Everything you need to know about the SECURE Act 2.0

In December of 2022, Congress passed the Consolidated Appropriations Act, 2023 which contains a large section covering retirement in the U.S. referred to as SECURE 2.0. As a reminder, SECURE 2.0 is seen as building upon or enhancing the Setting Every Community Up for Retirement Enhancement Act of 2019 (the SECURE Act). The Act can be broken down into the following parts:

Expanding Coverage and Increasing Retirement Savings

  • Expanding Automatic Enrollment in Retirement Plans – Requires new 401(k) and 403(b) plans to include EACA at three percent (not more than 10%) auto deferral with annual one percent auto increase to 10% (not to exceed 15%). Amounts to defaulted into QDIA. This does not apply to SIMPLE plans adopted before the effective date, governmental or church plans, plans sponsored by businesses in existence for less than three years, or plans maintained by employers with 10 or fewer employees. Effective plan years begin after December 31, 2024.

  • Small Employer Pension Plan Startup Credit – Increases credit for small employers from 50% of startup costs to 100% for employers with up to 50 employees and provides additional credit (except for defined benefit plans) for employer contributions (per-employee cap of $1,000). There are dollar limitations and a phase-in of the credit. These credits would be available to eligible employers if they adopt an existing plan (like an MEP or PEP). Effective taxable years begin after December 31, 2022.

  • Savers Credit Enhancement – The credit is changed from a cash payment from a tax refund to a federal matching contribution (50% up to $2,000) that must be deposited into a taxpayer’s IRA/retirement plan. The match is phased out if it is subject to inflation adjustments on an annual basis, making them more attractive. Effective for taxable years after December 31, 2026.

  • 403(b) MEPs and PEPs – 403(b) plans may now participate in multiple employer plans or pooled employer plans. Effective for plan years after December 31, 2022.

  • 403(b) Plans Use of Collective Investment Trusts (CITs) – CITs are pooled investment vehicles designed exclusively for use with qualified plans. These vehicles are alternatives to mutual funds or separate accounts and allow for greater flexibility in investment design, and often times, fee savings. They have been utilized by 401(k), 457, and other qualified plans for decades. Additional securities/banking legislation is still required to make these available in 403(b) plans. Stay tuned…

  • Required Minimum Distributions (RMD) – Moves back the date by which retired participants are required to begin taking minimum distributions from their qualified plans. Age is moved back to 73 starting on January 1, 2023, and to 75 starting on January 1, 2033. Also, surviving spouses can elect to be treated as the deceased employee for RMDs. Effective- for calendar years after December 31, 2023. Special needs trusts for disabled beneficiary may provide for a charitable organization as the remainder beneficiary, and becomes effective for calendar years after the enactment of the SECURE Act 2.0.

  • IRA Catch Up Limit Indexed – Subject to a COLA adjustment. Effective for tax years beginning after December 31, 2023.

  • Increasing Catch Up Limits Within Plans – The COLA adjusted $5,000 catch-up limit ($7,500 for 2023) will be raised to COLA adjusted $10,000 for participants who have attained age 60, 61, 62, and 63, but not age 65 before the close of the taxable year. Effective for taxable years after December 31, 2024.

  • Matching Contributions for Student Loan Repayments – Employers can make matching contributions into their qualified retirement plans (401(k), 403(b), SIMPLE IRA) for employee repayments made on qualified student loans for higher education. Governmental employers are also permitted to do so in 457(b) or another plan concerning such repayment. For nondiscrimination testing purposes, the plan may separately test employees who receive matching contributions on loan repayments. Effective for plan years after December 31, 2023.

  • Military Spouse Retirement Plan Eligibility Credit for Small Employers - $200 per military spouse (non-HCE), plus 100% of employer contributions (up to $300) made on behalf of military spouse (maximum $500) credit for small employers. Effective after enactment of Act.

  • Small Financial Incentives for Contributions – Plan sponsors may provide small incentives (like gift cards) to employees to spur employee deferrals. Effective after enactment of Act.

  • Withdrawals for Emergency Expenses – 10% excise tax does not apply to distributions used for emergency expenses which are unforeseeable or an immediate financial need (personal or family emergency expenses). One distribution per year, up to $1,000, and repayable within three years (no additional emergency distributions during this period unless repayments are made). Effective for distributions after December 31, 2023.

  • SIMPLE Plans – Employer may make additional contributions to each employee in uniform manner that cannot exceed lesser of 10% of compensation or $5,000 (indexed). Effective for taxable years after December 31, 2023. Catch-up contribution at age 50 increased by 10% for employers with no more than 25 employees. Employers with between 26-100 employees can provide higher deferral limits only if they provide a 4% match or a 3% nonelective contribution. Effective taxable years after December 31, 2023.

  • Nontrade/business SEP – Can provide domestic employees (e.g., housekeeper) retirement benefits under simplified employee pension (SEP). Effective taxable years after enactment of Act.

  • Automatic Portability – Allows service providers to provide plans with automatic portability services. Includes automatic transfer of participant’s default IRA (from prior plan distribution) into new employer’s plan, unless participant opts out. Effective 12 months after enactment of Act.

  • Starter Plans – Employers not offering a retirement plan can offer a starter 401(k) or safe harbor 403(b). Auto-enrollment at three -15% with an annual limit the same as IRA contribution limit with additional catch-up beginning at 50. Effective plan years after December 31, 2023.

  • Safe Harbor for Employee Elective Deferral Failures – If error (auto-enroll or escalation) is corrected within nine and a half months after the end of the year in which the error occurred, favorably to a participant and consistently among similarly situated participants. Effective for errors after December 31, 2023.

  • Long-Term Part-Time Eligibility Accelerated – Changes eligibility from three consecutive years of 500 hours worked to two consecutive years. Also extends the long-term part-time coverage rules to 403(b) plans that are subject to ERISA. Effective for plan years after December 2024.

  • 529 Rollover to Roth – Tax- and penalty-free rollover of unused dollars (up to $35,000) from 529 accounts to Roth IRA over the lifetime of beneficiaries. Subject to Roth IRA annual limits and 529 accounts must have been open for more than 15 years. Effective for distributions after December 31. 2023.

  • Emergency Savings Accounts – Employers may offer their non-HCEs emergency savings accounts that link to their retirement plans. There can be auto-enrollment at up to three percent (capped at $2,500). Once the cap is reached, additional contributions are directed to the employee’s Roth (if they have one) or stopped until the balance dips below maximum. Contributions receive Roth tax treatment and are included in determining matching contributions. No fees or penalties can be charged to the first four distributions from the account. Accounts are portable at separation from service or can be rolled into a Roth plan or IRA.

  • ESOP Changes – Deferral of tax for certain sales of employer stock to ESOP of S-Corp. Certain securities are treated as publicly traded for ESOP. Effective for sales made after December 31, 2027.

Preservation of Income

  • Qualifying Longevity Annuity Contracts (QLACs) Made More Attractive – QLACs are designed to begin payment towards the end of individuals’ life expectancy. This helps to safeguard against running out of income later in life. The 25% limit would be removed and spouses would be allowed to share QLACs as joint and survivor annuities. Effective for contracts purchased/received on the date of the Act enactment.

  • ETFs – Gives broader access to exchange traded funds on variable annuity platforms. Effective for segregated asset account investments made on or after seven years after date of the Act enactment.

  • Partial Annuitization – Account owners may now elect to aggregate distributions from retirement accounts and annuities for purposes of determining RMDs. Effective with the Act enactment.

Simplification and Clarification of Retirement Plan Rules

  • Recovery of Retirement Plan Overpayments – Statutorily relieves fiduciaries from seeking inadvertent benefit overpayments, yet if they do so, the Act puts rules in place (no interest or additional amounts can be sought; if repaid in installments, the aggregate cannot exceed the amount of the overpayment; consideration of hardship imposed on recipient, etc.). Clarifies that failure to obtain repayment does not impact qualified status of plan. Effective with the Act enactment.

  • Reduction in Excise Taxes – Excises taxes imposed for failure to take RMDs have been reduced from 50% to 25% and can be further reduced to 10% if corrected during a provided correction window. Effective for taxable years after the Act enactment.

  • Lost and Found – DOL directed to create national online lost and found database for retirement plans. Database to be created no later than two years after the Act enactment date.

  • Performance Benchmark for Asset Allocation Funds – For designated investment alternatives (“DIA”) held by a plan, the fiduciaries may use a benchmark that is a blend of different broad-based securities market indices if it’s reasonably representative of asset class holdings of the DIA; the blend is modified at least once per year to reflect changes in holdings of DIA; it’s given to participants in easy-to-understand fashion; and, each index used would meet requirements standing alone. DOL to update regulations no later than two years after the Act enactment.

  • Elimination of Notices and Disclosures – Certain disclosures, notices and plan documents would not have to be provided to unenrolled employees if they are given an annual reminder of their eligibility with election deadlines and any document they request to which they are entitled to receive otherwise. They must be given a summary plan description. Effective plan years after December 31, 2022.

  • Increasing Cash-Out Limit - Changing the small amount cash-out threshold from $5,000 to $7,000. Effective for distributions after December 31, 2023.

  • Expanding the EPCRS – Corrections for loan errors, IRAs, and additional safe harbors. Rev. Proc. 2021-30 to be update no later than two years from the Act enactment.

  • Elimination of the “first day of the month” Requirement for Governmental 457 Plans – Elections may be made any time before compensation being deferred is available to participants. Effective taxable years after the Act enactment.

  • Provisions Relating Firefighters and First Responders – Age 50 retirement rule extended for private firefighters, effective for distributions made after the Act enactment. The Act will exclude service-connected disability retirement payments from income upon attaining retirement age. Effective taxable years after December 31, 2026.

  • Top Heavy Rules and Excludable Employees – May perform top-heavy tests separately for excludable employees. Effective plan years after December 31, 2023.

  • Qualified Birth or Adoption Distributions – Repayment of QBADs restricted to three years. Effective retroactively to three-year period beginning on the date of distribution.

  • Hardship Withdrawals – Administrators may rely on employee certifications of hardship requirements. Effective plan years after enactment of Act. 403(b) hardship rules changed to mirror 401(k) rules, and becomes effective for plan years after December 31, 2023.

  • Domestic Abuse Distributions – Allow penalty-free distributions from plans for domestic abuse victims equal to lesser than $10,000 or 50% of account balance. Distributions may be repaid over three years. Effective for distributions after December 31, 2023.

  • Family Attribution – Updates to stock-related ownership attribution rules to address the inequities of spouses living in community property versus separate property states and parent and minor children. Effective plan years after December 31, 2023.

  • Increase Benefit Accruals – Plans may be amended to allow for an increase in participants’ benefits by the due -date of employer’s tax return. Effective for plan years after December 31, 2023.

  • Terminal Illness Distributions – Penalty-free distributions for terminally ill individuals. Effective for distributions after enactment of Act.

  • Long-Term Care Premium Payments for Governmental Plans – No longer need a plan to directly pay insurance premiums. Effective distributions after enactment of Act.

  • Early Distribution – Penalty-free distribution extended to public safety officers with at least 25 years of service with a sponsor. Effective distribution after enactment of Act. Penalty free distributions to corrections officers of state and local governments. Effective distributions after enactment of Act.

  • Federally Declared Disasters – Creates permanent rules for Federally declared disasters occurring on or after January 1, 2021. Penalty-free distributions are allowed up to $22,000 for affected individuals from plan/IRA taken into income over three-year period and can be repaid. Amounts distributed prior to disaster for purchase of home can be recontributed and repayments of loans can be extended.

  • SIMPLE to Safe Harbor – Employers can replace SIMPLE IRA with SIMPLE 401(k) or other 401(k) with required employer contributions, during the plan year. Effective plan years after December 31, 2023.

  • Long-Term Care Bought with Retirement Dollars – Plans can make penalty-free distributions up to $2,500 annually for payment of premiums for high-quality coverage, long-term care insurance contracts. Effective three years after the Act enactment.

Correction of Mortality Tables

  • Benefit Statements – For defined contribution plans, only one benefit statement annually must be provided in paper. The other three quarterly statements may be provided electronically unless participants elect otherwise. Effective plan years after December 31, 2025. For defined benefit plans, the statement provided every three years must be in paper, unless participants elect otherwise.

  • Tribal Government – Tribal courts recognized are authorized under Federal law to issue qualified domestic relations orders. Effective for orders after December 31, 2022.

  • Department of Labor Undertakings – A myriad of directives for the DOL to report to the Government Accountability Office or Congress regarding disclosure consolidation/improvements and what information should be provided to participants to make financial decisions, impact of inflation on retirement plans, and pooled employer plans (PEPs).

  • Group of Plans – Plans filing under Group of Plans need only submit audit opinion if they have 100 participants or more. Effective after the Act enactment.

  • Cash Balance – Allows plan sponsors to provide larger pay credits for older employees with longer service. Effective for plan years after the enactment of Act.

Revenue Provisions

  • Catch Up Contributions Treated as Roth – All catch-up contributions will be subject to Roth treatment (unless employee has compensation equal to or less than $145,000 indexed). Effective for taxable years after December 31, 2023.

  • Treatment of Matching or Contributions as Roth – Provides participants with the option of matching contributions on deferrals or student loan repayments to be treated as Roth contributions (including taxability). Effective on enactment of Act.

  • Retiree Health Benefits – Sunset extended (to end of 2032) on ability of employer to use assets from overfunded pension plan to pay retiree health/life insurance.

We recognize these changes may be confusing or overwhelming to keep track of. Please reach out to a KerberRose Trusted Retirement Plan Advisor with questions on any of the SECURE Act 2.0 provisions.

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