Year-End Compliance Testing Overview
December 2014 Newsletter
The end of the calendar year is fast approaching which means the plan year
end for many qualified plans. It will be time for plan sponsors to collect
complete employee data to enable their service providers to perform the numerous
compliance tests required to retain the plans tax qualified status.
This article provides a brief description of the required defined
contribution plan compliance tests as well as an overview of the census data
collection process.
Employee Census Data Collection
At the end of the plan year the employer must prepare a census report. This
information is used to determine eligibility, calculate and allocate
contributions, perform compliance testing, update participant vesting and to
prepare Form 5500 for filing with the Department of Labor. Accurate census
information is critical to performing these administrative functions. In
general, the census consists of the names, compensation, relevant dates (hire,
birth, termination, rehire) and the number of hours worked for all employees who
were employed during any portion of the year—not just those actively
participating in the plan.
Compensation typically includes gross compensation reported on Form W-2
unless the plan specifically excludes certain types of compensation for plan
purposes. When determining contributions and performing the 2014 tests, plan
sponsors may only take into account each participant's compensation up to
$260,000.
Owners and Officers
It is important to identify the owners and officers of the company as this
information is used to determine "highly compensated employees" for purposes of
the nondiscrimination tests and "key employees" for the top heavy test.
It is also important to identify which employees are relatives of any owners
since they may be considered owners through stock attribution rules. An employee
is deemed to own the stock or interest owned by his or her spouse, parents,
children and grandchildren. For example, if Harry works for a corporation owned
by his father, he will also be considered to own the corporation for testing
purposes because of the stock attribution rules.
Highly Compensated Employees (HCEs)
HCEs are generally those employees who:
- Were a more than 5% owner of the employer at any time during the current
or preceding plan year, or
- Had compensation from the employer in the preceding plan year in excess
of an indexed limit. For example if an employee earned more than $115,000 in
2013, the employee is considered an HCE in 2014. The plan may limit the
number of employees in this category to the top 20% when ranked by
compensation.
All other employees are considered non-highly compensated employees (NHCEs).
Key Employees
A key employee is an employee who meets any of the following criteria during
the determination year (usually the preceding plan year):
- Owns more than 5% of the employer;
- Owns more than 1% of the employer and had compensation in excess of
$150,000; or
- Is an officer of the employer with compensation in excess of an indexed
limit ($170,000 for 2014), with certain limits on the maximum number in this
category.
Related Businesses
If an owner of a company has ownership in another company, it must be
determined if the companies are "related" as a controlled group. Companies could
also be related as an "affiliated service" group even if there is no common
ownership.
Related companies are treated as one company for certain plan purposes
including nondiscrimination testing. Therefore, it is important that
relationships with other businesses be shared with the service provider
performing required plan testing.
Required Plan Testing
The IRS has established a multitude of requirements a qualified plan must
meet in order to be considered qualified. In general, the requirements assure
that contributions are allocated fairly to each eligible participant. Below is a
brief description of the required tests.
Minimum Coverage Test
Qualified retirement plans are required to benefit a nondiscriminatory group
of employees who have satisfied the eligibility requirements of the plan. Under
the ratio percentage test, the percentage of NHCEs benefiting under the plan
must be at least 70% of the percentage of HCEs who benefit under the plan. If
the plan does not pass this test, it may still be able to pass a more complex
average benefits test.
Average Deferral Percentage (ADP) and Average Contribution
Percentage (ACP) Tests
The ADP test is performed on employee deferrals (including Roth
contributions) while the ACP test is performed on matching and/or voluntary
after-tax contributions. The percentages for each employee within the HCE and
NHCE groups are totaled and averaged to get the ADP and ACP for each group. The
averages for the HCE group may not exceed a specific ratio of the average for
the NHCE group as follows:
- NHCE group average less than 2%: maximum HCE average is 2 times the NHCE
average;
- NHCE group average between 2%–8%: maximum HCE average is the NHCE
average +2%;
- NHCE group average over 8%: maximum HCE average is the NHCE average
times 1.25.
In performing the ADP test, all active and terminated employees eligible to
defer at any time during the plan year are included, whether or not they
actually made a deferral. In general, the following employees are included in
the ACP test:
- All active and terminated employees who met the plan's requirements to
receive a match regardless of whether they actually made a deferral and
received a match; and
- All employees eligible to make a voluntary after-tax contribution at any
time during the year.
Plans that do not pass the test(s) must take some action, such as corrective
distributions or additional employer contributions. Corrective distributions
generally must be made within 2˝ months after the end of the plan year to
avoid a 10% excise tax.
Safe harbor 401(k) plans are deemed to automatically satisfy the ADP and ACP
testing requirements. This allows HCEs to defer up to the annual dollar limit
($17,500 for 2014) regardless of how much or how little the NHCEs defer. As a
trade-off, safe harbor plans must meet a number of requirements including
minimum employer contributions, immediate vesting and participant notices.
Top Heavy Test
A plan is top heavy if the account balances of key employees on the
determination date (usually the last day of the preceding plan year) are more
than 60% of the total account balances of all participants. For example, the top
heavy test performed using the December 31, 2014 account balances will determine
if the plan is top heavy in 2015. Generally, all plans maintained by the
employer, including defined benefit plans, are aggregated for purposes of this
test. Certain safe harbor plans are exempt from the top heavy rules.
If the plan is considered to be top heavy, participants must become fully
vested in at least six years. In addition, for each year the plan is top heavy,
minimum contributions must be made on behalf of non-key participants still
employed on the last day of the plan year in an amount equal to the highest
contribution rate allocated to any key employee, up to a maximum of 3% of
compensation. For example, if a top heavy profit sharing plan has one key
employee who received a contribution of 2% of his or her compensation, then all
non-key employees would be entitled to a 2% contribution. If the key employee
receives a 4% contribution, then the non-key employees must receive at least a
3% contribution.
The top heavy regulations provide that salary deferrals made by key employees
are considered employer contributions but deferrals by non-key employees are
considered employee contributions. In other words, deferrals by a key employee
can trigger the top heavy contribution requirement, yet deferrals by a non-key
employee cannot be used to satisfy the requirement.
For example, if the plan is top heavy and one key employee defers 4%, the 3%
minimum contribution requirement will apply to all non-key employees who have
met the plan's eligibility requirements, even those who have elected not to make
deferrals.
Profit sharing and matching contributions as well as forfeitures are
considered employer contributions for purposes of determining if the minimum is
met. If the employer sponsors multiple plans, only one plan has to provide the
minimum.
Annual Additions Test
Annual additions allocated to a participant's account during the plan's
limitation year (usually the plan year) are limited to the lesser of 100% of
compensation or an indexed maximum limit ($52,000 in 2014). All defined
contribution plans of the employer are aggregated in determining whether the
limit has been exceeded. Annual additions include:
- Employer contributions, e.g. profit sharing, matching;
- Employee 401(k) elective deferrals, including Roth contributions;
- Employee after-tax voluntary and mandatory contributions; and
- Forfeiture allocations.
Rollovers, earnings, loan repayments and 401(k) catch-up contributions are
not considered annual additions.
Several methods are permissible for correcting a failed annual additions test
and the plan document will specify the applicable method. The most common method
for correcting a 401(k) plan failure is to first return voluntary after-tax and
401(k) deferrals in the amount necessary to pass the test.
Conclusion
The end of the year is the time to prepare for annual testing and reporting.
Complete employee data must be collected in order to accurately perform the
required year-end administrative functions and testing to keep the plan in
compliance.
2015 IRS and Social Security Annual Limits
Each year the U.S. government adjusts the limits for qualified plans and
Social Security to reflect cost of living adjustments and changes in the law.
Many of these limits are based on the "plan year." The elective deferral and
catch-up limits are always based on the calendar year. Here are the 2015 limits
as well as the 2014 limits for comparative purposes:
|
Maximum compensation limit |
$265,000 |
$260,000 |
Defined contribution plan maximum contribution
|
$53,000 |
$52,000 |
Defined benefit plan maximum benefit
|
$210,000 |
$210,000 |
401(k), 403(b) and 457 plan elective maximum elective deferrals
|
$18,000 |
$17,500 |
Catch-up contributions
|
$6,000 |
$5,500 |
SIMPLE plan elective deferrals
|
$12,500 |
$12,000 |
Catch-up contributions
|
$3,000 |
$2,500 |
IRA
|
$5,500 |
$5,500 |
Catch-up contributions
|
$1,000 |
$1,000 |
"Highly Compensated" employee threshold |
$120,000 |
$115,000 |
"Key Employee" (officer) threshold
|
$170,000 |
$170,000 |
Social Security taxable wage base |
$118,500 |
$117,000 |
This newsletter is intended to provide general
information on matters of interest in the area of qualified retirement plans and
is distributed with the understanding that the publisher and distributor are not
rendering legal, tax or other professional advice. Readers should not act or
rely on any information in this newsletter without first seeking the advice of
an independent tax advisor such as an attorney or CPA.
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