Posts in Employer Plan
New RMD Rule Could Affect Spouse Beneficiaries, Hypothetically

The new RMD regulations are not without at least one limitation for spouse beneficiaries, in the form of the “hypothetical RMD.” This could affect a spouse beneficiary who inherits an IRA or qualified retirement plan account before the deceased’s RMDs are required to begin—generally age 73—and who elects the new 10-year beneficiary payout rule in order to delay the onset of required distributions.

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Navigating a Break-in-vesting Service? What You Need to Know About Your Qualified Retirement Plan

Unlike breaks-in-eligibility service that can delay an employee’s ability to participate in an employer’s retirement plan, breaks-in-vesting service can delay or even prevent a participant’s ability to fully vest and become entitled to employer contributions if she is subject to a vesting schedule.

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New Guidance Released on Matching Contributions for Qualified Student Loan Payments

Recent legislation passed by Congress includes several provisions that enhance the ability of workers to increase their retirement savings. One of these provisions, Section 110 of the SECURE 2.0 Act of 2022 (SECURE 2.0), also enhances the ability of employers that sponsor a 401(k), 403(b), governmental 457(b), or a SIMPLE IRA plan to supplement workers’ retirement savings by providing matching contributions to employees who make qualified student loan payments (QSLPs) in 2024 and later plan years.

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Employee Breaks-in-Eligibility Service Are Inevitable. Here's How to Handle Them.

Just as important  for an employer choosing plan service requirements  is considering when an employee will experience a break in eligibility service.  Breaks in service—leaving that employer, in other words—can potentially delay when an employee becomes a participant, or resumes participation if he or she was an eligible participant before incurring breaks in service.

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DOL Releases Final Investment Advice Fiduciary Rule

The Department of Labor (DOL) recently released a regulatory package that includes a final amendment (the Retirement Security Rule) to the regulations that define what constitutes an investment advice fiduciary under the Employee Retirement Income Security Act of 1974 (ERISA) Title I and Title II (codified in the Internal Revenue Code).

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A Brush Up on EPCRS’s Self-Correction Program: Reviewing updates made to EPCRS following the passage of SECURE 2.0

Plan sponsors may generally correct eligible inadvertent failures under the EPCR’s Self-Correction Program. Exceptions to this rule include failures in which the plan or plan sponsor is under examination by the IRS or for failures that have been identified by the plan or plan sponsor but have not been corrected within a reasonable period of time after identification.

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Are You in Your 70s? The What, Who, and How of Delaying RMDs

Every year, retirement savers in their 70s are faced with either starting or delaying their required minimum distributions (RMDs): whether it be from an employer-sponsored retirement plan or an individual retirement arrangement (IRA). The required beginning date (RBD) determines how long an account owner can delay taking an RMD. As different RBDs may apply, the topic is notoriously confusing. But we are here to help.

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