MANDATORY FOR PLANS TO ACCEPT CATCH-UP CONTRIBUTIONS
Effective for: Taxable years beginning after 12.31.2023 (extended to 12.31.2025 under IRS guidance)
Applies to: 401(k) plans, 403(b) plans, and governmental 457(b) plans
In general, the Tax Code permits a plan to allow participants ages 50 and over the ability to make elective salary deferrals over and above the normal annual limit. These are referred to as catch-up contributions.
Under SECURE 2.0, if a plan wants to continue to make catch-up contributions available, it must comply with the following:
- Any catch-up contributions made by a participant whose wages (for FICA tax purposes) from the employer sponsoring the plan exceed $145,000 (as adjusted for inflation) in the preceding calendar year must be made on a Roth basis.
- If the preceding rule applies to any participant for a plan year, the plan must allow (but does not need to require) all other participants to elect to make catch-up contributions on a Roth basis.
As part of this provision, Congress also made a conforming amendment that eliminated the section of the Tax Code that permits catch-up contributions in the first place. This has been identified by various industry participants. On May 23, 2023, the House Ways and Means Committee and Senate Finance Committee leaders sent a letter to the Department of the Treasury and IRS acknowledging this issue and noting that they intend to introduce a technical correction to address it.
However, other open questions remain around implementing this provision. For example, there are questions about plan sponsors tracking FICA wages, whether the IRS will extend the express requirements of the rule in connection with mid-year hires or Roth deferrals generally, and how the rule will interplay with using re-characterized catch-up contributions to pass non-discrimination testing.
Considering these open questions and other concerns around implementing this provision by January 1, 2024, the IRS published Notice 2023-62 on August 25, 2023. This notice announced a two-year “administrative transition period” during which enforcement of this rule will be delayed. In addition, the IRS noted that participants can continue making catch-up contributions and it will issue additional guidance on the rule to address the open questions before the new effective date.