The increasing complexities of daily
life have left many Americans seeking simpler solutions. As a
result, the term "simple," when used with retirement planning,
was quickly embraced by the small business community, the same
way that "low-fat" became the mantra for weight watchers. The
belief was that if it’s simpler, it must be better, at least on
some levels.
The Simplified Employee Pension (SEP) plan has been around
for many years. It offers the flexibility of a profit sharing
plan and previously allowed salary deferrals. In recent years
Congress created the Savings Incentive Match Plan for Employees
(SIMPLE) IRA and 401(k) plans, and thus the simplicity began to
get more and more complicated. But more importantly, the
simplicity did not keep pace with other advantages afforded to
traditional plans. So when an employer searches for the best
retirement plan for its employees, the owner may find that the
answer is not "simple"!
This newsletter will compare the major differences among the
simple and traditional plans.
Availability
Any business, including a non-profit, can adopt a 401(k)
profit sharing plan. Such plans allow eligible participants to
make salary deferrals and may or may not provide employer
matching contributions. In addition, the plan allows the
employer to make nonelective contributions which are usually
discretionary each year. A plan document must be executed by the
last day of the first plan year in order to establish the plan.
A SEP can also be established by any business, although it is
more commonly used by small employers. Individual retirement
accounts (IRAs) are set up by the employer for each eligible
employee to receive contributions. A SEP document can be adopted
any time up to the filing due date of the employer’s federal tax
return, including extensions. The document can be individually
designed or the IRS model SEP agreement can be used. SEP
contributions are made by the employer and are usually
discretionary each year.
A SIMPLE IRA plan can be adopted by any employer with up to
100 employees who each earned $5,000 or more in the previous
calendar year. The employer may not maintain another qualified
plan that covers any employee eligible under the SIMPLE IRA
plan.
A SIMPLE 401(k) plan is really not a simple plan at all, like
the two plans described above. It is more like a watered down
safe harbor 401(k) plan, with reduced deferral limits and lower
employer contribution requirements, which allow it to eliminate
nondiscrimination testing. It is also available to employers
with 100 or fewer employees who each earned $5,000 or more in
the previous calendar year.
Eligibility
A 401(k) profit sharing plan can omit employees who have not
yet attained age 21. In addition, the salary deferral portion of
the plan can require up to one full year of service (1,000 hours
during a twelve-month period), while all employer contribution
portions of the plan (e.g., nonelective and match contributions)
can require up to two full years of service, although anything
in excess of one year requires 100% immediate vesting.
SEP plans can utilize the same age 21 provision but have very
different service requirements. Employees must be included if
they earn $450 or more in the current year and performed
services for the employer in at least three of the preceding
five calendar years.
SIMPLE IRAs must cover all employees who are expected to earn
at least $5,000 each from the employer in the current year and
who earned at least $5,000 from the employer in any two previous
calendar years.
SIMPLE 401(k) plans are governed by the same eligibility
provisions as regular 401(k) plans.
Contribution Limitations
The traditional 401(k) profit sharing plan can receive
deductible employer contributions up to 25% of all eligible
participants’ compensation plus employee salary deferrals.
Contribution allocations to any one participant are limited to
the lesser of 100% of compensation or the annual additions
dollar limit ($42,000 for 2005). For those age 50 and older, the
dollar limit is increased by the maximum catch-up contribution
which is $4,000 for 2005. Salary deferrals are limited by an
annual dollar limit ($14,000 for 2005) plus the catch-up
contribution, if applicable.
The SEP deduction and contribution limits are the same as for
traditional plans. However, employee salary deferrals are not
allowed (salary reduction SEPs adopted prior to 1997 may
continue to receive salary deferral contributions).
SIMPLE IRA and SIMPLE 401(k) plans require the employer to
match deferrals 100% up to 3% of compensation deferred, or
provide a 2% of compensation contribution for all eligible
employees. These contributions are slightly lower than those
required for safe harbor 401(k) plans, which are either a 3%
nonelective contribution or a match equal to 100% of the first
3% deferred, plus 50% of the next 2% deferred. The salary
deferral limit for SIMPLE plans is $10,000 as of 2005, plus a
$2,000 catch-up contribution for those age 50 and older.
Vesting
Another advantage of the traditional plan is being able to
use a vesting schedule. Employer-derived benefits vest over
time, typically under a graduated schedule over six or seven
years. (Employee contributions are always 100% vested.) When a
participant terminates prior to achieving full vesting, the
non-vested portion is forfeited and can be used to offset future
employer contributions, pay administrative expenses or be
allocated to remaining participants.
SEPs, SIMPLE IRAs and SIMPLE 401(k) plans require full and
immediate vesting of all contributions. Safe harbor 401(k)
contributions are also 100% vested immediately.
Distributions
Most traditional plans require a triggering event for
distributions, such as death, disability, termination or
hardship. Some profit sharing plans allow in-service
distributions after a specified period of time. Distributions
from IRAs, including those established under a SEP or SIMPLE IRA
plan, can be made at any time determined by the participant.
Generally, all taxable distributions prior to age 59½ are
subject to a 10% penalty tax. In traditional plans the penalty
will not apply for distributions on account of separation from
service after age 55. In IRAs, the penalty is waived for certain
medical expenses, qualified education expenses and first time
home purchases (up to $10,000).
SIMPLE IRAs have an additional distribution restriction. If a
taxable distribution occurs within the first two years of the
initial contribution, the penalty tax will be increased from 10%
to 25%. In addition, rollovers within the first two years can
only be made to another SIMPLE IRA plan. Rollovers to any other
plan during that period will be considered taxable distributions
and be subject to the 25% penalty tax.
Required minimum distributions from IRAs and qualified plans
must begin at age 70½. However, traditional plans can permit
non-owners (who own 5% or less of the business) who work past
age 70½ to delay distributions until their actual retirement.
Analysis
The primary advantages of SEPs and SIMPLE IRA plans are no
nondiscrimination testing, no top heavy considerations, no
annual Form 5500 filings and a simplified plan document. Account
statements must still be provided to participants and
contribution calculations must be performed. SIMPLE 401(k) plans
can also eliminate nondiscrimination and top heavy testing but
they must file 5500s each year.
A major advantage of the traditional profit sharing plan is
the broader options for allocating employer contributions. A
traditional plan can utilize age-based formulas, including the
popular new comparability method, which help to maximize
contributions for the owner and minimize contributions for the
staff. Here is a prime example:
Janice is 60 years old and owns a business with four other
employees. She wants to sponsor a retirement plan with maximum
flexibility and maximum contributions for herself. She is
considering a SEP plan and a profit sharing plan. The most
advantageous SEP allocation formula would be integrated with
social security. The profit sharing allocation formula would be
new comparability, based on ages and projected benefits. The
contribution comparison would be as follows:
Employee |
Age |
Compensation |
SEP
Contribution |
Profit Sharing
Contribution |
|
Owner |
60 |
$210,000 |
$42,000 |
$42,000 |
|
A |
35 |
50,000 |
8,371 |
2,500 |
|
B |
30 |
40,000 |
6,697 |
2,000 |
|
C |
25 |
30,000 |
5,023 |
1,500 |
|
D |
21 |
20,000 |
3,349 |
1,000 |
|
Total: |
|
$350,000 |
$65,440 |
$49,000 |
The SEP plan would require an additional $16,440 of
contributions for the staff to provide the same $42,000 maximum
contribution for the owner. In addition, the profit sharing plan
could utilize a vesting schedule that might result in
forfeitures which could further reduce employer costs.
Now let’s assume that the owner’s compensation is only
$100,000. In that case, salary deferrals would help to maximize
the owner’s total contribution without increasing contributions
for the staff. In addition, since the plan allows deferrals, the
owner could make a $4,000 catch-up contribution, bringing her
total allocation to $46,000. Here is what the combination of
401(k) and profit sharing contributions might look like:
Employee |
Age |
Compensation |
Salary
Deferrals |
Profit Sharing
Contribution |
Total
Contribution |
|
Owner |
60 |
$100,000 |
$18,000 |
$28,000 |
$46,000 |
|
A |
35 |
50,000 |
? |
2,500 |
2,500 |
|
B |
30 |
40,000 |
? |
2,000 |
2,000 |
|
C |
25 |
30,000 |
? |
1,500 |
1,500 |
|
D |
21 |
20,000 |
? |
1,000 |
1,000 |
|
Total: |
|
$240,000 |
|
$35,000 |
$53,000 |
Employees receive a 5% contribution which is more than enough
to meet the 3% safe harbor requirements and avoid deferral
nondiscrimination testing. They can also elect to defer into the
plan.
Since a new SEP plan cannot accept salary deferrals, it could
not compete with the allocations in the above example. The
SIMPLE IRA plan would also not be a viable option, even in
conjunction with a profit sharing plan, since it has a lower
deferral limit ($10,000 plus $2,000 catch-up).
SEP and SIMPLE IRA plans can sometimes eliminate more
employees because their service eligibility requirements can
exceed one year (see above), but more part-timers can be
excluded in traditional plans which can require 1,000 hours of
service during a twelve-month period. Also worth noting is that
traditional plans can allow participant loans whereas SEPs and
SIMPLE IRAs cannot.
Conclusion
When choosing a retirement plan, keep in mind that the
simplest solutions are best suited for simple situations. SEP
plans may be most appropriate for one-person companies, where
the desired contribution can be made with the least amount of
administrative work and costs. SIMPLE IRA plans are an easy way
for small employers to make salary deferrals available to the
staff, where simplicity is traded for reduced deferral limits.
But for an employer looking for the full array of options and
benefits, the traditional plan is still the best choice.
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