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403(b) Plan
- The retirement plan for employees of public schools, universities,
and nonprofit organizations such as hospitals, churches, and
charitable institutions. As with its cousin, the 401(k) plan, a
403(b) plan allows employees to make pretax contributions to their
plan. All contributions and earnings grow tax-free until funds are
withdrawn. Then, 100% of each withdrawal is taxed as ordinary
income, unless it qualifies for and is rolled over into an eligible
IRA plan.
Making Every Penny Count ...
By:
Lawrence Groves
More and more workers are leaving their jobs and taking their 401 k
retirement plan funds with them. While some are rolling their funds
over into IRAs or other qualified plans; many are taking their
distributions in cash. Once an employee has left the job, any
payments of earned vacation, sick or other leave made after leaving
the job were not considered for inclusion in deferrals to Solo 401k,
401(k), or 403(b) plans. These plans' definition of compensation
excluded any post employment earnings as the IRS excluded it from
the definition. As far as these plans' were concerned, it's as if
the money was never earned.
Since the post employment earnings were not included in 401 k or 403
b compensation, these earnings were not a factor in any non
discrimination or top heavy testing, as well as not being available
for profit sharing or matching contributions.
Depending upon the employers' policy on vacation, sick or other
leave accumulation, this exclusion could be a substantial amount. As
an example, suppose you are earning $50,000 when you leave your
company. You've been working hard, haven't needed a sick day in 3
years and haven't taken a vacation in two years. You have
accumulated four weeks of vacation and twelve sick days. The
vacation and sick leave represent $6400 in additional income. Had
you had been contributing 10% to your plan; $640 extra would have
been deposited into your account. That $640 at 7% for 20 years is
$2,476.60 for a 400% return. But that 400% return has been left on
the table up until now.
On May 25, 2005 and retroactive back to January 1, 2005 the IRS has
redefined section 415 Compensation to include post severance
compensation if it's paid within 2-1/2 months after separation from
service. But this is only for payments that would have been paid if
the participant had continued in employment or if they are for bona
fide sick, vacation and other leave. The leave-related payments can
be included only if the employee could have used the leave had
employment continued. This new definition will still exclude
severance payments due to severance of employment
Employers can now amend their 401k retirement or 403b retirement
plans to accommodate the new definition but may find themselves
making additional contributions for compensation paid in the next
year. Employees can add more contributions to their accounts. Plan
administrators may find that the new definition of Section 415
compensation presents some administrative challenges in tracking the
information, separating it from non eligible compensation and
performing timely non discrimination testing.
Want to retire with $1,127,376.04? Visit
Solo 401k Retirement or
Women's Solo 401k Retirement
Contact Lawrence Groves at Lawrence@solo-k.com or call 727-277-4137
....