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Showing content with the highest reputation on 01/14/2025 in Posts

  1. Same. There is zero chance that a small employer is going to be able to track automatic enrollment, much less automatic increase. This is not my assessment alone – this is their assessment as well. They are very busy making widgets, and hopefully making money. This is not how they want to spend their time.
    2 points
  2. We encourage all of our clients to default to 10% MAE and probably 98% of them agree. We've had very little pushback.
    2 points
  3. If nothing else, 10% is probably a big enough contribution to push participants to make an affirmative election.
    1 point
  4. If the plan has a sophisticated recordkeeper that is tracking eligibility AND deferral elections then obviously it is doable. Even better if there is a 360 bridge. But the reality is many employers do not have that kind of capability available to them. So for example, there might be a recordkeeper, but they may not be tracking eligibility because the requisite data to do so may not be exportable from payroll in a useable format. Without full censsu data the RK cannot track eligibility and if you can't track eligibility than the RK cannot track auto enrollment. Oh and even if the RK can track eligibility and deferrals the employer has to be super meticulous about always checking the RK for any deferral elections that were made (because emails get lost, missed and diverted to junk). That's really hard to do if you have 15 employees (perhaps 5 contributers?) and one change every other year. Bottom line is all but those with the most robust reporting capabilities really must use the 10% approach because the reality is they cannot track auto enrollment/increases on their own (i speak in general terms obviously some people can do this). And I promise my description of the technology requirements above excludes a LOT of plan sponsors. ergo a LOT of employers should be using this 10% approach.
    1 point
  5. 401king

    Contribution Withdrawal

    Yes. Simple one to be honest. Just because a participant takes a mid-year distribution doesn't exempt them from being in testing.
    1 point
  6. Some TPAs and recordkeepers suggested to clients setting the initial (and final) default percentage at 10%. Their reason was to avoid yearly auto-escalations, which might be error-prone. The 10% works also to avoid difficulties about what default percentage applies to a participant the administrator didn’t apply a default to for 2025 and, if required, puts in later.
    1 point
  7. Lou S.

    Is my step-mother an HCE?

    If she legally adopted you then I think she is. If she's "just married to your dad" then no double attribution.
    1 point
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