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IRS Clarifies Provisions of the SECURE and the Bipartisan American Miners Acts
July 13, 2020

Business Credit
The SECURE ACT added a new Code Sec 45T, which provides a business credit to an eligible employer that establishes an eligible automatic contribution arrangement under a qualified employer plan. The credit is equal to $500 per year and applies to tax years beginning after December 31, 2019.

The notice clarifies than an eligible employer can only receive a credit during a single three year credit period. For example, if Employer X includes an automatic contribution arrangement for Plan A during 2021, 2022, and 2023 and then includes an automatic contribution arrangement for Plan B during 2022, 2023, and 2024, they can receive no more than $500 as a credit for 2021, 2022, and 2023, and are not permitted to receive a credit for 2024. The employer must include the same arrangement in the same plan for years two and three.

The credit applies separately to each eligible employer that participates in a multiple employer plan.

IRA Contribution Age Limit
Prior to the SECURE Act, an individual was not permitted to make contributions to their IRA if they were age 70 and 1/2 or older by the last day of the year. The SECURE Act eliminated that age limit for contributions after 2019.

The notice clarifies that a financial institution is not required to accept contributions after age 70 and 1/2, but if it does choose to accept them, it must amend its IRA contract and distribute a copy of the amendment and disclosure statement to each individual.

Individuals are not permitted to offset the amount of their required minimum distribution by the amount of their post-age 70 and 1/2 contributions for the same year.

Individuals are able to take their required minimum distributions as qualified charitable distributions. The example below illustrates how this would interact with the new lack of age limit on contributions.

Imagine Bob is over 70 and a 1/2 before 2020. He deducts $5,000 for contributions for 2020 and 2021, but makes no contribution for 2022. He makes no qualified charitable distributions for 2020 and makes qualified charitable distributions of $6,000 for 2021 and $6,500 for 2022. Bob's excludable amount of qualified charitable distributions for 2021 is the $6,000 of qualified charitable distributions reduced by the $10,000 aggregate amount of post-age 70 1/2 contributions for 2021 and earlier taxable years. For this individual, these amounts are $5,000 for each of 2020 and 2021, resulting in no excludable amount of qualified charitable distributions for 2021 (that is, $6,000 - $10,000 = ($4,000)). The excludable amount of the qualified charitable distributions for 2022 is $2,500 ($6,500 - $4,000 = $2,500). Because the $4,000 amount reduced the excludable amount of qualified charitable distributions for 2022, that $4,000 amount does not apply again in later years, and no amount of post-age 70 1/2 contributions remains to reduce the excludable amount of qualified charitable distributions for subsequent taxable years.

Qualified Birth or Adoption Distributions
Code Sec. 72(t)(1) generally imposes a 10 percent additional tax on an early distribution from a qualified retirement plan (including an IRA or Roth IRA), unless the distribution qualifies for an exception. The SECURE Act provides a new exception to the 10 percent penalty for any qualified birth or adoption distribution up to $5,000 from an applicable retirement plan if made during the 1-year period beginning on the date on which the child is born or the adoption is finalized. The parent must include the name, age and the Taxpayer Identification Number of the child on their tax return the year the distribution is made.

The distribution can be made from any eligible retirement plan described in Code Sec. 402(c)(8)(B), other than a defined benefit plan. Therefore, a Code Sec. 401(a) qualified defined contribution plan, a Code Sec. 403(a) annuity plan, a Code Sec. 403(b) annuity contract, a governmental Code Sec. 457(b) plan, or an IRA is eligible to permit a qualified birth or adoption distribution. Eligible adoptees include any individual who has not attained age 18 or is physically or mentally incapable of self support as defined in Code Sec. 72(m)(7), but does not include an individual who is a child of the taxpayer's spouse. Each parent can receive a qualified distribution up to $5,000 with respect to the same adoptee, and can receive multiple distributions if they have multiple births (ex. Twins or triplets).

Eligible retirement plans are not required to permit distributions for qualified birth or adoption distributions, but if they do not, individuals can still take the distribution and treat it as a qualified birth or adoption distribution on their federal tax return. Plans must accept recontribution of the distribution, if the following apply:

(a) the plan permits qualified birth or adoption distributions;

(b) the individual received a qualified birth or adoption distribution from that plan; and

(c) the individual is eligible to make a rollover contribution to that plan at the time the individual wishes to recontribute the qualified birth or adoption distribution to the plan.

Qualified birth or adoption distributions are not treated as eligible rollover distributions for purposes of the direct rollover rules, Code Sec. 402(f) notice requirements, and the mandatory withholding rules.

Difficulty of Care Payments
Code Sec. 408(o) provides that designated nondeductible contributions may be made on behalf of an individual to an IRA. A difficulty of care payment is a type of qualified foster care payment that is excludable from gross income.

The notice clarifies that difficulty of care payments received by an employee from a person other than his or her employer are not included as compensation. If an employer does not make difficulty of care payments, then the plan does not need to amend the plan to include the payments in the plan's definition of compensation. However, if the employer begins to make difficulty of care payments, the plan must be amended.

Participation Rights Expanded for Part-Time Employees
Prior to the SECURE Act, employers that maintained a 401(k) plan were not required to offer it to part-time employees who work less than 1,000 hours per year. The rules require only that employers offer the plan to any employee who has both attained age 21 and has completed at least one year of service. A "year of service" is defined as a 12-month period during which the employee has worked at least 1,000 hours. Someone who works a bare 1,000 hours would be averaging 19.2 hours per week.

Under the SECURE Act, employers with 401(k) plans must offer employees who work between 500 and 1000 hours year an additional track to 401(k) participation. Employees must be able to satisfy participation requirements by completing either:

  • the existing one year of service requirement, working at least 1,000-hours, or
  • the new three consecutive 12-month periods of service requirement working at least 500 hours in each period.
The three-consecutive-years-of-service track is not available for an employee unless the employee reaches age 21 by the close of the last of the 12-month periods.

For purposes of determining vesting rights to employer contributions for 500-hour track employees, each 12-month period for which the employee has at least 500 hours of service is treated as a year of service. For purposes of the break-in-service rules, a 1-year break in service includes a year in which the employee has not completed at least 500 hours of service.

These amendments apply to plan years beginning after December 31, 2020, except that 12-
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