TPA Commentary - June 2006
Hardship Distributions Provide Valuable Option
In an ideal
world, we would all contribute as much money as possible to our
retirement plans and allow it to grow until we were ready to retire.
We could then enjoy our twilight years with comfort and security, be
it traveling the world or relaxing by the pool.
In the real
world, life doesn’t always go as planned. Doctor bills, college
tuition and personal emergencies can arise and stress our finances
to the max. During these times an employee may be relieved to know
that his retirement account, though intended for retirement, is also
available for financial hardship.
The type of
retirement plan most likely to offer hardship distributions is the
ever-popular 401(k) plan, funded primarily by employee salary
deferrals. Section 403(b) and section 457(b) plans are also funded
by salary deferrals and are likely to permit hardship distributions
as well. However, such distributions are not limited to deferral
accounts and other accounts under a profit sharing plan may provide
them.
What follows is
a close-up look at the rules concerning hardship distributions,
including some provisions added by final regulations that many plans
will incorporate this year. It also includes special provisions
adopted last year to provide relief to victims of Hurricane Katrina.
Salary Deferral
vs. Employer Accounts
The overwhelming
majority of hardship distributions are dispensed from participants’
401(k) (salary deferral) accounts. In fact, hardship is the only
allowable reason for an in-service distribution from salary deferral
accounts prior to age 59½ (other than plan termination without an
alternative plan).
Profit sharing
plans may allow in-service distributions of employer-funded benefits
(e.g., match or profit sharing contributions) prior to age 59½,
conditioned upon the occurrence of a specified event. One of the
eligible events is a participant’s financial hardship. The rules
applicable to these hardship distributions are less restrictive than
for salary deferral accounts.
For hardships
from employer-funded benefits, the plan must define hardship and
establish rules that are applied in a uniform, consistent manner.
However, in order to simplify plan administration, some plan
documents apply the more restrictive salary deferral hardship
withdrawal requirements to hardship withdrawals from employer-funded
accounts.
The plan may
permit the entire vested employer-funded account balance to be
distributed, including earnings. Employer qualified nonelective
contributions (QNEC) and qualified matching contributions (QMAC),
made for purposes of passing nondiscrimination testing, may not be
distributed as in-service distributions unless the employee has
attained age 59½. An exception applies for QNECs and QMACs credited
prior to January 1, 1989 (or if later, plan years ending prior to
July 1, 1989).
The rules for
salary deferral hardship distributions are more complicated. Let’s
take a look at those rules.
Distributions
From Deferral Accounts
The first
requirement is that the withdrawal be on account of an immediate and
heavy financial need of the participant. In addition, the withdrawal
must not exceed the amount necessary to satisfy the need. These
determinations are made in accordance with objective and
nondiscriminatory standards set forth in the plan document.
Financial Need
The
determination as to whether or not a participant has an immediate
and heavy financial need is based on the relevant facts and
circumstances of each case. However, the regulations provide a “safe
harbor” list of events which will automatically be deemed to satisfy
the financial need requirement. The list is as follows:
§
Expenses for, or necessary to obtain medical care for the employee,
the spouse or dependents (including a non-custodial child) that
would be deductible under section 213 of the Internal Revenue Code
(IRC), regardless of whether the expenses exceed 7.5% of adjusted
gross income;
§
Costs directly related to the purchase of a principal residence for
the employee (excluding mortgage payments);
§
Payment of tuition, related educational fees and room and board
expenses for up to the next 12 months of post-secondary education
for the employee, the spouse, children or dependents;
§
Payments necessary to prevent the eviction of the employee from his
principal residence or foreclosure on the mortgage on that
residence;
§
Payments for burial or funeral expenses for the employee’s parent,
spouse, child or dependent; or
§
Expenses for the repair of damage to the employee’s principal
residence that would qualify for the casualty deduction under IRC
section 165, whether or not the loss exceeds 10% of adjusted gross
income.
The last two items on the list were added
by the final 401(k) regulations, effective for plan years beginning
after December 31, 2005. Plans had the ability to incorporate the
changes earlier, as of plan years ending after December 29, 2004,
but only if all of the provisions of the final regulations were
implemented at the same time. The hardship provisions of the final
regulations can only be utilized after the plan document has been
appropriately amended.
Plans may
utilize the safe harbor definition of financial need or establish
their own criteria under the facts and circumstances test. The
regulations give some examples of what may reasonably be considered
financial need, and certainly the safe harbor list can also serve as
a guideline.
Satisfaction of
the Financial Need
Once the
existence of a financial need is established, a participant must
show that a distribution from his salary deferral account is
necessary to satisfy the need. Under the facts and circumstances
test, the following items must be satisfied:
§
The distribution must not exceed the amount of the need, plus any
federal, state and local taxes and penalties that may result from
the distribution, and
§
There are no alternative means available. Alternative means includes
assets of the employee’s spouse and minor children that are
reasonably available to the employee. The employer may rely on the
employee’s written statement that no other resources are available,
absent specific knowledge to the contrary that the need can be
satisfied by:
§
Reimbursement or compensation by insurance or otherwise;
§
Liquidation of employee’s assets;
§
Cessation of elective or other employee contributions to the plan;
§
Other currently available distributions and loans from plans
maintained by any employer; or
§
Borrowing from commercial sources on reasonable terms.
However, the
employee would not be expected to take such other action if the
effect would be to increase the need.
A plan can
choose to utilize a safe harbor test in which case the distribution
will be deemed necessary to satisfy the need if the following two
conditions are met:
§
The employee has obtained all other currently available
distributions and loans from all plans maintained by the employer,
and
§
The employee is prohibited from making elective and other employee
contributions to any plan maintained by the employer for at least
six months after receipt of the hardship distribution.
The term “all
plans of the employer” means all qualified and non-qualified plans.
The six-month suspension rule does not apply to mandatory employee
contributions to a defined benefit plan or to a health or welfare
benefit plan. In plans that provide safe harbor matching
contributions to avoid nondiscrimination testing, the suspension
period cannot exceed six months.
Benefits
Available For Distribution
Regardless of
the amount of financial need, a hardship distribution cannot exceed
the amount of available benefits in the participant’s salary
deferral account. Generally, the available benefits are limited to
the aggregate contributions made by the participant up to the date
of distribution, reduced by any prior deferral distributions.
Earnings on salary deferrals are not included, other than those
credited prior to January 1, 1989 (or if later, plan years ending
prior to July 1, 1989).
Example: Diane
needs $10,000 for the purchase of a primary residence. She has no
other source of funds at her disposal. Her 401(k) plan allows
participant loans as well as hardship distributions, and the rules
require that all available loans be taken first. But the additional
debt of a plan loan would disqualify her from obtaining the mortgage
she needs to purchase the home. She is therefore approved for a
hardship distribution.
The current
value of Diane’s deferral account is $14,000, of which $9,500
represents her aggregate contributions since she entered the plan in
2001. The maximum withdrawal Diane can take is $9,500, and she would
have to suspend contributions to the plan for the next six months in
accordance with the provisions of her plan.
Taxation of
Hardship Distributions
Hardship
distributions are taxable in the year received and will be subject
to an additional 10% early withdrawal penalty if the participant has
not reached age 59½. Such distributions are not eligible for
rollover to an IRA or another qualified employer plan. They are
subject to 10% tax withholding which may be waived by the
participant.
Hurricane
Katrina Victims
On September 15,
2005 the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) and the Department of Labor
provided unprecedented broad-based relief for those adversely
affected by Hurricane Katrina. IRS Announcement 2005-70 provided
guidelines for the relaxation of administrative rules governing plan
loans and hardship distributions to Katrina victims and members of
their families who participate in retirement plans. The relief made
it easier for these participants to establish financial need by
allowing plan administrators to rely on representations by the
participant, absent actual knowledge to the contrary. In addition,
the minimum six-month contribution suspension period after receiving
a hardship withdrawal was eliminated. Plans that didn’t provide for
loans or hardship distributions could process withdrawals regardless
and amend the plan at a later date. The special rules applied to
loans and hardship distributions made between August 29, 2005 and
March 31, 2006.
Conclusion
The availability
of hardship distributions from salary deferral plans is one of many
factors that encourage employee participation. Knowing that the
money can be withdrawn if needed provides a sense of security. The
hardship rules are intended to limit distributions to times of
serious financial need and support the long-term goal of saving for
retirement. But the recent expansion of the hardship criteria
illustrates that the rules are intended to be fair and keep pace
with the changing needs of employees.
The information contained in this
newsletter is intended to provide general information on matters of
interest in the area of qualified retirement plans and is provided
with the understanding that our company is not engaged in rendering
legal or tax advice. Legal or tax questions should always be
referred to a qualified tax advisor such as an attorney or CPA.
©2006 Benefit
Insights, Inc. All rights reserved.
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