Randy Watson Posted September 22, 2009 Posted September 22, 2009 Plan has a mandatory matching contribution provision and a last day of the plan year requirement to receive a match. Those who retire, are disabled or die prior to the end of the plan year can recieve an allocation (if they deferred). If we move to a discretionary formula during the plan year, we can avoid making allocations because participants have not accrued a right to receive the benefit (they don't accrue a right to receive unless they are employed at the end of the plan year). I assume those who retire, become disabled or die before or after the adoption of the amendment would be entitled to a match. Is that a correct assumption? I assume those who experienced these after the adoption date would not be entitled.
Jim Chad Posted September 23, 2009 Posted September 23, 2009 IMNTBHO I think you are close. If anyone has met any of the 3 exceptions, I believe you cannot change until next year. But I may be confusing this with the way non elective contributions work. I'm going to be interested to hear what others say.
austin3515 Posted September 23, 2009 Posted September 23, 2009 Anyone who dies, retires, becomes disabled BEFORE the amendment MUST receive the match in the document, since they have already accrued a right to the benefit. Everyone else is fair game, since they have not met the allcoation conditions due to the last day rule. Austin Powers, CPA, QPA, ERPA
Jim Chad Posted September 24, 2009 Posted September 24, 2009 If one person has died and gets the current fixed match and the others get a smaller match, this would not really change coverage testing.. Then, you have the ACP test for nondiscrimination. Is testing this simple or can someone think of something else?
austin3515 Posted September 24, 2009 Posted September 24, 2009 Ah well I suppose if you make the amendment the day after the owner retires, you would have a problem, since amendments cannot discriminate in favor of HCE's. But that sort of thing is ALWAYS something to watch out for in every decision you make. Austin Powers, CPA, QPA, ERPA
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