IRA Providers: SECURE Act 2.0 Expands EPCRS to Correct Inadvertent IRA Errors

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Morgan Lewis - ML Benefits

The SECURE 2.0 Act of 2022 (SECURE 2.0) made a number of changes in law intended to simplify the administration of retirement plans, including through the expansion of the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) Employee Plans Compliance Resolution System (EPCRS). EPCRS furthers the goal of ensuring that tax-qualified retirement plans operate in compliance with the Internal Revenue Code of 1986, as amended (the Code), by providing a mechanism for sponsors and administrators of those plans to correct certain documentary and operational errors that may arise in plan administration.

What the Expansion Means for IRA Providers

Prior to the passage of SECURE 2.0, EPCRS could not be used to correct inadvertent errors in the administration of individual retirement accounts and individual retirement annuities (collectively, IRAs). SECURE 2.0 notably expands EPCRS to allow IRA providers to address inadvertent failures with respect to IRAs.

This is welcome news for IRA providers that, until now, have had few options for correcting inadvertent administrative errors (e.g., seeking a voluntary closing agreement with the IRS, or putting the onus on the IRA owners to apply for a private letter ruling or seek other relief).

What Are ‘Inadvertent Failures’?

SECURE 2.0 provides that eligible “inadvertent failures” are failures that occur despite the existence of practices and procedures that satisfy the standards set forth in Section 4.04 of the current EPCRS in IRS Revenue Procedure 2021-30 or similar standards in the case of IRAs.

To meet the EPCRS standards, IRA providers must have formal or informal practices and procedures in place that are reasonably designed to promote and facilitate overall compliance in form and operation with applicable Code requirements, and should also be able to demonstrate that they routinely follow the established practices and procedures.

An inadvertent failure may occur through an IRA provider’s oversight or mistake in applying the established practices and procedures, or where an established procedure, while reasonable, is not sufficient to prevent the occurrence of the failure.

However, SECURE 2.0 makes clear that failures that are egregious, relate to the diversion or misuse of plan assets, or are directly or indirectly related to an abusive tax avoidance transaction are not eligible inadvertent failures. Future guidance on the EPCRS expansion may provide additional details regarding standards applicable to IRA providers.

When to Expect IRS Guidance

The IRS must issue guidance on the expansion of EPCRS to cover IRAs and the correction methods that may be used to correct inadvertent failures by December 29, 2024, which is two years after the enactment of SECURE 2.0.

Wish List for IRA Providers

SECURE 2.0 expressly calls out errors related to (1) the waiver of the excise tax on failures to take a required minimum distribution and (2) rules permitting a nonspouse beneficiary to return distributions to an inherited IRA in certain cases involving a service provider’s inadvertent error.

Notably, the statute includes language indicating that other inadvertent errors in the administration of IRAs may also be corrected under the expanded EPCRS. Future IRS guidance will hopefully cover the following inadvertent errors that, despite reasonable practices and procedures, sometimes plague IRA providers:

  • IRA contributions to incorrect customer accounts
  • IRA contributions credited to the wrong tax year
  • Failure to withhold proper taxes from IRA distributions
  • Transfers and rollovers to incorrect customer accounts
  • Failure to complete requested transactions by required deadline
  • Failure to properly title IRA account or checks related to an IRA distribution
  • Wrong IRA transaction processed; not following IRA owner instruction
  • Errors involving allocating inherited IRA assets

[View source.]

DISCLAIMER: Because of the generality of this update, the information provided herein may not be applicable in all situations and should not be acted upon without specific legal advice based on particular situations.

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