ldr Posted April 4, 2019 Posted April 4, 2019 Good morning to all, I have been asked to research the following: " Is it acceptable for salary deferrals to be funded well after the end of the plan year for self-employed individuals, i.e. sole proprietors. This is in the case of an ERISA plan, not a solo 401(k) plan. " Your thoughts, opinions, and explanations of your practices are appreciated, as always.
justanotheradmin Posted April 4, 2019 Posted April 4, 2019 I agree with jpod. I think deferrals should be deposited as soon as reasonable after income is known for the year. Sometimes income isn't known until substantially later after year end. We have run into situations where deposits occur during the year, or shortly after year end, but later on the CPA determines the earned income is negative. This means those deferral deposits never should have occurred, and now there is excess money in the trust that has to be dealt with. I'm a stranger on the internet. Nothing I write is tax or legal advice. I'd like a witty saying here, but I don't have any. When in doubt, what does the plan document say?
ldr Posted April 4, 2019 Author Posted April 4, 2019 Thank you, jpod and justanotheradmin. I have worked in the past for one TPA firm where the owner was adamant that partners and sole proprietors absolutely must get their deferrals deposited prior to 12/31 (for a calendar year plan). I have also worked for TPA firms where the owners more or less threw up their hands and said "I give up. Let the partners and sole proprietors do whatever they please." And that wasn't being flippant - it was because they never seemed to know what their incomes actually were until the summer following 12/31. So those TPA owners took the position that partners and sole proprietors could make their deferrals as late as the filing date for their own tax returns including any extensions. Reading the latest out of Sal Tripodi's encyclopedia, he seems to be saying that as long as a deferral election is signed by 12/31, the actual funding can be as late as the determination of the income for the year.
jpod Posted April 4, 2019 Posted April 4, 2019 A Schedule C filer does not have to make a deferral election by 12/31.
Bird Posted April 4, 2019 Posted April 4, 2019 13 minutes ago, jpod said: A Schedule C filer does not have to make a deferral election by 12/31. I think they do - make an election but not a deposit. Ed Snyder
jpod Posted April 4, 2019 Posted April 4, 2019 Respectively disagree. We've been down this road before on BenefitsLink.
Tom Poje Posted April 4, 2019 Posted April 4, 2019 The regs are quite specific A partner's earned income for a year is deemed to be currently available on the last day of the partnership taxable year. As a result, a partner in a partnership (or sole proprietor) may not make a salary reduction election after the last day of the partnership or sole proprietorship taxable year after the last day of that year. [Treas. Reg. § 1.401(k)-1(a)(6)(iii) Bill Presson 1
ldr Posted April 4, 2019 Author Posted April 4, 2019 @Tom Poje thanks for jumping in here. Do you agree that it's okay for the actual deposit of the deferrals for the partners and sole proprietors to occur deep into the summer following 12/31, as long as they have completed a salary deferral election form prior to 12/31? (That's assuming that it takes that long to determine their earnings, of course)
Tom Poje Posted April 4, 2019 Posted April 4, 2019 yes, in fact the preamble to the regs anticipated the opposite, making deferrals before it is even known what the comp would be One commentator asked for clarification of the interaction between these timing rules and the rule under the regulations that treats a self-employed individual's earned income as being currently available on the last day of the individual's taxable year and whether this last day rule precludes a partner from making elective contributions during the year through a reduction in the partner's draw. The restriction on the timing of contributions is not intended to prevent a partner from deferring amounts that are paid to the partner throughout the year on account of services performed by the partner during the year, and the final regulations have been modified to clarify this point. However, self-employed individuals who take advantage of this opportunity to defer amounts during the year must make sure that the amount contributed during the year will not exceed the limits (such as the limits of section 415) that will apply to the individual, based on the individual's actual earned income for the relevant period.
Mike Preston Posted April 4, 2019 Posted April 4, 2019 3 hours ago, jpod said: Respectively disagree. We've been down this road before on BenefitsLink. Link to a thread or two?
jpod Posted April 4, 2019 Posted April 4, 2019 10 minutes ago, Mike Preston said: Link to a thread or two? I'm not good at finding old links. I'm not saying everyone agrees with me. My analysis is this: The usually required election that must be made before the compensation becomes currently available is an agreement between the employee and the employer, or the partner and the partnership. The reason the IRS regulation does not address a Schedule C filer is that even the IRS recognizes that it would be a complete fiction for the Schedule C filer to enter into an agreement with himself. Those who are very conservative will advise the Schedule C filer to sign some sort of election form on or before December 31 and stick it in a file or the cookie jar, and that's fine, but I am absolutely confident that it is not necessary.
Luke Bailey Posted April 4, 2019 Posted April 4, 2019 2 hours ago, Tom Poje said: The regs are quite specific A partner's earned income for a year is deemed to be currently available on the last day of the partnership taxable year. As a result, a partner in a partnership (or sole proprietor) may not make a salary reduction election after the last day of the partnership or sole proprietorship taxable year after the last day of that year. [Treas. Reg. § 1.401(k)-1(a)(6)(iii) jpod, your powers of persuasion are so strong you had me going for a minute, but I re-read the reg. It specifically addresses sole proprietors and puts them under the same rule! What am I missing? Luke Bailey Senior Counsel Clark Hill PLC 214-651-4572 (O) | LBailey@clarkhill.com 2600 Dallas Parkway Suite 600 Frisco, TX 75034
Kevin C Posted April 4, 2019 Posted April 4, 2019 Actually, the cite Tom gave addresses both partners and sole proprietors. Quote (iii) Timing of self-employed individual's cash or deferred election. For purposes of paragraph (a)(3)(iv) of this section, a partner's compensation is deemed currently available on the last day of the partnership taxable year and a sole proprietor's compensation is deemed currently available on the last day of the individual's taxable year. Accordingly, a self-employed individual may not make a cash or deferred election with respect to compensation for a partnership or sole proprietorship taxable year after the last day of that year. See §1.401(k)-2(a)(4)(ii) for the rules regarding when these contributions are treated as allocated.
jpod Posted April 4, 2019 Posted April 4, 2019 I stand corrected on what the regulation says. I still believe it is ridiculous. What would the election say? Dear jpod: Please contribute out of my earned income for 2019 the lesser of $X or the maximum elective contribution permitted under the Code. Sincerely yours, jpod.
Luke Bailey Posted April 4, 2019 Posted April 4, 2019 The same thing it would say for a partner in a partnership who does not know exactly what he or she will make for the year, and therefore how much he or she can or wants to contribute, but is required by his/her managing partner to submit (by hand, email, text, or fax) an irrevocable election by midnight 12/31 of year N: "I hereby elect irrevocably to contribute the greater of $X or Y% of my "earned income" [formulas may vary, but must be objectively determinable in only one way once earned income is known] as "earned income" is explained in the firm's 401(k) plan's Summary Plan Description (the "Plan's SPD") to the Plan for the N plan year." The only difference with a sole proprietor is that he or she would have an easier time faking it. Luke Bailey Senior Counsel Clark Hill PLC 214-651-4572 (O) | LBailey@clarkhill.com 2600 Dallas Parkway Suite 600 Frisco, TX 75034
ldr Posted April 4, 2019 Author Posted April 4, 2019 @jpod, yes, silly as it seems, here's what Sal says, Volume 11, page 64: "The requirement for the partner to make an election by the last day of the partnership year applies even if the final tax accounting for the partnership is not completed until a later date and the actual amount of the partner's earned income is not determinable until such later date. The deferral may be contributed after that date but the election to defer may not be made later than that date. The election may state the deferral as a dollar amount or as a percentage of the partner's earned income. It should also be acceptable to state that the deferral election as a formula (e.g. the greatest deferral amount that would be permitted under the ADP test)." I have administered plans in the past where the partners filled out an election form and simply put MAX in the blank where the dollar amount or the percentage would go. We just took it to be the statutory max as reduced by any considerations like failed ADP test, not enough income to support the contribution - in other words, the MAX possible under the circumstances....
jpod Posted April 4, 2019 Posted April 4, 2019 He is talking only about partners in that excerpt, isn't he? If he has a discussion about Schedule C filers please share.
ldr Posted April 4, 2019 Author Posted April 4, 2019 I did not see Schedule C specifically addressed in this passage but I will see if I can find something else on that in here...
jpod Posted April 4, 2019 Posted April 4, 2019 11 minutes ago, Luke Bailey said: The same thing it would say for a partner in a partnership who does not know exactly what he or she will make for the year, and therefore how much he or she can or wants to contribute, but is required by his/her managing partner to submit (by hand, email, text, or fax) an irrevocable election by midnight 12/31 of year N: "I hereby elect irrevocably to contribute the greater of $X or Y% of my "earned income" [formulas may vary, but must be objectively determinable in only one way once earned income is known] as "earned income" is explained in the firm's 401(k) plan's Summary Plan Description (the "Plan's SPD") to the Plan for the N plan year." The only difference with a sole proprietor is that he or she would have an easier time faking it. That's not the only difference. The critical difference is that in the case of a Schedule C filer there is only one party, whereas in the case of a p/s there are two parties: one who is in control of the payment of the compensation and one who will receive it.
jpod Posted April 4, 2019 Posted April 4, 2019 1 minute ago, ldr said: I did not see Schedule C specifically addressed in this passage but I will see if I can find something else on that in here... I am not asking you to do any work but you cited Sal as rejecting my view but in fact what you shared didn't do that.
ldr Posted April 4, 2019 Author Posted April 4, 2019 @jpod Yeah I found it. Next page, 65. "Application of rule to sole proprietor. Should a sole proprietor of an unincorporated business (or the sole owner of an LLC that is taxed as an unincorporated sole proprietorship) be subject to the same rules as discussed above for partners? The regulations issued in 1991 did not address this issue, but Treas. Reg. 1.401(k)-1(a)(6) amends the regulations to apply the "currently available" rule described in 1.f above to sole proprietors. As a result, a sole proprietor's deferral election also needs to be made before the close of his or her taxable year in order to apply to self-employment earnings for that year. This makes sense and it should be reasonable to apply this rule to sole proprietors for years prior to the effective date of the proposed regulations. Most sole proprietors will be on a calendar taxable year, so in most cases, the sole proprietor's earnings are treated under this rule as currently available on December 31, and a deferral election could apply to the sole proprietor's earnings for such a calendar year only if made by December 31 of that year." etc.
ldr Posted April 4, 2019 Author Posted April 4, 2019 @jpod I never mind looking things up and doing a little work - people for the most part have been very nice on here about helping me with questions, even dumb questions. When I throw something up I am grateful if anyone answers and I will share anything I can find that looks helpful...no worries!
Luke Bailey Posted April 4, 2019 Posted April 4, 2019 1 hour ago, jpod said: That's not the only difference. The critical difference is that in the case of a Schedule C filer there is only one party, whereas in the case of a p/s there are two parties: one who is in control of the payment of the compensation and one who will receive it. jpod, I think that if a tree falls in a forest, it makes a sound even if there's no one there to hear it. Bill Presson 1 Luke Bailey Senior Counsel Clark Hill PLC 214-651-4572 (O) | LBailey@clarkhill.com 2600 Dallas Parkway Suite 600 Frisco, TX 75034
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