Sec. 301. Recovery of retirement plan overpayments |
Fiduciaries for plans that have mistakenly overpaid a participant must take reasonable steps to recoup such overpayment, such as collecting the overpayment from the participant or employer in order to maintain the tax-qualified status of the plan and comply with ERISA. EPCRS includes various procedures for correcting overpayments made from defined benefit and defined contribution plans. The Pension Benefit Guaranty Corporation (“PBGC”) also has overpayment recoupment policies for terminating defined benefit plans. |
A 401(a), 403(a), 403(b), and governmental plan (but not including a 457(b) plan) will not fail to be a tax favored plan merely because the plan fails to recover an “inadvertent benefit overpayment” or otherwise amends the plan to permit this increased benefit. In certain cases, the overpayment is also treated as an eligible rollover distribution. There is also fiduciary relief for failure to make the plan whole. However, the plan sponsor must still satisfy minimum funding requirements and prevent/restore an impermissible forfeiture. For ERISA-covered plans, if the plan sponsor elects to offset future plan payments to recover the overpayment, restrictions will be imposed on the offset. Moreover, restrictions will be imposed on collection efforts from the participant (e.g., no interest, must recover within three years). |
Effective upon enactment with certain retroactive relief for prior good faith interpretations of existing guidance. |
Sec. 302. Reduction in excise tax on certain accumulations in qualified retirement plans |
Existing law imposes an excise tax on an individual if the amount distributed to an individual during a taxable year is less than the RMD under the plan for that year. The excise tax is equal to 50% of the shortfall (that is, 50% of the amount by which the RMD exceeds the actual distribution). (The excise tax may be abated under a reasonable cause exception or through a VCP submission.) |
Reduces the excise tax for failure to take RMDs from 50% of the shortfall to 25%. Further reduces the excise tax to 10% if the individual corrects the shortfall during a two-year correction window. |
Effective for taxable years beginning after the date of enactment. |
Sec. 303. Retirement savings lost and found |
N/A |
Directs the DOL to create an online searchable “Lost and Found” database to collect information on benefits owed to missing, lost or non-responsive participants and beneficiaries in tax-qualified retirement plans and to assist such plan participants and beneficiaries in locating those benefits. This applies to tax-qualified defined benefit and defined contribution plans subject to ERISA vesting provisions. |
Directs the creation of the database no later than two years after the date of enactment of SECURE 2.0. |
Sec. 304. Updating dollar limit for mandatory distributions |
Under current law, employers may immediately distribute without the consent of the participant and directly rollover former employees’ retirement accounts from a workplace retirement plan into an IRA if their balances are no more than $5,000. |
Increases the involuntary cash-out limit to $7,000 from $5,000. |
Effective for distributions after December 31, 2023. |
Sec. 305. Expansion of Employee Plans Compliance Resolution System (“EPCRS”) |
Under existing rules, employer sponsors of qualified plans have only limited opportunities to self-correct plan errors under EPCRS. This generally involves operational failures that are insignificant (or otherwise corrected within a three-year period). |
Allows any eligible inadvertent failure (as defined in Sec. 305(e)) to be self-corrected under EPCRS at any time (regardless of whether the error is significant or insignificant) unless (i) the IRS identified the failure before self-corrective measures commenced, or (ii) the self-correction was not completed in a reasonable period after the failure was identified. A loan error that is an eligible inadvertent failure may be self-corrected under EPCRS, and the DOL must treat the self-corrected failure as meeting the requirements of the DOL’s Voluntary Fiduciary Correction Program, but may impose reporting or other procedural requirements. This covers 401(a), 403(a), 403(b), 408(p)(SIMPLE IRAs) and 408(k) (SEPs). The Treasury Department is directed to expand EPCRS to (i) allow IRA custodians to address eligible inadvertent failures, and (ii) add preapproved correction methods for eligible inadvertent failures, including general principles of correction, and to update Revenue Procedure 2021-30 for these changes within two years after enactment. |
Effective upon enactment. |
Sec. 306. Eliminate the “first day of the month” requirement for governmental Section 457(b) plans |
Currently, participants in a 457(b) plan generally may only defer compensation if an agreement providing for the deferral has been entered into before the first day of the month in which the compensation is paid or made available. |
Conforms rule for governmental 457(b) plans to rule for 401(k) and 403(b) plans by allowing participants of governmental 457(b) plans to change their deferral rate at any time before the compensation is available to the individual. For tax-exempt 457(b) plans, participants may defer compensation for any calendar month only if an agreement providing for such deferral has been entered into before the beginning of such month. |
Effective for taxable years beginning after the date of enactment. |
Sec. 307. One-time election for qualified charitable distribution (“QCD”) to split-interest entity; increase in qualified charitable distribution limitation |
Under current law, certain charitable IRA distributions (called qualified charitable distributions) up to $100,000 are excluded from gross income of the individual. QCDs also count for minimum required distribution purposes. |
Allows individuals to make a one-time election of up to $50,000 (indexed for inflation) for qualifying charitable distributions to certain split-interest entities, including charitable remainder annuity trusts, charitable remainder unitrusts, and charitable gift annuity. Indexes the $100,000 limit, and new, one-time $50,000 limit, to inflation for taxable years beginning after 2023. |
One-time election of up to $50K is effective for distributions made in taxable years beginning after the date of enactment.
Indexed distribution limits are effective for distributions in taxable years ending after the date of enactment. |
Sec. 308. Distributions to firefighters |
Current law permits “qualified public safety employees” in a governmental plan to take retirement withdrawals beginning at age 50 after separation from service without incurring a 10% early withdrawal penalty. |
Extends the age 50 early withdrawal exception for qualified public safety employees to also apply to private sector firefighters receiving distributions from a qualified retirement plan or 403(b) plan. |
Effective for distributions made after the date of enactment. |
Sec. 309. Exclusion of certain disability-related first responder retirement payments |
Disability-related retirement plan payments are typically included in the recipient’s taxable income. |
For first responders, excludes service-connected, disability pension payments (from a 401(a), 403(a), governmental 457(b), or 403(b) plan) from gross income after reaching retirement age up to an annualized excludable disability amount. |
Effective for plan years beginning after December 31, 2026. |
Sec. 310. Application of top-heavy rules to defined contribution plans covering excludable employees |
Generally, for a defined contribution plan, the top-heavy minimum contribution is 3% of the participant’s compensation. A defined contribution plan is top-heavy if the aggregate of accounts for key employees exceeds 60% of the aggregate accounts for non-key employees. If a plan is top-heavy, minimum contributions or benefits must be provided for non-key employees and, in some cases, faster vesting is required. |
Allows a top-heavy plan that covers otherwise excludable employees (employees that do not satisfy the Code’s minimum age and service eligibility rules – age 21 and one year of service) to perform separate top-heavy testing for excludable and non-excludable employees. |
Effective for plan years beginning after December 31, 2023. |
Sec. 311. Repayment of qualified birth or adoption distribution limited to three years |
Following the SECURE Act, current law does not limit the period during which a qualified birth or adoption distribution may be repaid and qualify as a rollover distribution. |
Requires qualified birth or adoption distributions to be recontributed within three years of the distribution in order to qualify as a rollover contribution. (This aligns the rule with similar disaster relief provisions and simplifies plan administration.) |
Effective for distributions made after the date of the enactment. For prior distributions, the repayment period ends December 31, 2025. |
Sec. 312. Employer may rely on employee certifying that deemed hardship distribution conditions are met |
Applicable Treasury regulations provide that hardship distributions may be made on account of an immediate and heavy financial need or an unforeseeable emergency, if limited to the amount necessary to satisfy the financial need. These needs are evaluated using facts and circumstances, but there are certain safe harbor events that are deemed to be on account of a hardship. Employees must provide a written representation that they have insufficient cash or liquid assets reasonably available to satisfy the need. (In general, the employee must submit records documenting the safe harbor event constituting a hardship, although there is a streamlined hardship documentation method outlined in the Internal Revenue Manual that uses a self-certification process if certain requirements are met.) |
Allows a plan administrator to rely on an employee’s self-certification that they have had a safe harbor event that constitutes a deemed hardship for purposes of taking a hardship withdrawal from a 401(k) plan or a 403(b) plan. The administrator can also rely on the employee’s certification that the distribution is not in excess of the amount required to satisfy the financial need and that the employee has no alternative means reasonably available to satisfy the financial need. A similar rule applies for purposes of unforeseeable emergency distributions from governmental Section 457(b) plans. |
Effective for plan years beginning after the date of enactment. |
Sec. 313. Individual retirement plan statute of limitations for excise tax on excess contributions and certain accumulations |
The Code imposes excise taxes on excess contributions made to IRAs (Section 4973) and failures to distribute RMDs from plans and IRAs (Section 4974). The statute of limitations with respect to a tax liability for excess retirement contributions or accumulations generally starts to run within three years after the excise tax return (e.g., Form 5329) is filed, but if such a return is never filed, the statute does not begin to run. |
For purposes of any excise tax imposed on excess contributions or on certain accumulations in connection with an IRA (Code Section 4973 and 4974), the bill provides that the applicable return to start the statute of limitation includes the income tax return filed by the person on whom the tax is imposed for the year in which the act (or failure to act) giving rise to the liability for such tax occurred. Therefore, the filing of Form 5329 should no longer be required to start the statute of limitations for these penalties. However, if the income tax return is used to start the running of the statute of limitation, the statute of limitations is six years rather than three years for Code Section 4973 excise tax. And this relief does not apply if the 4973 excise tax is due to acquiring property for less than fair market value. For a person not required to file a return for that year, the statute of limitations begins on the date that the return would have been required to be filed. |
Effective upon enactment. |
Sec. 314. Penalty-free withdrawal from retirement plans for individual in case of domestic abuse |
N/A |
Permits certain penalty-free early withdrawals in the case of domestic abuse in an amount not to exceed the lesser of $10,000 (indexed) or 50% of the value of the employee’s vested account under the plan. In addition, such eligible distributions to a domestic abuse victim (defined by the amendment to Code Sec. 72(t)(2)(K)(iii)(II)) may be recontributed to applicable eligible retirement plans, subject to certain requirements. (This is similar to the QBAD provision.) This also provides for an in-service distribution event for 401(k), 403(b), and governmental 457(b) plans. |
Effective for distributions made after December 31, 2023. |
Sec. 315. Reform of family attribution rule |
Current law provides family attribution rules to address scenarios in which a person, such as a family member, is treated as having an ownership interest in a business. These rules take into account the laws on familial property ownership in a community property state. These rules are important for determining who is the employer and in the controlled group/affiliated service group for various testing and distribution rights. |
Adds special rules to address family attribution and to disregard community property laws for purposes of determining ownership of a business. To the extent these changes result in changes to the members of a controlled group or affiliated service group, transition relief under Code Section 410(b)(6)(C) will apply. |
Effective for plan years beginning after December 31, 2023. |
Sec. 316. Amendments to increase benefit accruals under plan for previous plan year allowed until employer tax return due date. |
Current law provides a remedial amendment period for plans to meet qualification requirements. In general, a discretionary plan amendment (which would include an increase in benefit accruals) must be adopted by the end of the plan year in which it is effective. |
Allows plans to make discretionary plan amendments (subject to satisfaction of applicable Code requirements) to increase benefits until the employer’s tax filing deadline (including extensions) for the immediately preceding taxable year in which the amendment is effective. This applies to stock bonus, pension, profit-sharing, or annuity plan to increase benefits for the preceding plan year (other than increasing matching contributions). |
Effective for plan years beginning after December 31, 2023. |
Sec. 317. Retroactive first year elective deferrals for sole proprietors |
Under Section 201 of the SECURE Act, a Section 401(k) plan of a sole proprietor can be funded with employer contributions as of the due date for the business’s return, but elective deferrals may not be made retroactively. |
For a sole proprietor’s first plan year (if the owner is the only employee), allows elective deferrals to be made by the tax filing due date (determined without regard to any extensions). |
Effective for plan years beginning after enactment. |
Sec. 318. Performance benchmarks for asset allocation funds |
Existing regulations require a plan fiduciary to supply certain performance and benchmark data to participants about their investment options. |
Requires the Secretary of Labor to modify existing regulations within two years of enactment to provide that, in the case of a designated investment alternative which contains a mix of asset classes, a plan administrator may, but is not required to, use a benchmark which is a blend of different broad-based securities market indices. DOL has to submit a report to Congress three years after the applicability date of the final regulations. |
Effective upon enactment. |
Sec. 319. Review and report to the Congress relating to reporting and disclosure requirements |
Plans are currently required to file reports with federal agencies (e.g., Form 5500) and provide numerous notices to participants (e.g., Summary Plan Description). |
Requires the Secretaries of Labor and Treasury and the Director of the PBGC to study the disclosure and reporting requirements on plan sponsors and submit a report to Congress within three years of enactment addressing possible avenues for simplification, consolidation, or standardization. |
Effective upon enactment. |
Sec. 320. Eliminating unnecessary plan requirements related to unenrolled participants |
Under current rules, employees who choose not to participate in an employer-sponsored plan (“unenrolled participants”) are required to receive numerous communications from the plan sponsor. |
Amends the requirements under ERISA and the Code for defined contribution plan sponsor notices to unenrolled participants to consist solely of an annual notice of eligibility to participate during the annual enrollment period (and providing any document so entitled upon request). |
Effective for plan years beginning after December 31, 2022. |
Sec. 321. Review of pension risk transfer interpretive bulletin |
DOL Interpretive Bulletin 95-1 provides guidance for fiduciaries selecting an annuity provider for a defined benefit plan, including “annuity liftouts” under ongoing plans. |
Requires DOL to review Interpretive Bulletin 95-1 regarding pension risk transfers to determine whether amendments are warranted and to report to Congress its findings within one year of enactment. |
Effective upon enactment. |
Sec. 322. Tax treatment of IRA involved in a prohibited transaction |
If an IRA owner or beneficiary engages in a prohibited transaction with respect to the IRA, the IRA loses its tax-favored status and ceases to be an IRA as of the first day of the taxable year in which the prohibited transaction occurs. As a result, the IRA is treated as distributing to the individual on the first day of that taxable year the fair market value of all of the assets in the account. |
Clarifies that, for this purpose, each IRA of the individual shall be treated as a separate contract. |
Effective for taxable years beginning after enactment. |
Sec. 323. Clarification of substantially equal periodic payment rule |
Present law imposes a 10% tax penalty on early distributions from tax-preferred retirement accounts, but an exception applies to substantially equal periodic payments that are made over the account owner’s life expectancy if certain criteria are met. |
Clarifies that the exception for substantially equal periodic payments continues to apply after certain rollovers and for certain annuities. |
Effective for transfers, rollovers, and exchanges after December 31, 2023, and effective for annuity distributions on or after the date of enactment of SECURE 2.0. |
Sec. 324. Treasury guidance on rollovers |
N/A |
Requires the Secretary of the Treasury to develop and release sample forms to simplify, standardize, facilitate and expedite (i) rollovers of eligible rollover distributions from employer-sponsored retirement plans to another such plan or IRA, and (ii) trustee-to-trustee transfers of amounts from an IRA to another IRA, no later than January 1, 2025. |
Effective upon enactment. |
Sec. 325. Roth plan distribution rules |
Under current law, Roth IRAs – but not Roth amounts in 401(k), etc. plans – are exempt from pre-death RMD rules. |
Extends the pre-death RMD exemption to Roth amounts in plans. |
Effective generally for taxable years beginning after December 31, 2023, but not with respect to distributions required before January 1, 2024. |
Sec. 326. Exception to penalty on early distributions from qualified plans for individuals with a terminal illness |
Present law imposes a 10% tax penalty on early distributions from tax-preferred retirement accounts unless certain exceptions apply. |
Creates an exception to the 10% early withdrawal penalty for distributions to individuals whose physician certifies that they have an illness or condition that is reasonably expected to result in death in 84 months or less. |
Effective upon enactment. |
Sec. 327. Surviving spouse election to be treated as employee |
Current law allows a sole designated spousal beneficiary to treat a deceased IRA owner’s IRA as their own for purposes of RMD rules. |
Provides similar post-death spousal RMD rules to plans: Allows a spousal beneficiary to irrevocably elect to be treated as the employee for RMD purposes and if the spouse is the employee’s sole designated beneficiary, the applicable distribution period after the participant’s year of death is determined under the uniform life table. |
Effective for calendar years beginning after December 31, 2023. |
Sec. 328. Repeal of direct payment requirement on exclusion from gross income of distributions from governmental plans for health and long-term care insurance |
Current law provides an exclusion from gross income for up to $3,000 for distributions made by governmental retirement plans to pay for health insurance premiums of certain eligible retired public safety officers, provided the premiums are paid directly by the plan. |
Allows the plan to distribute funds to pay for qualified health insurance premiums (1) directly to the insurer or (2) directly to the participant (but the participant must include a self-certification that such funds did not exceed the amount paid for premiums in the year of the distribution when filing the tax return for that year). |
Effective for distributions made after the date of enactment. |
Sec. 329. Modification of eligible age for exemption from early withdrawal penalty |
Qualified public safety employees may receive distributions from governmental plans after separating from service after attaining age 50 without being subject to the 10% early withdrawal penalty. |
Extends the age 50 exception to the 10% early withdrawal penalty to those qualified public safety employees who have separated from service and have attained age 50 or 25 years of service, whichever comes first. |
Effective for distributions made after the date of enactment. |
Sec. 330. Exemption from early withdrawal penalty for certain state and local government corrections employees |
Qualified public safety employees may receive distributions from governmental plans after separating from service after attaining age 50 without being subject to the 10% early withdrawal penalty. |
Expands the definition of qualified public safety employee to include certain corrections officers and forensic security employees, thus making them eligible for the age 50 exception to the 10% early withdrawal penalty. |
Effective for distributions made after the date of enactment. |
Sec. 331. Special rules for the use of retirement funds in connection with qualified federally declared disasters |
In recent years, Congress has eased plan distribution and loan rules in cases of disaster on a case-by-case basis. |
Provides permanent special rules governing plan distributions and loans in cases of qualified federally declared disasters. Up to $22,000 may be distributed to a participant per disaster;Amount is exempt from the 10% early withdrawal fee;Inclusion in gross income may be spread over 3-year period;Amounts may be recontributed to a plan or account during the 3-year period beginning on the day after the date of the distribution;Allows certain home purchase distributions to be recontributed to a plan or account if those funds were to be used to purchase a home in a disaster area and were not so used because of the disaster; andIncreases the maximum loan amount for qualified individuals and extends the repayment period. |
Effective for disasters occurring on or after January 26, 2021. |
Sec. 332. Employers allowed to replace SIMPLE retirement accounts with safe harbor 401(k) plans during a year |
Current law prohibits the replacement of a Simple IRA plan with a 401(k) plan mid-year. Rollovers from the SIMPLE IRA to the 401(k) plan can take place if the SIMPLE IRA has been in place for at least two years. |
Permits an employer to elect to replace a SIMPLE IRA plan with a safe harbor 401(k) plan at any time during the year, provided certain criteria are met. The 2-year rollover limitation in SIMPLE IRAs converting to a 401(k) or 403(b) plan is waived. |
Effective for plan years beginning after December 31, 2023. |
Sec. 333. Elimination of additional tax on corrective distributions of excess contributions |
Current law requires a corrective distribution of an excess contribution to an IRA, along with any earnings on the excess contribution. The distribution is subject to the 10% early withdrawal penalty. |
Exempts corrective distributions and corresponding earnings from the 10% early withdrawal penalty. |
Effective for any determination of, or affecting, liability for taxes, interest or penalties that is made on or after the date of enactment (without regard to whether the act or failure to act upon which the determination is based occurred before the date of enactment). |
Sec. 334. Long-term care contracts purchased with retirement plan distributions |
Plans may only make distributions for approved reasons. Existing law provides favorable tax treatment for various forms of health and disability insurance. Existing law also imposes a 10% tax penalty on early distributions from tax-preferred retirement accounts unless certain exceptions apply. |
Permits retirement plans to distribute a certain amount per year for certain long-term care insurance contracts. The amount permitted to be distributed is the lowest of: (1) the amount paid by or assessed to the employee during the year for long-term care insurance; (2) 10% of the employee’s vested accrued benefit in the plan; or (3) $2,500 (this dollar amount will be indexed for inflation beginning in 2025). Distributions from plans and IRAs would be exempt from the 10% penalty on early distributions if used to pay premiums for high quality, long-term care insurance. |
Effective beginning with distributions three years after the date of enactment. |
Sec. 335. Corrections of mortality tables |
Mortality rates used to calculate minimum funding for defined benefit plans are based on mortality tables, which are updated by applying “mortality improvement rates.” These improvement rates are based on mortality trends (currently from the Society of Actuaries Mortality Improvement Scale MP-2020 Report). The improvement rates are not capped or limited under the current regulations. |
Directs the Secretary of the Treasury to update the minimum funding regulations to apply a cap on mortality improvement rates. For valuation dates occurring on or after 2024, the mortality improvement rates cannot assume for years beyond the valuation date future mortality improvements at any age which are greater than 0.78%. This 0.78 figure may be updated to reflect overall mortality changes as projected by the Social Security Administration. |
Effective upon enactment, but not practically effective until 2024. |
Sec. 336. Report to Congress on Section 402(f) notices |
Section 402(f) notices are given by employer retirement plans in the case of a distribution to a participant that is eligible for rollover to another tax preferred retirement account, and describes distribution options and tax consequences. |
Requires the Government Accountability Office to issue a report to Congress on the effectiveness of Section 402(f) notices, and to make recommendations to facilitate better understanding of distribution options and tax consequences, no later than 18 months after enactment. |
Effective upon enactment. |
Sec. 337. Modification of required minimum distribution rules for special needs trusts |
Current law places limits on the ability of beneficiaries of defined contribution retirement plans and IRAs to receive lifetime distributions after the account owner’s death. Special rules apply in the case of certain beneficiaries, such as those with a disability. |
Clarifies that in the case of a special needs trust established for certain beneficiaries (e.g., a beneficiary with a disability), the trust may provide for a charitable organization as the remainder beneficiary. |
Effective for calendar years beginning after enactment of SECURE 2.0. |
Sec. 338. Requirement to provide paper statements in certain cases |
ERISA requires plan administrators to periodically furnish participants and beneficiaries with statements describing the individual’s benefit under the plan. In defined contribution plans, benefit statements must be provided at least once each calendar quarter, if the participant has the right to direct investments, and at least once each calendar year in other cases. In defined benefit plans, benefit statements must generally be delivered at least once every three years. DOL disclosure regulations include various document delivery safe harbors. DOL updated the disclosure regulations in 2020 to add a new safe harbor to the two existing safe harbors: (i) the 2002 safe harbor generally applies to individuals who either have (a) the ability to effectively access electronic documents at work through an electronic system, the use of which is an integral part of the employee’s duties; or (b) consented to receive notices electronically; and (ii) the 2020 safe harbor allows a plan administrator to utilize electronic media to furnish retirement plan notices where the plan administrator complies with certain notice, access, and other requirements and the participant does not opt-out of electronic disclosure. |
Modifies the pension benefit statements requirement to generally require that: for a defined contribution plan, at least one statement must be provided on paper in written form for each calendar year; andfor a defined benefit plan, at least one statement must be provided on paper every three years. Exceptions allowed for plans that allow employees to opt in to e-delivery if the plan follows the 2002 safe harbor. Also directs the Secretary to make changes by December 31, 2024 to the e-delivery rules to include certain participant protections including requiring a one-time initial paper notice, prior to the first pension benefit statement being delivered electronically, informing the participant of her right to receive all required disclosures on paper. |
Effective for plan years beginning after December 31, 2025. |
Sec. 339. Recognition of Tribal government domestic relations orders |
Under present law, plan administrators cannot assign the benefit of a participant pursuant to a domestic relations order issued by a Tribal government. |
Allows domestic relations orders issued by Indian tribal governments to be recognized as “qualified domestic relations orders” to provide the same exception for Tribal domestic relations orders from the prohibition on assignment or alienation of benefits as had previously applied to State issued domestic relations orders. |
Effective for domestic relations orders received by plan administrators after December 31, 2022, including any such order which is submitted for reconsideration after such date. |
Sec. 340. Defined contribution plan fee disclosure improvements |
In July 2021, the Government Accountability Office issued a report entitled, “401(k) Retirement Plans: Many Participants Do Not Understand Fee Information, but DOL Could Take Additional Steps to Help Them.” The Government Accountability Office made five specific recommendations to DOL. |
Builds on the Government Accountability Office report to require the Secretary of Labor to review guidance on fiduciary requirements for disclosure in participant-directed individual account plans, explore through a public request for information, weigh potential improvements, and report to Congress. Report due within three years of enactment. |
Effective upon enactment. |
Sec. 341. Consolidation of defined contribution plan notices |
ERISA and the Code require a number of individual mandatory plan notices. |
Directs the Secretaries of the Treasury and Labor to adopt regulations allowing, but not requiring, plan sponsors to consolidate two or more mandatory notices under ERISA Sections 404(c)(5)(B) and 514(e)(3) and Code Sections 401(k)(12)(D), 401(k)(13)(E), and 414(w)(4) into a single notice. The Section specifically states that it shall not be interpreted as preventing the consolidation of any other notices required under ERISA or the Code to the extent otherwise permitted. Regulations must be promulgated within two years of enactment. |
Effective upon enactment. |
Sec. 342. Information Needed for Financial Options Risk Mitigation (INFORM) Act |
Under present law, defined benefit plans are permitted to offer lump-sum buy-outs to plan participants in lieu of future lifetime payments. A 2015 Government Accountability Office report found that participants need better information before making such a decision. |
Requires plan sponsors to provide beneficiaries with certain information regarding lump-sum offers 90 days before a decision period, including how to compare lump-sum offers to the value of lifetime benefits, details about the election period, and other information. Plan sponsors must also provide data to DOL and PBGC regarding the lump sums being offered to participants as well as provide a model notice. |
Requires Departments of Labor and the Treasury to issue joint regulations within one year of enactment. |
Sec. 343. Defined benefit annual funding notices |
Administrators of all defined benefit plans that are subject to title IV of ERISA are required to provide an annual funding notice to the PBGC, to each plan participant and beneficiary, to each labor organization representing such participants or beneficiaries, and, in the case of a multiemployer plan, to each employer that has an obligation to contribute to the plan. An annual funding notice must include, among other things, the plan’s funding percentage, a statement of the value of the plan’s assets and liabilities and a description of how the plan’s assets are invested as of specific dates, and a description of the benefits under the plan that are eligible to be guaranteed by the PBGC. |
Amends existing defined benefit plan notices to require additional information regarding plan funding status. The most relevant additional information required is as follows: A statement of the value of the plan’s assets and liabilities for the preceding two years in addition to the already required plan year to which the notice relates;A statement of the number of participants who are (i) retired or separated from service and are receiving benefits, (ii) retired or separated participants entitled to future benefits, and (iii) active participants under the plan for the preceding two plan years in addition to the already required plan year to which the notice relates;Information regarding the average return on assets for the plan year;For single employer plans, a statement as to whether the plan’s funded status for the plan year to which the notice relates and for the two preceding plan years, is at least 100%, and if not, the actual percentage. This also includes more detailed information on plan assets, liabilities and funded status; andFor single employer plans, a statement that if plan assets are determined to be sufficient to pay vested benefits that are not guaranteed by the PBGC, participants and beneficiaries may receive benefits in excess of the guaranteed amount, and that such a determination generally uses assumptions that result in a plan having a lower funded status compared to the disclosed funded status. |
Effective for plan years beginning after December 31, 2023. |
Sec. 344. Report on pooled employer plans |
N/A |
Requires DOL to study PEPs, including the number of PEPs, the number of participants, fees, disclosure, enforcement actions, and other items. Report must be published within five years of enactment and every five years thereafter. |
Effective upon enactment. |
Sec. 345. Annual audits for group of plans |
Under current law, generally, a Form 5500 for a defined contribution plan must contain an opinion from an independent qualified public accountant as to whether the plan’s financial statements and schedules are presented fairly. However, no such opinion is required with respect to a plan covering fewer than 100 participants. The SECURE Act provided for an arrangement for a group of plans with common features to file a single Form 5500. Proposed regulations would require both a plan-level and a trust-level audit for plans participating in such a group. |
Clarifies that with respect to a group of plans, a trust-level audit is not required and that only plans with 100 or more participants are required to undergo an audit. |
Effective upon enactment. |
Sec. 346 Worker Ownership, Readiness, and Knowledge |
N/A |
Creates an Employee Ownership and Participation Initiative at the DOL to provide technical assistance to those seeking to start new employee-owned businesses and encourage employee participation. Appropriates funds for a grant program related to employee ownership. |
Effective upon enactment. |
Sec. 347. Report by the Secretary of Labor on the impact of inflation on retirement savings |
N/A |
Directs the DOL to study the impact of inflation on retirement savings and submit a report to Congress not later than 90 days after the date of enactment. |
Effective upon enactment. |
Sec. 348. Cash balance |
Cash balance and other “hybrid” plans are subject to numerous technical rules that make it difficult to offer market-based designs. |
Permits a cash balance plan with variable interest crediting rates to use a projected interested crediting rate that is “reasonable” but not in excess of 6%. The practical consequence of this change is that plans will be permitted to provide larger pay credits for older, longer service workers without the risk of failing the anti-backloading rules. |
Effective for plan years beginning after the date of enactment. |
Sec. 349. Termination of variable rate premium indexing |
Defined benefit plans subject to Title IV of ERISA are required to pay a variable rate premium to PBGC. In 2023, the variable rate premium is $52 per each $1000 of unfunded vested benefits, but it is indexed for inflation. |
Ends the indexing of the variable rate premium and sets the premium permanently at $52 per each $1000 of unfunded vested benefits. |
Effective upon enactment. |
Sec. 350. Safe harbor for correction of employee elective deferral failures |
The IRS’ Employee Plans Compliance Resolution System (EPCRS) contains rules allowing plans to correct errors, including with respect to missed deferrals under automatic enrollment or automatic escalation features. EPCRS currently contains a safe harbor for correcting automatic enrollment failures, which is set to expire on December 31, 2023. |
Creates a safe harbor that a plan will not fail to be a qualified plan merely because of a corrected error. A “corrected error” is a reasonable administrative error made in implementing automatic enrollment, automatic escalation features, or by failing to offer an affirmative election due to the employee’s improper exclusion from the plan, so long as that error is corrected within 9 ½ months of the end of the plan year in which the error occurred (or date on which employee notifies the plan sponsor of the error, if earlier), is resolved favorably toward the participant and without discrimination toward similarly situated participants, and notice is provided within 45 days of the date on which correct deferrals begin. This new safe harbor does not require a corrective contribution for missed deferrals, but the plan sponsor must contribute any missed matching contributions, plus earnings. The safe harbor is available for 401(a), 403(b) and 457(b) plans and IRAs. |
Effective for any errors with respect to which the date that is 9½ months after the end of the plan year during which the error occurred is after December 31, 2023. |