SECURE Act 2.0 – A Summary of the Major 401(k) Provisions

The SECURE 2.0 Act of 2022 (SECURE 2.0) became law on December 29, 2022. The new law makes sweeping changes to 401(k) plans – particularly plans sponsored by small businesses. It includes provisions intended to expand coverage, increase retirement savings, and simplify and clarify retirement plan rules. Employers of all sizes should understand the law’s provisions to ensure their 401(k) plan is ready to meet their effective date.

The new law builds upon the SECURE Act of 2019 efforts to increase plan coverage and retirement savings. It also makes major changes to distribution rules, participant disclosures, and plan testing procedures – just to name a few. Here is a summary of the major 401(k) provisions. I will follow up next time with my thoughts on the effectiveness of these changes.

Tax Credits for Small Businesses

Startup tax credits

Section 102 increases the tax credit for starting a new plan from 50 percent to 100 percent for employers with up to 50 employees. Small businesses can earn an additional credit for making employer contributions, up to a per-employee cap of $1,000. This full additional credit is limited to employers with 50 or fewer employees and phased out for employers with between 51 and 100 employees. The applicable percentage is 100 percent in the first and second years, 75 percent in the third year, 50 percent in the fourth year, 25 percent in the fifth year – and no credit for tax years thereafter.

Section 102 is effective for taxable years beginning after December 31, 2022.

Military spouse tax credit

Section 112 creates a tax credit for eligible small businesses that employ military spouses and allow them to participate in their plan subject to special eligibility and vesting requirements. The tax credit equals the sum of (1) $200 per military spouse, and (2) 100 percent of all employer contributions (up to $300) made on behalf of the military spouse, for a maximum tax credit of $500. This credit applies for 3 years with respect to each military spouse – and does not apply to highly compensated employees.

Section 112 is effective for taxable years beginning after December 29, 2022.

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Plan Eligibility

Automatic enrollment for new plans

Section 101 requires new 401(k) plans to automatically enroll participants upon attaining eligibility. The initial automatic enrollment amount is at least 3 percent but not more than 10 percent. Each year thereafter that amount is increased by 1 percent until it reaches at least 10 percent, but not more than 15 percent. Plans established before December 29, 2022 are grandfathered. There is an exception for small businesses with 10 or fewer employees, new businesses (i.e., those that have been in business for less than 3 years), church plans, and governmental plans.

Section 101 is effective for plan years beginning after December 31, 2024

Faster eligibility for long-term, part-time workers

Under current law, employer must allow employees with at least 1,000 hours of service in a 12-month period or 500 hours of service in a three-consecutive-year period to join their plan – regardless of whether the employee has met the plan’s normal eligibility requirements. Section 125 reduces the three-year rule to two years.

Section 125 is effective for plan years beginning after December 31, 2024.

Employee Contributions

Mandatory Roth catch-up for high earners

Section 603 provides all catch-up contributions to qualified retirement plans must be made on a Roth basis, except for participants whose prior year wages didn’t exceed $145,000 (indexed for inflation).

Section 603 is effective for taxable years beginning after December 31, 2023.

Higher catch-up contribution Limit

Section 109 increases the limit on catch-up contributions to the greater of $10,000 or 50 percent more than the regular catch-up limit ( $7,500 for 2023 ) for individuals who have attained ages 60, 61, 62 and 63. The increased amounts are indexed for inflation after 2025.

Section 109 is effective for taxable years beginning after December 31, 2024.

New Emergency Savings Accounts

Section 127 permits employers to offer short-term emergency savings accounts (“ESAs”) to non-Highly Compensated Employees. ESAs must be funded with Roth contributions. Contributions are treated as elective deferrals for matching purposes and capped at $2,500 - unless the employer specifies a lower amount. Participants must be allowed to take at least one withdrawal per month, and the first four withdrawals per year cannot be subject to fees.

Section 127 is effective for plan years beginning after December 31, 2023.

New deferral deadline for sole proprietors

Under the SECURE Act, an employer may establish a new 401(k) plan after the end of the taxable year, but before the employer’s tax filing date and treat the plan as having been established on the last day of the taxable year. Such plans may be funded by employer contributions up to the employer’s tax filing date. Section 317 allows these plans, when they are sponsored by sole proprietors or single-member LLCs, to receive employee contributions up to the date of the employee’s tax return filing date for the initial year if the owner is the only employee.

Section 317 is effective for plan years beginning after December 29, 2022.

Employer Contributions

Roth matching and nonelective contributions

Under current law, employers must contribute matching and nonelective contributions on a pre-tax basis. Section 604 allows participants to designate matching or nonelective contributions as Roth contributions when their plan allows.

Section 604 is effective for contributions made after December 29, 2022.

Saver’s match

Section 103 replaces the saver’s credit with a direct government matching contribution to the taxpayer’s IRA or eligible retirement plan. The match is 50 percent of IRA or retirement plan contributions up to $2,000 per individual. The match phases out between $41,000 and $71,000 in the case of taxpayers filing a joint return ($20,500 to $35,500 for single taxpayers and married filing separate; $30,750 to $53,250 for head of household filers).

Section 103 is effective for taxable years beginning after December 31, 2026.

Matching of student loan payments

Section 110 permits an employer to make matching contributions under a 401(k) plan, 403(b) plan, or SIMPLE IRA with respect to “qualified student loan payments.” A qualified student loan payment is broadly defined as any indebtedness incurred by the employee solely to pay qualified higher education expenses of the employee. For purposes of the nondiscrimination test applicable to elective contributions, Section 110 permits a plan to test separately the employees who receive matching contributions on student loan repayments.

Section 110 is effective for contributions made for plan years beginning after December 31, 2023.

Plan Testing

Top heavy rules for plans with excludable employees

Section 310 allows a top-heavy 401(k) plan that covers otherwise excludable employees (employees who have not attained age 21 or worked a year of service) to perform a separate top-heavy test for excludable and non-excludable employees.

Section 310 is effective for plan years beginning after December 31, 2023.

Reform of family attribution rules

Related businesses must be aggregated when testing a 401(k) plan for nondiscrimination if enough common ownership exists. Individuals are deemed to own the stock of certain family members due to IRS-mandated family attribution rules . Section 315 removes 1) attribution for spouses with separate and unrelated businesses who reside in community property states, and 2) attribution between parents with separate and unrelated business who have minor children.

Section 315 is effective for plan years beginning after December 31, 2023.

Participant Distributions

Required Minimum Distributions

SECURE 2.0 makes numerous changes to the Required Minimum Distribution (RMD) rules. The changes include: