403(b) vs. 401(k) Plan Design Considerations for Tax-Exempt Organizations Tuesday, April 30, 2013



Similar documents
SIMPLE IRA Plan. Reporting and Disclosure Requirements No annual IRS filing requirement.

HIGHLIGHTS OF THE FINAL 403(b) REGULATIONS AND WHAT THE CHANGES MEAN TO PLAN SPONSORS

Employer Frequently Asked Questions

403(b) Plan Fundamentals:

Legal Alert: Pension Protection Act of 2006 Changes Affecting Defined Contribution Plans

Employee Benefit Plans Nondiscrimination Compliance Testing Practice Aid

Average Deferral Percentage test (ADP test) All other employees are considered Non-HCEs.

Application of ERISA

Glossary of Qualified

Plan Sponsor 401(k) Retirement Plan Analysis

NONDISCRIMINATION SAFE HARBOR ALTERNATIVES FOR 403(b) AND 401(k) PLANS

INSTRUCTIONS FOR 403(b) PROTOTYPE PLAN AND COMPLETION OF 403(b) ADOPTION AGREEMENTS

Comparison of SEPS, SARSEPs and SIMPLE IRA Plans

401(k) PROFIT SHARING SOLUTIONS

403(b) PLANS A GUIDE FOR SECTION 501(c)(3) ORGANIZATIONS

Detailed information on safe harbor contributions to 401(k) plans

Business Retirement Plans Choose Wisely

SIMPLE IRA Plan. Davis & Graves CPA LLP Jerry Davis, CPA/PFS 700 N Main Gresham, OR jerryd@davisgraves.com

The MC Academy The Employee Benefits and Executive Compensation Series. Qualified Plans Part 2

PFC-1: Plan Financial Consulting Syllabus

SIMPLE IRA 2016 Fact Sheet

Internal Revenue Service Enrolled Retirement Plan Agent Special Enrollment Examination (ERPA-SEE) Syllabus. Part I: Compliance and Operational Issues

401(k) Retirement Plan Review Packet

Mandatory Disaggregation Permissive Disaggregation Otherwise Excludable Employees Consequences of Using Disaggregation. How Disaggregation Works

Many individuals are involved in operating

Cash or Deferred 401(k) Plan

SARSEP Salary Reduction Simplified Employee Pension

Alerus Retirement Solutions Plan Administration Guide

The Split Personalities of 457(b) Nonqualified Plans

401(k) Plans for Business Owners

Qualified Retirement Plan and Trust Defined Contribution Basic Plan Document 03

IRS Publishes Model Amendments for EGTRRA

Retirement Plan Administration. Mercer HR Services. SERVICE 401(k) Compliance Testing Manual. A resource for testing information

Small Business Plans Business owner guide

Fiduciary Guide. Vested Interest Defined Contribution Plan Services

Qualified Retirement Plan

401(k) Plans For Small Businesses

ASPPAJournal. ASPPA s Quarterly Journal for Actuaries, Consultants, Administrators and Other Retirement Plan Professionals

The Five Pillars of a Retirement Plan

If your plan has not been updated to reflect EGTRRA, the plan needs to be revised.

This Checklist is not a complete description of all plan requirements, and should not be used as a substitute for a complete plan review

Glossary NUM. Aspen Pension Administrators, Inc Pan American Fwy NE, Suite B Albuquerque NM aspenpension.

New law provides additional designated Roth contribution options

Appendix A: Types of Retirement Plans

Synopsis of Qualified Retirement Plan Options

What s the Easiest Way to Pass a 401(k) NONDISCRIMINATION TEST? TRANSAMERICA. The retirement answer.

The "Economic Growth and Tax Relief Reconciliation Act of 2001" Makes Significant Changes to Retirement Plans and IRAs

PROFIT SHARING PLANS. for Small Businesses

COMPARING 403(b) AND QUALIFIED PLANS

How to Correct ADP/ACP Test Failures after the Statutory Correction Period

Retirement Services Instructional Guide

NONDISCRIMINATION TESTING

The Fidelity Retirement Plan and Trust Agreement Basic Plan Document No. 04

Planning for Retirement Needs. Profit-Sharing Plans, 401(k) Plans, Stock Bonus Plans, and ESOPs Chapter 5

SUMMARY PLAN DESCRIPTION

Administering Your Firm's Retirement Plan Best Practices

Business Retirement Plan Matrix

I. SECTION 403(b) TAX-SHELTERED ANNUITY ARRANGEMENTS by Ron Hallsten and Bob Architect

What s the Easiest Way to Pass a 401(k) NONDISCRIMINATION TEST? Transamerica. Master Retirement. POWER CHOICE FREEDOM

PRESENT LAW AND BACKGROUND RELATING TO THE TAX TREATMENT OF RETIREMENT SAVINGS

ftwilliam.com Safe Harbor Basics 10/28/2015

Alert. Client PROSKAUER ROSE SM. Employee Benefits Provisions Under the Economic Growth And Tax Relief Reconciliation Act of 2001

Qualified Retirement Plans

New Comparability Plan

Qualified Retirement Plan

Pension Protection Act of 2006 Changes Affect Single-Employer Defined Benefit Plans in 2008

AUTOMATIC ENROLLMENT 401(k) PLANS. for Small Businesses

Legal Alert: Pension Protection Act of 2006 IRAs, 403(b) Plans, and 457 Plans

457 GUIDEBOOK. Answers to your questions about 457 plans

Salary Reduction Simplified Employee Pension (SAR-SEP) Plan Employer Adoption Agreement For Use with the Traditional IRA Application

Transcription:

403(b) vs. 401(k) Plan Design Considerations for Tax-Exempt Organizations Tuesday, April 30, 2013 Rod Stortenbecker, CPC, QPA, FLMI Senior Consultant, Lincoln Financial Group

Plan design options for tax-exempt organizations Numerous types of tax-exempt organizations Only certain tax-exempt and governmental entities may sponsor 403(b) plans: 501(c)(3) no other tax-exempt organizations Public schools and certain governmental entities Today s discussion will focus on a 501(c)(3) tax-exempt organization s sponsorship of a 403(b) plan

Plan design options for tax-exempt organizations What types of plans can a 501(c)(3) tax-exempt organization sponsor? 401(k) 401(a) (Profit Sharing or Money Purchase) 403(b) 457(b)

403(b) plans - ERISA vs. Non-ERISA Subject to ERISA means participants benefits & rights are protected These include eligibility, participation, funding, reporting, disclosure, anti-alienation, anti-assignment, bonding and fiduciary duty. A 403(b) plan can be exempt from ERISA requirements if certain conditions are met. Regulatory exemption employer cannot exercise discretionary authority and decision making additional factors must be considered Statutory exemption applies to governmental plans and non-electing church plans Today s discussion will focus on ERISA 403(b) plans

Impact of recent changes on 403(b) plans 2009 Final Regulations Written plan document requirement Elimination of open-ended contract-to-contract transfers o Replaced with contract exchanges and has restrictions/conditions Clarification on nondiscrimination rules for salary deferrals o Normally scheduled to work fewer than 20 hours per week Termination of a 403(b) plan possible EPCRS (Revenue Procedures 2008-50 and 2013-12) Expanded correction program now available to address errors in plan administration as well as plan document

403(b) vs. 401(k) - Basic differences Comparison of 403(b) and 401(k) plans Availability and general requirements Eligibility and entry requirements Plan design considerations Contribution limits Testing requirements Reporting requirements Disclosure requirements

Availability 403(b) vs. 401(k) - Basic differences (cont.) Who can sponsor? Section 501(c)(3) taxexempt organization, educational institution, and electing church employer Any business entity, including tax-exempt organizations, corporations, partnerships, and sole proprietors Note: A governmental entity is ineligible from sponsoring a 401(k) unless the plan is grandfathered.

403(b) vs. 401(k) - Basic differences (cont.) General Requirements Funding vehicle and investment options Written plan document Annuity contract that satisfies Section 403(b)(1)) or mutual funds held in a Section 403(b)(7) custodial account Required Group annuity contract or trust which may hold investments such as mutual funds, nonregistered separate accounts, stocks, bonds, and employer securities. Required

403(b) vs. 401(k) - Basic differences (cont.) Eligibility Requirements Eligible Employee Salary deferrals: universally available ; exclusions include: o Employees normally scheduled <20 hours/week o Student employees o Nonresident aliens without U.S. source income o Employees covered under another 401(k), 403(b), or govt. 457(b) plan o Those with deferrals < $200 Employer contributions: o Exclusions allowed provided Section 410(b) minimum coverage passed All contributions available to all employees; exclusions include: Statutory exclusions: o Nonresident aliens without US source income o Collectively bargained employees Non-statutory exclusions: o Exclusions allowed provided Section 410(b) minimum coverage test passed

Entry Requirements 403(b) vs. 401(k) - Basic differences (cont.) Entry Requirements Salary deferrals: No age or service requirement allowed Employer contributions: Age and/or Service requirement allowed Maximum age 21 1 year of service; 2 years if full and immediate vesting All contributions: Age and/or Service requirement allowed: Maximum age 21 Deferrals: 1 year of service Employer Contributions: 1 year of service; 2 years if full and immediate vesting

403(b) vs. 401(k) - Basic differences (cont.) Plan Design Considerations Safe Harbor Design Vesting Plan to Plan Transfers Allowed deemed to pass ACP test Salary deferrals: Full and immediate Employer contributions: maximum 3-year cliff or 6-year graded schedule 90-24 transfers replaced with contract exchanges and plan to plan transfers Allowed deemed to pass ADP and/or ACP test Salary deferrals: Full and immediate Employer contributions: maximum 3-year cliff or 6-year graded schedule Transfers are allowed between 401(k) plans in certain circumstances

Contribution Limits 403(b) vs. 401(k) - Basic differences (cont.) Contribution Limits and Aggregation 415 limit lesser of 415 Compensation or 415 limit as indexed; 2013 limit is $51,000 Includes employee and employer contributions Excludes: Age 50 catch-up contributions. Note: The 15- year special catch-up is included in 415 limit. 415 limit lesser of 415 Compensation or 415 limit as indexed; 2013 limit is $51,000 Includes employee and employer contributions Excludes: Age 50 catch-up contributions Please note: Generally, the 415 limit applies individually to each plan ( control exception). In 2013, an employee could receive $51,000 in each type of plan. The 402(g) limit requires aggregation of the deferrals made to all 403(b) and 401(k) plans for the calendar year. For 2013, an individual s limit to defer in both plans is $17,500, exclusive of catch-up contributions. The 457(b) top hat plan has its own limit and such contributions are excluded in these plans limits.

403(b) vs. 401(k) - Basic differences (cont.) Contribution Limits (cont.) Roth Contributions Catch-up Contributions Allowed Age 50+ catch-up allowed 15-year catch-up allowed for certain employers and specific service and contribution requirements. Employees who qualify may contribute up to $3,000 above the applicable 402(g) limit. Allowed Age 50+ catch-up allowed

403(b) vs. 401(k) - Basic differences (cont.) Testing Requirements Nondiscrimination Testing Salary Deferrals Universal Availability Requirement No formal test Employer Match ACP Test 410(b) Minimum Coverage Test Employer Non-elective 401(a)(4) General Test 410(b) Minimum Coverage Test Note: Benefit, Right or Feature Test may apply Salary Deferrals ADP Test 410(b) Minimum Coverage Employer Match ACP Test 410(b) Minimum Coverage Test Employer Non-elective 401(a)(4) General Test 410(b) Minimum Coverage Test Note: Benefit, Right or Feature Test may apply

403(b) vs. 401(k) - Basic differences (cont.) Testing Requirements (cont.) Top Heavy Not applicable Applicable unless plan meets exception available for 401(k) safe harbor plan design

403(b) vs. 401(k) - Basic differences (cont.) Reporting Requirements Form 5500 Required Required Audit Requirement Required if plan has greater than 100 lives Required if plan has greater than 100 lives

403(b) vs. 401(k) - Basic differences (cont.) Disclosure Requirements Participant Disclosure and Notice Requirements SPD SMM SAR Benefit statements Fee disclosure Special tax notice Universal availability notice The following may apply: Safe harbor notice Automatic enrollment QDIA Blackout/SOX notice Same, except Universal Availability does not apply). In addition, employer stock diversification may apply.

401(k) and 403(b) plans Key differences Some of the most significant differences between 403(b) and 401(k) plans are: Plan eligibility Universal Availability / ADP testing Top-heavy

Adopt a 401(k) rather than a 403(b)? Why would an eligible organization adopt a 401(k) plan rather than a 403(b) plan? May not understand or may assume 401(k) is better Eligibility or possible exclusion of certain employee classes/groups for salary deferral purposes Universal Availability requirement vs. ADP o May be able to project results & determine which is better Different investment options or ability to utilize certain types of investments

Maintain multiple plans Is it advantageous to maintain a 403(b) and a 401(k) or 401(a) plan? May allow an employer to double up contributions for some groups Additional Considerations A number of nonprofit employers still have more than one plan 403(b) plan typically will accept salary deferrals and 401(a) plan will accept employer non-elective contributions 401(a) plan may even accept the employer match associated with the deferrals to the 403(b) plan A 403(b) plan may be terminated but cannot be merged with a 401(k) or 401(a) plan May acquire an entity that has plan (merge, terminate, freeze?) Paternalistic retirement leakage concerns for terminated plans

Questions? Thank you. 403(b) vs. 401(k) - Plan Design Considerations for Tax-Exempt Organizations Rod Stortenbecker, CPC, APA, FLMI Senior Consultant Lincoln Financial Group E-mail: Rod.Stortenbecker@LFG.com