Retirement Flashcards
SARSEP keys
- up to 25 employees, 50% of eligible employees must defer
- existence before 12/31/96 (grandfathered)
- salary deduction limit $19,000 (FICA)
- New employees can participate if the plan was established before 1/1/97
section 415 max limit for DB annual benefit
$225k or 100% of average compensation (highest 3)
280k (if compensation is above, use 280k-even for averaging)
solo 401k (uni 401k)- you, you and spouse, or two partners
not subject to typical 401k rules
- elective deferral up to 19k + employer contribution cap of 56k (max is 56k(including 19k)+6k)
- 6k catch up allowed for 50+
ESOP in S corp
no matter how many employees, an ESOP is ONE S shareholder
NUA (extra)
$20 basis, $100 at distribution -> $20 ordinary, $80 NUA, LTCG due at sale, if $88 6 mon after retirement, $8 is STCG
phantom income…if 72(t) (substantially equal payments) taken to avoid phantom, NUA is lost (must be lump sum)
NUA lost if employer stock is transferred into IRA
ESOP 10% penalty
over 55 ok
basis ordinary + 10%, distribution LT+10%
401(k) SIMPLE
280k salary cap
ERISA, so creditor protected
max employer contribution is $280k x 3%=$8250
Deferral is still $13,000
who can adopt 403(b)?
also called TDA/TSA
501(c)(3) tax exempt-churches, hospitals, private schools, colleges
discriminate against wage vs age
target benefit- age weighted (discriminates against age)
SS integration- discriminates against Wage
ratio percentage test (coverage test)
plan must cover % of NHCE employees that’s at least 70% of % of covered HCEs.
if 100% HCEs are covered and there are 100 NHCEs, 70% must be covered, 30% can be excluded
average benefits test
average benefits for all NHCE must be at least 70% of that for HCE
plans that can be integrated with SS(discriminate against wages)
DB, Cash Balance, Money purchase, target benefit, profit sharing, stock bonus, SEP- yes
ESOP, SIMPLE, 401(k) SIMPLE- no
cross-tested plan=new comparability plan
max benefits to HCE, min required for others
Min benefits/contributions for non-key employees (top-heavy plan)
DB- at least 2% of compensation
DC- min employer contribution no less than 3%
parent-subsidiary
brother-sister
affiliated service group
- one entity (parent co) owns at least 80% of other entities
- 5 (or fewer) owners of 2 or more entities own 80% of each
- a service org and pro org
72(t)
substantially equal payments
you screw up if the amount is changed before:
- end of 5 yrs
- age 59.5 whichever is later
and you have to recapture 10% of total payments received BEFORE 59.5 (so if you start taking payments at 57.5 and cease at 61.5, two years worth of payment is penalized at 10%)
one-time switch to RMD (with no penalty)-will reduce payout and tax
RMDs when 10 yr age difference b/n spouse
joint life table can be used- lower mandatory distributions- the younger has to be beneficiary
stretch IRA (non-spouse individuals)
(-1 method)
take distributions based on the beneficiary’s own life expectancy [owner dies in 2019= use 2020 divisor, then reduced by -1 each year after]
[if bene is decedent’s estate, gotta be taken out in 5 years]
if you are the bene, you take as much/little, but because it’s earning 6% (example), account keeps growing.
qualified plan (includes TSA/403(b)) loans- how much?
less than 50% of vested or $50,000
or $10,000 regardless (if you have it)
loans are allowed in all qualified plans and 403b
qualified joint and survivor annuity(QJSA)/qualified pre-retirement survivor annuity (QPSA) (pension benefit distribution)
pension benefits (like money purchase, target benefit) must be QJSA unless spouse consents to waiver in writing [profit sharing type CAN, but not required]
if married spouse dies before retirement, then QPSA to surviving spouse unless waived
QDRO doesn’t apply to which plans?
doesn’t apply to:
most nonqualified plans- annuities, certain DC, IRAs (SEP, roth, etc)
ONLY applies to QUALIFIED plans, in other words
ex: plan participant’s benefit supposed to start at 55, distributions to former spouse can be scheduled to begin at the participant’s age 55(even if former spouse isn’t retiring)
eligibility for IRA and Roth
IRA- based on active participation
Roth- based on AGI (basically can’t contribute if MFSeparately - $10k phaseout)
3 types of Roths
- Roth IRA- phaseouts AGI
- Roth 401k- no income restriction (ER contribution is pre-tax and goes to traditional 401k account; no income restriction)
- Roth conversion- no income restriction (also no limit to amount of conversion)
unfunded=informally funded
assets owned by company, so subject to creditors
can be life insurance, annuities, mutual funds, etc
412(i) plan
defined benefit plan funded entirely with insurance products like life insurance and annuities, contribution
based on actuarial assumption
for employers that have some need for life insurance, large contribution allowed but lower than typical
non spouse beneficiaries of 401k
transfer to IRA and withdraw over 5 years or their life expectancy
same for 403(b) and 457
IRAs NOT subject to RMD
Roth
Roth inherited by a spouse
Roth 401k subject to RMD (both the employer and employee contribution accounts)
group term life deductibility
if company is owner and beneficiary of policy, they can’t deduct
FSA
- healthcare on FSA money must be spent by 3/15 or forfeited
- typically funded through employee salary reduction (not subject to FICA and FUTA, no withholdings- all pretax)
- dependent care max $5000 (dependent care assistance only to child under 13 or physical/mental care for dependent)
salary reduction to FSA can be elected to split
ex: $7650 –> $5000 to dependent care and $2650 (max) to health FSA
used to pay for med expenses not covered by insurance
can’t pay for: health premiums including LTC, cosmetic items, cosmetic surgery, items for “general health”
(incidental) life insurance use in retirement plan
pure insurance protection is taxed to the participant at the Table 2001 cost
pure death benefit excluded from income
ex:
$40,000 death benefit received, $10,000 was cash value–> $30,000 is tax-free, but $10,000 ordinary tax
$250,000 group policy ($50,000 exemption):
- employee contributes $0.20 per $1000 (for all of $250,000)
- Table 1 rate is$0.43 per $1000 (only for $200,000)
- what is included in employee’s income? (annual)
$0.43 x 200=$86
$0.20 x 250=$50
$86-$50=$36/mon x 12= $432 included in his income
Pension Benefit Guaranty Corporation (PBGC) insures benefit payments to participants (and bene):
only defined benefit plans and cash balance plans
just insures against loss of benefits, oversees plan termination, doesn’t require reporting, etc (–> that’s ERISA)
403(b) funding vehicles
limited to annuity contracts or mutual funds (incidental life insurance under annuity contracts ok)
life insurance and section 162
disability and 162
- life insurance often used as informal funding vehicle
- employer owns policy, is beneficiary, premiums not deductible, so death proceeds to employer tax-free
- benefits paid to covered individual/survivor (cash bonus) is deductible expense as paid, individual has constructive receipt, so it’s taxable (deferred compensation)
individual owns contract and pays premium–> premiums not deductible, benefits tax-free to individual
individual owns contract and employer pays premium as bonus (162 disability)–> premiums deductible by employer (bonus), benefits tax-free to individual
individual owns contract and employer pays premium as salary continuation (group)–> premiums deductible by employer, benefits taxable to employee