Retirement Benefits
Page Contents
- Federal
- Summary
- Qualified Retirement Plans
- Defined Benefit Plans
- Benefit Formulas
- Unit Benefit
- Final Average Pay
- Integrated Approach
- Career Average Pay Formula
- Advantages and Disadvantages of Defined Benefit Plans
- Advantages
- Disadvantages
- Plan Design
- Eligibility Requirements
- Vesting Requirements
- Special Vesting Requirements
- Breaks in Service
- Funding the Plan
- Settlements or Curtailments
- Funding of Single-Employer Plans
- Minimum Required Contribution
- Special Rules for At-Risk Plans
- Maximum Tax-Deductible Contribution
- Funding of Multi-Employer Plans
- Minimum Required Contribution
- Maximum Tax-Deductible Contribution
- Funding-Based Limits on Benefits and Benefit Accruals Under Single-Employer Defined Benefit Plans
- Limitation of Plan Amendments Increasing Benefits
- Limitation on Accelerated Benefit Distributions
- Limitations on Benefit Accruals With Severe Funding Shortfalls
- Deemed Reduction of Funding Balance
- Calculating Benefits
- Forms of Payment
- Life Annuity Options
- Joint and Survivor Options
- Contingent Annuitant Options
- Defined Contribution Plans
- 401(k) Plans
- Profit Sharing Plans
- Money Purchase Plans
- Advantages and Disadvantages of Defined Contribution Plans
- Advantages
- Disadvantages
- Plan Design
- Eligibility Requirements
- Vesting Requirements
- Breaks in Service
- Financing/Funding Requirements
- Employer Contributions
- Employee Contributions
- Nonqualified Retirement Plans
- Excess Deferral Plans
- Top Hat Plans
- Funded or Unfunded
- Tax Implications for Nonqualified Retirement Plans
- Income Tax Implications
- Employment Tax (FICA/Medicare/FUTA) Implications
- Deferment in Nonaccount Balance Plans
- Hybrid Retirement Plans
- Cash Balance Pension Plans
- Pension Equity Plans
- Floor Offset Plans
- Age-Weighted Profit-Sharing Plans
- New Comparability Plans
- Target Benefit Plans
- DB(k) Plans
- Employee Stock Ownership Plan
- Helping Employees Prepare for Retirement
- Future Developments
Author: Gary Ceppos, CSB Associates, Inc.
Summary
- Defined benefit plans and defined contribution plans are either qualified or nonqualified. See Qualified Retirement Plans; Nonqualified Retirement Plans.
- If the retirement plan satisfies the appropriate requirements of the Internal Revenue Code and associated regulations, it is a qualified plan, which can have certain tax advantages. See Qualified Retirement Plans.
- Qualified retirement plans are governed by the Employee Retirement Income Security Act (ERISA) and by the Internal Revenue Code (IRC). See Qualified Retirement Plans.
- The two basic forms of qualified retirement plans are defined benefit plans and defined contribution plans. See Defined Benefit Plans; Defined Contribution Plans.
- A defined benefit plan provides a specific, determinable benefit upon retirement or other termination of employment. The employer bears the investment risk and contributes enough to the plan so employees receive their retirement benefit based on the plan's formula. See Defined Benefit Plans.
- A defined contribution plan credits each participant's account with employer and employee contributions, along with any gains or losses. The benefit at retirement is dependent upon contribution amounts and investment performance. See Defined Contribution Plans.
- Nonqualified retirement plans are generally provided to select individuals in the organization. These plans do not have to meet most ERISA or IRC requirements. See Nonqualified Retirement Plans.
- Participants in nonqualified plans may defer paying income tax on deferred funds. See Tax Implications for Nonqualified Retirement Plans.
- Employment taxes for nonqualified retirement plans have very specific requirements. See Employment Tax (FICA/Medicare/FUTA) Implications.
- Hybrid retirement plans combine features of both defined benefit and defined contribution plan designs. See Hybrid Retirement Plans.
- Retirement plans play an important role in helping employees save for the future. See Helping Employees Prepare for Retirement.