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Showing results for tags '416'.
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Please indicate if the years of service of which defined benefit minimum serve as a function must also occur as years of participation. URL https://www.ecfr.gov/current/title-26/section-1.416-1 Citation 26 CFR § 1.416-1 M-2 Q. What is the defined benefit minimum? A. (a) The defined benefit minimum requires that the accrued benefit at any point in time must equal at least the product of (i) an employee's average annual compensation for the period of consecutive years (not exceeding five) when the employee had the highest aggregate compensation from the employer and (ii) the lesser of 2% per year of service with the employer or 20%. (b) For purposes of the defined benefit minimum, years of service with the employer are generally determined under the rules of section 411(a) (4), (5) and (6). However, a plan may disregard any year of service if the plan was not top-heavy for any plan year ending during such year of service, or if the year of service was completed in a plan year beginning before January 1, 1984. (c) In determining the average annual compensation for a period of consecutive years during which the employee had the largest aggregate compensation, years for which the employee did not earn a year of service under the rules of section 411(a) (4), (5), and (6) are to be disregarded. Thus, if an employee has received compensation from the employer during years one two, and three, and for each of these years the employee earned a year of service, then the employee's average annual compensation is determined by dividing the employee's aggregate compensation for these three years by three. If the employee fails to earn a year of service in the next year, but does earn a year of service in the fifth year, the employee's average annual compensation is calculated by dividing the employee's aggregate compensation for years one, two, three, and five by four. The compensation required to be taken into account is the compensation described in Question and Answer T-21. In addition, compensation received for years ending in plan years beginning before January 1, 1984, and compensation received for years beginning after the close of the last plan year in which the plan is top-heavy may be disregarded. M-2 seems to allow the reckoning of average compensation to remain vague, though usually § 415 amounts apply for this situation. If so, please indicate if the amendment of 415 as described affected 416 defined benefit minimums. 26 USC 415: Limitations on benefits and contribution under qualified plans (3) Average compensation for high 3 years For purposes of paragraph (1), a participant's high 3 years shall be the period of consecutive calendar years (not more than 3) during which the participant both was an active participant in the plan and had the greatest aggregate compensation from the employer. In the case of an employee within the meaning of section 401(c)(1), the preceding sentence shall be applied by substituting for "compensation from the employer" the following: "the participant's earned income (within the meaning of section 401(c)(2) but determined without regard to any exclusion under section 911)". https://uscode.house.gov/view.xhtml?req=granuleid:USC-prelim-title26-section415&num=0&edition=prelim Subsec. (b)(3). Pub. L. 109–280, §832(a), struck out "both was an active participant in the plan and" before "had the greatest".
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DB/DC combination. Eligible Employee (HCE, but not key) enters both plans 1-1-2016. They accrue benefits for 2016. Now, both plans are amended to exclude this HCE (but not key) by classification effective 1-1-2017. Not eligible for deferrals, match, PS or anything, and not eligible for DB. The plans are not frozen. Owners and NHCEs and other HCEs are still eligible and accruing in both plans. A colleague is arguing that continuing additional top-heavy minimums must be accrued even after 2016 by this HCE even though they are fully excluded, assuming they meet the top heavy accrual requirement (1000 hours for DB or last day for DC). Based on grey book 2001-35. The written plan language appears to require the participant be an eligible employee to earn a TH minimum accrual. Essentially meaning they must earn a top-heavy year of participation to accrue additional top heavy minimum accruals. If they are now excluded by class, they can't earn any more years of top-heavy participation. My colleague states that this HCE became a "participant" on 1-1-2016 and that fact requires the plan to provide top-heavy minimums to comply with the law/guidance, since they are still a "participant" with accounts and/or benefit accruals from the 2016 plan year. The document might not have a formula for them for any more normal accruals, but the plan would not meet the law’s requirements if the top-heavy minimum was not provided, causing a qualification issue. Your thoughts on this?
