IRS released Notice 2023-62 on Friday giving employer retirement plans two additional years to comply with the controversial rule requiring that catch-up contributions for employees age 50 or over whose wages for the prior year exceeded $145,000 be made on a Roth basis.
IRS has proactively responded to requests for relief made by some of the country’s largest plan record keepers and retirement plan lobbying organizations.
This rule under Section 603 of the SECURE 2.0 Act was supposed to be effective beginning next year, but now IRS says it will provide a two-year “administrative transition period” — until Jan. 1, 2026 — before plans must comply with the new law. The effect of this delay is that until 2026, no employees will be required to make catch-up contributions on a Roth basis, and plans that don’t already offer Roth contributions will not need to begin offering them.
This could be an opportunity for affected employees — those with wages in excess of $145,000 — to make their 401(k) catch-up contributions to pretax 401(k)s, gaining the exclusion from income, rather than being forced to have those catch-up contributions go to the Roth 401(k).
Long term though, some of these employees might still fare better having these contributions go to the Roth 401(k), allowing the tax-free buildup for life, and for 10 years beyond to beneficiaries.
But the good news here is that all employees will have a choice on this now until 2026 and can make their catch-up contributions where they see fit.
IRS ALSO FIXES 2024 CATCH-UP CONTRIBUTION GLITCH
In this same notice, the IRS also stepped in to fix a glitch in the SECURE 2.0 law that inadvertently eliminated the ability for any employees to make catch-up contributions beginning in 2024. When Congress drafted the mandatory catch-up provision, it mistakenly deleted a part of the tax code, leaving the law to read that no employees (high-paid or not) would be able to make any catch-up contributions (pre-tax or Roth) starting in 2024. This was an obvious mistake, and IRS says it will allow these catch-up contributions to be made, even though Congress did not fix this error in the law.
Notice 2023-62 also says that the IRS is expected to provide future guidance saying that high-paid self-employed persons who have self-employment income instead of “wages” are not covered by the mandatory Roth 401(k) catch-up provision.
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