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[Federal Register: January 17, 2001 (Volume
66, Number 11)] [Proposed Rules] [Page 3928-3954] From the Federal Register Online via GPO
Access [wais.access.gpo.gov][DOCID:fr17ja01-32] ----------------------------------------------------------------------- DEPARTMENT OF TREASURY Internal Revenue Service (IRS) 26 CFR Parts 1 and 54 [REG-130477-00; REG-130481-00] RIN 1545-AY69, 1545-AY70 Required Distributions from Retirement
Plans AGENCY: Internal Revenue Service (IRS), Treasury. ACTION: Notice of proposed rulemaking and
notice of public hearing. SUMMARY: This document contains proposed
regulations relating to required minimum distributions from qualified
plans, individual retirement plans, deferred compensation plans under
section 457, and section 403(b) annuity contracts, custodial accounts,
and retirement income accounts. These regulations will provide the
public with guidance necessary to comply with the law and will affect
administrators of, participants in, and beneficiaries of qualified
plans; institutions that sponsor and individuals who administer
individual retirement plans, individuals who use individual retirement
plans for retirement income, and beneficiaries of individual retirement
plans; and employees for whom amounts are contributed to section
403(b)annuity contracts, custodial accounts, or retirement income
accounts and beneficiaries of such contracts and accounts. DATES:
Written and electronic comments must be received by April 17,2001.
Outlines of topics to be discussed at the public hearing scheduled for
June 1, 2001, at 10 a.m. must be received by May 11,2001. ADDRESSES: Send submissions to: CC:M&SP:RU
(REG-130477-00/REG130481-00)room 5226, Internal Revenue Service, POB
7604, Ben Franklin Station, Washington, DC 20044. Submissions may be
hand delivered Monday through Friday between the hours of 8 a.m. and 5
p.m. to: CC:M&SP:RU (REG-130477-00/REG-130481-00), Courier's Desk,
Internal Revenue Service,1111 Constitution Avenue NW., Washington, DC.
Alternatively, taxpayers may submit comments electronically via the
Internet by selecting the``Tax Regs'' option of the IRS Home Page, or by
submitting comments directly to the IRS Internet site at: http://www.irs.gov/tax__regs/reglist.html.
The public hearing on June 1, 2001, will be held in the IRS Auditorium
(7th Floor), Internal Revenue Building, 1111Constitution Avenue NW.,
Washington, DC.FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Concerning the
regulations, Cathy A. Vohs, 202-622-6090; concerning submissions and the
hearing, and/or to be placed on the building access list to attend the
hearing, Guy Traynor, 202-622-7180 (not toll-free numbers). Paperwork Reduction Act The collections of information contained in
these proposed regulations have been reviewed and approved by the Office
of Management and Budget in accordance with the Paperwork Reduction Act
(44 U.S.C.3507) under control number 1545-0996, in conjunction with the
notice of proposed rulemaking published on July 27, 1987, 52 FR 28070,
REG-EE-113-82, Required Distributions From Qualified Plans and
Individual Retirement Plans, and control number 1545-1573, in[[Page
3929]]conjunction with the notice of proposed rulemaking published on
December 30, 1997, 62 FR 67780, REG-209463-82, Required Distributions
from Qualified Plans and Individual Retirement Plans. An agency may not conduct or sponsor, and a
person is not required to respond to, a collection of information unless
it displays a valid control number assigned by the Office of Management
and Budget. Books and records relating to the
collection of information must be retained as long as their contents may
become material in the administration of any internal revenue law.
Generally, tax returns and tax return information are confidential, as
required by 26 U.S.C. 6103. Background This document contains proposed amendments
to the Income Tax Regulations (26 CFR Part 1) and to the Pension Excise
Tax Regulations(26 CFR Part 54) under sections 401, 403, 408, and 4974
of the Internal Revenue Code of 1986. It is contemplated that proposed
rules similar to those in these proposed regulations applicable to
section 401 will be published in the near future for purposes of
applying the distribution requirements of section 457(d). These
amendments are proposed to conform the regulations to section 1404 of
the Small Business Job Protection Act of 1996 (SBJPA) (110 Stat. 1791),
sections 1121 and 1852of the Tax Reform Act of 1986 (TRA of 1986) (100
Stat. 2464 and 2864),sections 521 and 713 of the Tax Reform Act of 1984
(TRA of 1984) (98Stat. 865 and 955), and sections 242 and 243 of the Tax
Equity and Fiscal Responsibility Act of 1982 (TEFRA) (96 Stat. 521). The
regulations provide guidance on the required minimum distribution
requirements under section 401(a)(9) for plans qualified under
section401(a). The rules are incorporated by reference in section
408(a)(6)and (b)(3) for individual retirement accounts and annuities (IRAs),section
408A(c)(5) for Roth IRAs, section 403(b)(10) for section 403(b)annuity
contracts, and section 457(d) for eligible deferred compensation plans. For purposes of this discussion of the
background of the regulations in this preamble, as well as the
explanation of provisions below, whenever the term employee is used, it
is intended to include not only an employee but also an IRA owner. Section 401(a)(9) provides rules for
distributions during the life of the employee in section 401(a)(9)(A)
and rules for distributions after the death of the employee in section
401(a)(9)(B). Section401(a)(9)(A)(ii) provides that the entire interest
of an employee in qualified plan must be distributed, beginning not
later than the employee’s required beginning date, in accordance with
regulations, over the life of the employee or over the lives of the
employee and a designated beneficiary (or over a period not extending
beyond the life expectancy of the employee and a designated
beneficiary). Section 401(a)(9)(C) defines required
beginning date for employees(other than 5-percent owners and IRA owners)
as April 1 of the calendar year following the later of the calendar year
in which the employee attains age 70 \1/2\ or the calendar year in which
the employee retires. For 5-percent owners and IRA owners, the required
beginning date is April 1 of the calendar year following the calendar
year in which the employee attains age 70 \1/2\, even if the employee
has not retired. Section 401(a)(9)(D) provides that (except
in the case of a life annuity) the life expectancy of an employee and
the employee's spouse that is used to determine the period over which
payments must be made may be predetermined, but not more frequently than
annually. Section 401(a)(9)(E) provides that the term designated
beneficiary means any individual designated as a beneficiary by the
employee. Section 401(a)(9)(G) provides that any distribution required
to satisfy the incidental death benefit requirement of section 401(a) is
a required minimum distribution. Section 401(a)(9)(B)(i) provides that, if
the employee dies after distributions have begun, the employee's
interest must be distributed at least as rapidly as under the method
used by the employee. Section 401(a)(9)(B)(ii) and (iii) provides
that, if the employee dies before required minimum distributions have
begun, the employee’s interest must be either: distributed (in
accordance with regulations)over the life or life expectancy of the
designated beneficiary with the distributions beginning no later than 1
year after the date of the employee’s death, or distributed within 5
years after the death of the employee. However, under section 401(a)(9)(B)(iv),
a surviving spouse may wait until the date the employee would have
attained age 70 \1/2\to begin taking required minimum distributions.
Comprehensive proposed regulations under section 401(a)(9) were
previously published in the Federal Register on July 27, 1987, 52
FR28070. Many of the comments on the 1987 proposed regulations expressed
concerns that the required minimum distribution must be satisfied
separately for each IRA owned by an individual by taking distributions
from each IRA. In response, Notice 88-38 (1988-1 C.B. 524) provided that
the amount of the required minimum distribution must be calculated for
each IRA, but permitted that amount to be taken from any IRA. Amendments to the 1987 proposed regulations
published in the Federal Register on December 30, 1997, 62 FR 67780,
responded to comments on the use of trusts as beneficiaries. Notice
96-67 (1996-2 C.B. 235) and Notice 97-75 (1997-2 C.B. 337) provided
guidance on the changes made to section 401(a)(9) by the SBJPA. The
guidance in Notice 88-38, Notice96-67, and Notice 97-75 is incorporated
in these proposed regulations with some modifications. Even though the distribution requirements
added by TEFRA were retroactively repealed by TRA of 1984, the
transition election rule in section 242(b) of TEFRA was preserved.
Notice 83-23 (1983-2 C.B. 418)continues to provide guidance for
distributions permitted by this transition election rule. These proposed
regulations retain the additional guidance on the transition rule
provided in the 1987proposed regulations. As discussed below, in response to
extensive comments, the rules for calculating required minimum
distributions from individual accounts under the 1987 proposed
regulations have been substantially simplified. Certain other 1987 rules
have also been simplified and modified, although many of the 1987 rules
remain unchanged. In particular, due to the relatively small number of
comments on practices with respect to annuity contracts, and the effect
of the 1987 proposed regulations on these practices, the basic structure
of the 1987 proposed regulation provisions with respect to annuity
payments is retained in these proposed regulations. The IRS and Treasury
are continuing to study these rules and specifically request updated
comments on current practices and issues relating to required minimum
distributions from annuity contracts. Explanation of Provisions Overview Many of the comments on the 1987 proposed
regulations addressed the rules for required minimum distributions
during an employee's life, including calculation of life expectancy and
determination of designated beneficiary. In particular, comments raised
concerns about the default [[Page 3930]] provisions, election requirements, and plan
language requirements. In general, the need to make decisions at age
70\1/2\, which under the1987 proposed regulations would bind the
employee in future years during which financial circumstances could
change significantly, was perceived as unreasonably restrictive. In
addition, the determination of life expectancy and designated
beneficiary and the resulting required minimum distribution calculation
for individual accounts were viewed as too complex. To respond to these concerns, these
proposed regulations would make it much easier for individuals--both
plan participants and IRA owners--and plan administrators to understand
and apply the minimum distribution rules. The new proposed regulations
would make major simplifications to the rules, including the calculation
of the required minimum distribution during the individual's lifetime
and the determination of a designated beneficiary for distributions
after death. The new proposed regulations simplify the rules by
Providing a simple, uniform table that all employees cause to determine
the minimum distribution required during their lifetime. This makes it
far easier to calculate the required minimum distribution because
employees would--no longer need to determine their beneficiary by their
required beginning date, sbull no longer need to decide whether or not
to recalculate their life expectancy each year in determining required
minimum distributions, and--no longer need to satisfy a separate
incidental death benefit rule. Permitting the required minimum
distribution during the employee’s lifetime to be calculated without
regard to the beneficiary’s age (except when required distributions
can be reduced by taking into account the age of a beneficiary who is a
spouse more than10 years younger than the employee). Permitting the beneficiary to be determined
as late as the end of the year following the year of the employee's
death. This allows--the employee to change designated beneficiaries
after the required beginning date without increasing the required
minimum distribution and--the beneficiary to be changed after the
employee's death, such as by one or more beneficiaries disclaiming or
being cashed out. Permitting the calculation of post-death
minimum distributions to take into account an employee's remaining life
expectancy at the time of death, thus allowing distributions in all
cases to be spread over a number of years after death. These simplifications would also have the
effect of reducing the required minimum distributions for the vast
majority of employees. The Uniform Distribution Period Under these proposed regulations and the
1987 proposed regulations, for distributions from an individual account,
the required minimum distribution is determined by dividing the account
balance by the distribution period. For lifetime required minimum
distributions, these proposed regulations provide a uniform distribution
period for all employees of the same age. The uniform distribution
period table is the required minimum distribution incidental benefit
(MDIB) divisor table originally prescribed in Sec. 1.401(a)(9)-2 of the
1987 proposed regulations and now included in A-4 of Sec. 1.401(a)-5 of
the new proposed regulations. An exception applies if the employee's
sole beneficiary is the employee's spouse and the spouse is more than
10years younger than the employee. In that case, the employee is
permitted to use the longer distribution period measured by the joint
life and last survivor life expectancy of the employee and spouse. These
changes provide a simple administrable rule for plans and individuals.
Using the MDIB table, most employees will be able to determine their
required minimum distribution for each year based on nothing more than
their current age and their account balance as of the end of the prior
year (which IRA trustees report annually to IRA owners). Under the 1987
proposed regulations, some employees already use the MDIB table to
determine required minimum distributions. Under the new proposed
regulations, they would continue to do so. For the majority of other
employees, required minimum distributions would be reduced as a result
of the changes. For years after the year of the employee's
death, the distribution period is generally the remaining life
expectancy of the designated beneficiary. The beneficiary's remaining
life expectancy is calculated using the age of the beneficiary in the
year following the year of the employee’s death, reduced by one for
each subsequent year. If the employee’s spouse is the employee's sole
beneficiary at the end of the year following the year of death, the
distribution period during the spouse’s life is the spouse's single
life expectancy. For years after the year of the spouse's death, the
distribution period is the spouse’s life expectancy calculated in the
year of death, reduced by one for each subsequent year. If there is no
designated beneficiary as of the end of the year after the employee's
death, the distribution period is the employee's life expectancy
calculated in the year of death, reduced by one for each subsequent
year. The MDIB table is based on the joint life
expectancies of an individual and a survivor 10 years younger at each
age beginning at age70. Allowing the use of this table reflects the fact
that an employee’s beneficiary is subject to change until the death of
the employee and ultimately may be a beneficiary more than 10 years
younger than the employee. The proposed regulations would allow lifetime
distribution sat a rate consistent with this possibility. Consistent
with the requirements of section 401(a)(9)(A)(ii), the distribution
period after death is measured by the life expectancy of the employee's
designated beneficiary in the year following death, or the employee's
remaining life expectancy if there is no designated beneficiary. This
ensures that the employee's entire benefit is distributed over a period
described in section 401(a)(9)(A)(ii), i.e., the life expectancy of the
employee or the joint life expectancy of the employee and a designated
beneficiary. The approach in these proposed regulations
allowing the use of a uniform lifetime distribution period addresses
concerns raised in comments on the 1987 proposed regulations that the
rules are too complex. It eliminates the use of two tables and the
interaction of the multiple beneficiary and change in beneficiary rules.
Finally, it generally eliminates the need to fix the amount of the
distribution during the employee's lifetime based on the beneficiary
designated on the required beginning date and eliminates the need to
elect recalculation or no recalculation of life expectancies at the
required beginning date. Suggestions have been received that the
life expectancy table used to calculate required minimum distributions
should be revised to reflect recent increases in longevity. These
proposed regulations instead provide authority for the Commissioner to
issue guidance of general applicability revising the life expectancy
tables and the uniform distribution table in the future if it becomes
appropriate. While life expectancy has increased in the 14 years since
the issuance of the section 72 life expectancy tables, those tables may
already overstate the average life expectancy of the class of
individuals who are subject to these required[[Page 3931]]minimum
distribution rules (qualified plan participants, IRA owners, et al.).
That is because those existing section 72 tables were derived from the
particular mortality experience of the select population of individuals
who purchase individual annuities, as opposed to the population who are
subject to the required minimum distribution rules. In any event, as noted earlier, the new
proposed uniform distribution period--equal to the joint life expectancy
of an individual and a survivor 10 years younger at each age--would
lengthen the lifetime distribution period for most employees and
beneficiaries. In fact, the new proposed regulations would lengthen that
period more for many individuals than would an update to reflect recent
increases in longevity. The IRS and Treasury believe that this
lengthening of the distribution period for most employees provides
further justification for retaining the existing life expectancy tables
at this time. Some commentators suggested that the
calculation of required minimum distributions include credit for any
distribution in a prior year that exceeded that year's required minimum
distribution. However, such a ``credit'' carryforward would require
significant additional data retention and would add substantial
complexity to the calculation of required minimum distributions. By
using the prior year's ending account balance for calculating required
minimum distributions, distribution of amounts in excess of the required
minimum distribution has the effect of reducing future required minimum
distributions over the remaining distribution period to some extent.
Accordingly, these proposed regulations do not provide for a credit
carryforward. Determination
of the Designated Beneficiary These proposed regulations provide that,
generally, the designated beneficiary is determined as of the end of the
year following the year of the employee's death rather than as of the
employee's required beginning date or date of death, as under the 1987
proposed regulations. Thus, any beneficiary eliminated by distribution
of the benefit or through disclaimer (or otherwise) during the period
between the employee's death and the end of the year following the year
of death is disregarded in determining the employee's designated
beneficiary for purposes of calculating required minimum distributions. If, as of the end of the year following the
year of the employee’s death, the employee has more than one
designated beneficiary and the account or benefit has not been divided
into separate accounts or shares for each beneficiary, the beneficiary
with the shortest life expectancy is the designated beneficiary,
consistent with the approaching the 1987 proposed regulations. This approach for determining the
designated beneficiary following the death of an employee after the
employee's required beginning date is simpler in several respects than
the approach in the 1987 proposed regulations and responds to concerns
raised with respect to the effects of beneficiary designation at the
required beginning date. Under this approach, the determination of the
designated beneficiary and the calculation of the beneficiary's life
expectancy generally are contemporaneous with commencement of required
distributions to the beneficiary. Any prior beneficiary designation is
irrelevant for distributions from individual accounts, unless the
employee takes advantage of a lifetime distribution period measured by
the joint life expectancy of the employee and a spouse more than 10
years younger than the employee. Further, for an employee with a
designated beneficiary, this approach provides the same rules for
distributions after the employee’s death, regardless of whether death
occurs before or after an employee’s required beginning date. Finally,
in the case of an employee who elects or defaults into recalculation of
life expectancy and who dies without a designated beneficiary, the
requirement that the employee’s entire remaining account balance be
distributed in the year after an employee's death has been eliminated
and replaced with a distribution period equal to the employee's
remaining life expectancy recalculated immediately before death. Default Rule for Post-Death Distributions As requested by some commentators, these
proposed regulations would change the default rule in the case of death
before the employee’s required beginning date for a non-spouse
designated beneficiary from the5-year rule in section 401(a)(9)(B)(ii)
to the life expectancy rule in section 401(a)(9)(B)(iii). Thus, absent a
plan provision or election of the 5-year rule, the life expectancy rule
would apply in all cases in which the employee has a designated
beneficiary. As in the case of death on or after the employee's required
beginning date, the designated beneficiary whose life expectancy is used
to determine the distribution period would be determined as of the end
of the year following the year of the employee's death, rather than as
of the employee’s date of death (as would have been required under the
1987proposed regulations). The 5-year rule would apply automatically
only if the employee did not have a designated beneficiary as of the end
of the year following the year of the employee's death. Finally, in the
case of death before the employee's required beginning date, these
proposed regulations allow a waiver, unless the Commissioner determines
otherwise, of any excise tax resulting from the life expectancy rule
during the first five years after the year of the employee's death if
the employee's entire benefit is distributed by the end of the fifth
year following the year of the employee's death. Annuity Payments These
proposed regulations make several changes to the rules for determining
whether annuity payments satisfy section 401(a)(9). The changes are
designed to make these rules more administrable without adverse effects
on the basic structure and application of the rules. The IRS and
Treasury are continuing to study and evaluate whether additional changes
would be appropriate for determining whether annuity payments satisfy
section 401(a)(9). Some comments were received on the annuity rules in
1987, but updated comments that include a discussion of current industry
practices, products, and concerns would be helpful. These proposed regulations provide that the
designated beneficiary for determining the distribution period for
annuity payments generally is the beneficiary as of the annuity starting
date, even if that date is after the required beginning date. Thus, if
annuity payments commence after the required beginning date, the
determination of the designated beneficiary is contemporaneous with the
annuity starting date and any intervening changes in the beneficiary
designation since the required beginning date are ignored. Second, as
requested in comments, these regulations extend to all annuity payment
streams the rule in the 1987 proposed regulations that allows a life
annuity with a period certain not exceeding 20 years to commence on the
required beginning date with no makeup for the first distribution
calendar year. For this purpose, the regulations clarify that only
accruals as of the end of the prior calendar year must be taken into
account in calculating the amount of an annuity[[Page 3932]]commencing
on the required beginning date. Subsequent accruals are treated as
additional accruals that must be taken into account in the next calendar
year. Also as requested in comments, the regulations provide that,
although additional accruals need to be taken into account in the first
payment in the calendar year following the year of the accrual, actual
payment in the form of a make-up payment need only be completed by the
end of that calendar year. The permitted increase in annuity payments
to an employee upon the death of the survivor annuitant has been
expanded to cover the elimination of the survivor portion of a joint and
survivor annuity due to a qualified domestic relations order. Further,
in response to comments, in the case of an annuity contract purchased
from an insurance company, an exception to the non-increasing payment
requirement in these proposed regulations has been added to accommodate
a cash refund upon the employee's death of the amount of the premiums
paid for the contract. One of the rules in the 1987 proposed
regulations that the IRS and Treasury are continuing to study and
evaluate is the rule providing that if the distributions from a defined
benefit plan are not in the form of an annuity, the employee's benefit
will be treated as an individual account for purposes of determining
required minimum distributions. The IRS and Treasury are continuing to
consider whether retention of this rule is appropriate for defined
benefit plans. Similarly, the IRS and Treasury are continuing to
consider whether the rule permitting the benefit under a defined benefit
plan to be divided into segregated shares for purposes of section
401(a)(9) is useful and appropriate for defined benefit plans. Trust as Beneficiary These proposed regulations retain the
provision in the proposed regulations, as amended in 1997, allowing an
underlying beneficiary of a trust to be an employee's designated
beneficiary for purposes of determining required minimum distributions
when the trust is named as the beneficiary of a retirement plan or IRA,
provided that certain requirements are met. One of these requirements is
that documentation of the underlying beneficiaries of the trust be
provided timely to the plan administrator. In the case of individual
accounts, unless the lifetime distribution period for an employee is
measured by the joint life expectancy of the employee and the employee's
spouse, the deadline under these proposed regulations for providing the
beneficiary documentation would be the end of the year following year of
the employee’s death. This is consistent with the deadline for
determining the employee's designated beneficiary. Because the
designated beneficiary during an employee's lifetime is not relevant for
determining lifetime required minimum distributions in most cases under
these proposed regulations, the burden of lifetime documentation
requirements contained in the previous proposed regulations
insignificantly reduced. A significant number of commentators on the
1997 amendment to the proposed regulations requested clarification that
a testamentary trust named as an employee's beneficiary is a trust that
qualifies for the look-through rule to the underlying beneficiaries, as
permitted in the1997 proposed regulations. These proposed regulations
provide examples in which a testamentary trust is named as an employee's
beneficiary and the look-through trust rules apply. As previously
illustrated in the facts of Rev. Rul. 2000-2, 2000-3 I.R.B. 305, the
examples also clarify that remaindermen of a ``QTIP'' trust must be
taken into account as beneficiaries in determining the distribution
period for required minimum distributions if amounts are accumulated for
their benefit during the life of the income beneficiary under the trust.
Rules for Qualified Domestic Relations Orders These proposed regulations
retain the basic rules in the 1987proposed regulation for a qualified
domestic relations order (QDRO). Thus, for example, the proposed regulations
continue to provide that a former spouse to whom all or a portion of the
employee's benefit is payable pursuant to a QDRO will be treated as a
spouse (including a surviving spouse) of the employee for purposes of
section 401(a)(9),including the minimum distribution incidental benefit
requirement, regardless of whether the QDRO specifically provides that
the former spouse is treated as the spouse for purposes of sections
401(a)(11) and417. This rule applies regardless of the number of former
spouses an employee has who are alternate payees with respect to the
employee’s retirement benefits. Further, for example, if a QDRO
divides the individual account of an employee in a defined contribution
plan into a separate account for the employee and a separate account for
the alternate payee, the required minimum distribution to the alternate
payee during the lifetime of the employee must nevertheless be
determined using the same rules that apply to distribution to the
employee. Thus, required minimum distributions to the alternate payee
must commence by the employee's required beginning date. However, the
required minimum distribution for the alternate payee will be separately
determined. The required minimum distributions for the alternate payee
during the lifetime of the employee may be determined either using the
uniform distribution period discussed above based on the age of the
employee in the distribution calendar year, or, if the alternate payee
is the employee's former spouse and is more than 10years younger than
the employee, using the joint life expectancy of the employee and the
alternate payee. Election of Surviving Spouse To Treat an
Inherited IRA as Spouse's Own IRA These proposed regulations clarify the
rule in the 1987 proposed regulations that allows the surviving spouse
of a decedent IRA owner to elect to treat an IRA inherited by the
surviving spouse from that owners the spouse's own IRA. The 1987
proposed regulations provide that this election is deemed to have been
made if the surviving spouse contributes to the IRA or does not take the
required minimum distribution for a year under section 401(a)(9)(B) as a
beneficiary of the IRA. These new proposed regulations clarify that this
deemed election is permitted to be made only after the distribution of
the required minimum amount for the account, if any, for the year of the
individual’s death. Further these new proposed regulations clarify
that this deemed election is permitted only if the spouse is the sole
beneficiary of the account and has an unlimited right to withdrawal from
the account. This requirement is not satisfied if a trust is named as
beneficiary of the IRA, even if the spouse is the sole beneficiary of
the trust. These clarifications make the election consistent with the
underlying premise that the surviving spouse could have received a
distribution of the entire decedent IRA owner's account and rolled it
over to an IRA established in the surviving spouse's own name as Ironer. These new proposed regulations also clarify
that, except for the required minimum distribution for the year of the
individual's death, the spouse is permitted to roll over the post-death
required minimum distribution under section 401(a)(9)(B) for a year if
the spouse disestablishing the IRA rollover account in the name of the
spouse as[[Page 3933]]IRA owner. However, if the surviving spouse is age
70\1/2\ or older, the minimum lifetime distribution required under
section 401(a)(9)(A)must be made for the year and, because it is a
required minimum distribution, that amount may not be rolled over. These
proposed regulations provide that this election by a surviving spouse
eligible to treat an IRA as the spouse's own may also be accomplished
byre designating the IRA with the name of the surviving spouse as owner
rather than beneficiary. IRA Reporting have Required Minimum
Distributions Because these regulations substantially
simplify the calculation of required minimum distributions from IRAs,
IRA trustees determining the account balance as of the end of the year
can also calculate the following year's required minimum distribution
for each IRA. To improve compliance and further reduce the burden
imposed on IRA owners and beneficiaries, under the authority provided in
section 408(i), these proposed regulations would require the trustee of
each IRA to report the amount of the required minimum distribution from
the IRA to the Ironer or beneficiary and to the IRS at the time and in
the manner provided under IRS forms and instructions. This reporting
would be required regardless of whether the IRA owner is planning to
take the required minimum distribution from that IRA or from another
IRA, and would indicate that the IRA owner is permitted to take the
required minimum distribution from any other IRA of the owner. During
year 2001,the IRS will be receiving public comments and consulting with
interested parties to assist the IRS in evaluating what form best
accommodates this reporting requirement, what timing is appropriate(e.g.,
the beginning of the calendar year for which the required amounts being
calculated), and what effective date would be most appropriate for the
reporting requirement. In this context, after thorough consideration of
comments and consultation with interested parties, theirs intends to
develop procedures and a schedule for reporting that provides adequate
lead time, and minimizes the reporting burden, friar trustees, issuers,
and custodians in complying with this new reporting requirement while
providing the most useful information to the IRA owners and
beneficiaries. The IRS and Treasury are also considering
whether similar reporting would be appropriate for section 403(b)
contracts. Permitted Delays Relative to Dross and
State Insurer Delinquency Proceedings The regulations permit the
required minimum distribution for a year to be delayed to a later year
in certain circumstances. Specifically, commentators requested a delay
during a period of up to 18 months during which an amount is segregated
in connection with the review of domestic relations order pursuant to
section 414(p)(7). Commentators also requested that a delay be permitted
while annuity payments under an annuity contract issued by a life
insurance company in state insurer delinquency proceedings have been
reduced or suspended by reason of state proceedings. These proposed
regulations allow delay in these circumstances. Correction of Failures Under Section
401(a)(9)The proposed regulations do not set forth the special rule
relieving a plan from disqualification for isolated instances of failure
to satisfy section 401(a)(9) because all failures for qualified plans
and section 403(b) accounts under section 401(a)(9) are now permitted to
be corrected through the Employee Plans Compliance Resolution System (EPCRS).
See Rev. Proc. 2000-16 (2000-6 I.R.B. 518). Amendment of Qualified Plans These regulations are proposed to be
effective for distributions for calendar years beginning on or after
January 1, 2002. For distributions for calendar years beginning before
the effective date of final regulations, plan sponsors can continue to
rely on the 1987proposed regulations, to the extent those proposed
regulations are not inconsistent with the changes to section 401(a)(9)
made by the Small Business Job Protection Act of 1996 (SBJPA) and
guidance related to those changes. Alternatively, for distributions for
the 2001 and subsequent calendar years beginning before the effective
date of final regulations, plan sponsors are permitted, but not
required, to follow these proposed regulations in the operation of their
plans by adopting the model amendment set forth below. The Treasury Department and the IRS are
making the model amendment set forth below available to plan sponsors to
permit them to apply these proposed regulations in the operation of
their plans without violating the requirement that a plan be operated in
accordance with its terms. Plan sponsors who adopt the model amendment
will have reliance that, during the term of the amendment, operation of
their plans in a manner that satisfies the minimum distribution
requirements in these proposed regulations will not cause their plans to
fail to be qualified. In addition, distributes will have reliance that
distributions that are made during the term of the amendment that
satisfy the minimum distribution requirements in these proposed
regulations. The model amendment may be adopted by plan sponsors,
practitioners who sponsor volume submitter specimen plans and sponsors
of master and prototype (M&P) plans. These proposed regulations permit plans to
make distributions under either default provisions or under permissible
optional provisions. Alan that has been amended by adoption of the model
amendment will be treated as operating in conformance with a requirement
of the proposed regulations that permits the use of either default or
optional provisions if the plan is operated consistently in accordance
with either the default rule or a specific permitted alternative,
notwithstanding the plan's terms. The Service will not issue determination,
opinion or advisory letters on the basis of the changes in these
proposed regulations until the publication of final regulations. Until
such time, the IRS will continue to issue such letters on the basis of
the 1987 proposed regulations and SBJPA. Although the IRS will not issue
determination, opinion or advisory letters with respect to the model
amendment, the adoption of the model amendment will not affect a
determination letter issued for a plan whose terms otherwise satisfy the
1987 proposed regulations and SBJPA. Plan sponsors should not adopt
other amendments to attempt to conform their plans to the changes in
these proposed regulations before the publication of final regulations.
The IRS intends to publish procedures at a later date that will allow
qualified plans to be amended to reflect the regulations under section
401(a)(9)when they are finalized. Qualified plans are required to be amended
for changes in the plan qualification requirements made by GUST by the
end of the GUST remedial amendment period under section 401(b), which is
generally the end of the first plan year beginning on or after January
1, 2001, or, inapplicable, a later date determined under the provisions
of section 19of Rev. Proc. 2000-20 (2000-6 I.R.B. 553). Many plans have
been operated in a manner that reflects the changes to section
401(a)(9)made by SBJPA and will have to be amended for[[Page 3934]]these
changes by the end of the GUST remedial amendment period. The IRS
intends that its procedures for amending qualified plans for the final
regulations under section 401(a)(9) will generally avoid the need for
plan sponsors, volume submitter practitioners and M&P plan sponsors
to request another determination, opinion or advisory letter subsequent
toothier application for a GUST letter. In addition, to the extent such
subsequent letter is needed or desired, the IRS intends that its
procedures will provide that the application for the letter will not
have to be submitted prior to the next time the plan is otherwise
amended or required to be amended. The model amendment described above is set
forth below: With respect to distributions under the
Plan made in calendar years beginning on or after January 1, 2000
(ALTERNATIVELY, SPECIFYA LATER CALENDAR YEAR FOR WHICH THE AMENDMENT IS
TO BE INITIALLYEFFECTIVE), the Plan will apply the minimum distribution
requirements of section 401(a)(9) of the Internal Revenue Code in
accordance with the regulations under section 401(a)(9) that were
proposed in January 2001, notwithstanding any provision of the Plant the
contrary. This amendment shall continue in effect until the end of the
last calendar year beginning before the effective date of final
regulations under section 401(a)(9) or such other date specified in
guidance published by the Internal Revenue Service. Amendment of IRAs and Effective Date These regulations are proposed to be
effective for distributions for calendar years beginning on or after
January 1, 2002. For distributions for the 2001 calendar year, IRA
owners are permitted, button required, to follow these proposed
regulations in operation, notwithstanding the terms of the IRA
documents. IRA owners may therefore rely on these proposed regulations
for distributions for the2001 calendar year. However, IRA sponsors
should not amend their IRA documents to conform their IRAs to the
changes in these proposed regulations before the publication of final
regulations. The IRS will not issue model IRAs on the basis of the
changes in these proposed regulations until the publication of final
regulations. Until such time, IRA owners can continue to use the current
model IRAs which are based on the 1987 proposed regulations under
section 401(a)(9). The I Swill publish procedures at a later date that
will allow IRAs to beam ended to reflect final regulations under section
401(a)(9).Proposed Effective Date The regulations are proposed to be
applicable for determining required minimum distributions for calendar
years beginning on or after January 1, 2002. For determining required
minimum distributions for calendar year 2001, taxpayers may rely on
these proposed regulations iron the 1987 proposed regulations. If, and
to the extent, future guidance is more restrictive than the guidance in
these proposed regulations, the future guidance will be issued without
retroactive effect. Special Analyses It has been determined that this notice of
proposed rulemaking isn’t a significant regulatory action as defined
in Executive Order12866. Therefore, a regulatory assessment is not
required. It also has-been determined that section 553(b) of the
Administrative Procedure Act(5 U.S.C. chapter 5) does not apply to these
regulations, and because the regulation does not impose a collection of
information on small entities, the Regulatory Flexibility Act (5 U.S.C.
chapter 6) does not apply. Pursuant to section 7805(f) of the Code,
these proposed regulations will be submitted to the Chief Counsel for
Advocacy of the Small Business Administration for comment on their
impact on small business. Comments and Public Hearing Before these proposed regulations are
adopted as final regulations, consideration will be given to any
electronic or written comments(preferably a signed original and eight
(8) copies) that are submitted timely to the IRS. In addition to the
other requests for comments set forth in this document, the IRS and
Treasury also request comments on the clarity of the proposed rule and
how it may be made easier to understand. All comments will be available
for public inspection and copying. A public hearing has been scheduled for
June 1, 2001, at 10 a.m. in the IRS Auditorium (7th Floor), Internal
Revenue Building, 1111Constitution Avenue NW., Washington, and DC. Due
to building security procedures, visitors must enter at the 10th street
entrance, located between Constitution and Pennsylvania Avenues, NW. In
addition, all visitors must present photo identification to enter the
building. Because of access restrictions, visitors
will not be admitted beyond the immediate entrance area more than 15
minutes before the hearing starts. For information about having your
name placed on the building access list to attend the hearing, see the
FOR FURTHER INFORMATIONCONTACT section of this preamble. The rules of 26 CFR 601.601(a)(3) applies
to the hearing. Persons who wish to present oral comments
at the hearing must submit written comments and an outline of the topics
to be discussed and the time to be devoted to each topic (signed
original and eight (8)copies) by May 11, 2001. A period of 10 minutes will be allotted to
each person for making comments. An agenda showing the scheduling of the
speakers will be prepared after the deadline for receiving outlines has
passed. Copies of the agenda will be available free of charge at the
hearing. Drafting Information The principal authors of these regulations
are Marjorie Hoffman and Cathy A. Vohs of the Office of the Division
Counsel/Associate Chief Counsel (Tax Exempt and Government Entities).
However, other personnel from the IRS and Treasury participated in their
development. List of Subjects 26 CFR Part 1 Income taxes, Reporting and record keeping
requirements. 26 CFR Part 54 Excise taxes, Pensions, Reporting and
record keeping requirements. Adoption of Amendments of the Regulations Accordingly, 26 CFR part 1 is amended as
follows: PART 1--INCOME TAXES Paragraph 1. The authority citation for
part 1 is amended by adding entries in numerical order to read in part
as follows: Authority: 26 U.S.C. 7805 * * * Sec. 1.401(a)(9)-1 is also issued under 26
U.S.C. 401(a)(9). Sec. 1.401(a)(9)-2 is also issued under 26
U.S.C. 401(a)(9). Sec. 1.401(a)(9)-3 is also issued under 26
U.S.C. 401(a)(9). Sec. 1.401(a)(9)-4 is also issued under 26
U.S.C. 401(a)(9). Sec. 1.401(a)(9)-5 is also issued under 26
U.S.C. 401(a)(9). Sec. 1.401(a)(9)-6 is also issued under 26
U.S.C. 401(a)(9). Sec. 1.401(a)(9)-7 is also issued under 26
U.S.C. 401(a)(9). Sec. 1.401(a)(9)-8 is also issued under 26
U.S.C. 401(a)(9).* * * Sec. 1.403(b)-2 is also issued under 26
U.S.C. 403(b)(10).* * * [[Page 3935]] Sec. 1.408-8 is also issued under 26 U.S.C.
408(a)(6) and (b)(3).* * * Par. 2. Sections 1.401(a)(9)-0 through
1.401(a)(9)-8 are added tread as follows: Sec. 1.401(a)(9)-0 Required minimum
distributions; table of contents. This table of contents lists the
regulations relating to required minimum distributions under section
401(a)(9) of the Internal Revenue Code as follows: Sec. 1.401(a)(9)-0 Required minimum
distributions; table of contents. Sec. 1.401(a)(9)-1 Required minimum
distribution requirement in general. Sec. 1.401(a)(9)-2 Distributions commencing
before an employee’s death. Sec. 1.401(a)(9)-3 Death before required
beginning date. Sec. 1.401(a)(9)-4 Determination of the
designated beneficiary. Sec. 1.401(a)(9)-5 Required minimum
distributions from defined contribution plans. Sec. 1.401(a)(9)-6 Required minimum
distributions from defined benefit plans. Sec. 1.401(a)(9)-7 Rollovers and transfers. Sec. 1.401(a)(9)-8 Special rules. Sec. 1.401(a)(9)-1 Required minimum
distribution requirement in general. Q-1. What plans are subject to the required
minimum distribution requirement under section 401(a)(9) and Sacs.
1.401(a)(9)-1 through1.401(a)(9)-8?A-1. All stock bonus, pension, and
profit-sharing plans qualified under section 401(a) and annuity
contracts described in section 403(a)are subject to the required minimum
distribution rules in section401(a)(9) and Sacs. 1.401(a)(9)-1 through
1.401(a)(9)-8. Senesce. 1.403(b)-2 for the distribution rules applicable
to annuity contracts or custodial accounts described in section 403(b),
senesce. 1.408-8 for the distribution rules applicable to individual
retirement plans, see Sec. 1.408A-6 described for the distribution rules
applicable to Roth IRAs under section 408A, and see section457(d)(2)(A)
for distribution rules applicable to certain deferred compensation plans
for employees of tax exempt organizations or state and local government
employees. Q-2. Which employee account balances and
benefits held under qualified trusts and plans are subject to the
distribution rules of section 401(a)(9) and Sacs. 1.401(a)(9)-1 through
1.401(a)(9)-8? A-2. The distribution rules of section
401(a)(9) apply to all account balances and benefits in existence on or
after January 1, 1985.Sections 1.401(a)(9)-1 through 1.401(a)(9)-8 apply
for purposes of determining required minimum distributions for calendar
years beginning on or after January 1, 2002. Q-3. What specific provisions must a plan
contain in order to satisfy section 401(a)(9)? A-3. (a) Required provisions. In order to
satisfy section401(a)(9), the plan must include several written
provisions reflecting section 401(a)(9). First, the plan must generally
set forth the statutory rules of section 401(a)(9), including the
incidental death benefit requirement in section 401(a)(9)(G). Second,
the plan must provide that distributions will be made in accordance
withes. 1.401(a)(9)-1 through 1.401(a)(9)-8. The plan document must also
provide that the provisions reflecting section 401(a)(9) override any
distribution options in the plan inconsistent with section 401(a)(9). The plan also must include any other
provisions reflecting section401(a)(9) as are prescribed by the
Commissioner in revenue rulings, notices, and other guidance published
in the Internal Revenue Bulletin. See Sec. 601.601(d)(2)(ii)(b) of this
chapter. b) Optional provisions. The plan may also
include written provisions regarding any optional provisions governing
plan distributions that do not conflict with section 401(a)(9) and the
regulations thereunder. (c) Absence of optional provisions. Plan
distributions commencing after an employee's death will be required to
be made under the default provision set forth in Sec. 1.401(a)(9)-3 for
distributions unless the plan document contains optional provisions that
override such default provisions. Thus, if distributions have not
commenced to the employee at the time of the employee's death,
distributions after the death of an employee are to be made
automatically in accordance with the default provisions in A-4(a) of
Sec. 1.401(a)(9)-3 unless the plan either specifies in accordance with
A-4(b) of Sec. 1.401(a)(9)-3 the method under which distributions will
be made or provides for elections by the employee (or beneficiary) in
accordance with A-4(c) offset. 1.401(a)(9)-3 and such elections are made
by the employee orbeneficiary. Sec.
1.401(a)(9)-2 Distributions commencing before an employee’s death. Q-1. In the case of distributions
commencing before an employee’s death, how must the employee's entire
interest be distributed in order to satisfy section 401(a)(9)(A)? A-1. (a) In order to satisfy section
401(a)(9)(A), the entire interest of each employee must be distributed
to such employee not later than the required beginning date, or must be
distributed, beginning not later than the required beginning date, over
the life of the employee or joint lives of the employee and a designated
beneficiary or over a period not extending beyond the life expectancy of
the employee or the joint life and last survivor expectancy of the
employee and the designated beneficiary. (b) Section 401(a)(9)(G) provides that
lifetime distributions must satisfy the incidental death benefit
requirements. (c) The amount required to be distributed
for each calendar year in order to satisfy section 401(a)(9)(A) and (G)
generally depends on whether a distribution is in the form of
distributions under a defined contribution plan or annuity payments
under a defined benefit plan. Forth method of determining the required
minimum distribution in accordance with section 401(a)(9)(A) and (G)
from an individual account under a defined contribution plan, see Sec.
1.401(a)(9)-5. For the method of determining the required minimum
distribution in accordance with section 401(a)(9)(A) and (G) in the case
of annuity payments from defined benefit plan or an annuity contract,
see Sec. 1.401(a)(9)-6. Q-2. For purposes of section 401(a)(9)(C),
what does the term required beginning date mean? A-2. (a) Except as provided in paragraph
(b) of this A-2 with respect to a 5-percent owner, as defined in
paragraph (c), the term required beginning date means April 1 of the
calendar year following the later of the calendar year in which the
employee attains age 70\1/2\, or the calendar year in which the employee
retires from employment with the employer maintaining the plan. (b) In the case of an employee who is a
5-percent owner, the term required beginning date means April 1 of the
calendar year following the calendar year in which the employee attains
age 70\1/2\. (c) For purposes of section 401(a)(9), a
5-percent owner is an employee who is a 5-percent owner (as defined in
section 416) with respect to the plan year ending in the calendar year
in which the employee attains age 70\1/2\. (d) Paragraph (b) of this A-2 does not
apply in the case of governmental plan (within the meaning of section
414(d)) or a church plan. For purposes of this paragraph, the term
church plan means a plan maintained by a church for church employees,
and the term church means any church (as defined in section
3121(w)(3)(A)) or qualified church-controlled organization (as defined
in section 3121(w)(3)(B)).[[Page 3936]] (e) A plan is permitted to provide that the
required beginning date for purposes of section 401(a)(9) for all
employees is April 1 of the calendar year following the calendar year in
which the employee attained age 70\1/2\ regardless of whether the
employee is a 5-percentowner. Q-3. When does an employee attain age
70\1/2\? A-3. An employee attains age 70\1/2\ as of
the date six calendar months after the 70th anniversary of the
employee's birth. For example, if an employee's date of birth was June
30, 1932, the 70th anniversary of such employee's birth is June 30,
2002. Such employee attains age70\1/2\ on December 30, 2002.
Consequently, if the employee is a 5-percent owner or retired, such
employee's required beginning date is April 1, 2003. However, if the
employee's date of birth was July 1,1932, the 70th anniversary of such
employee's birth would be July 1,2002. Such employee would then attain
age 70\1/2\ on January 1, 2003and such employee's required beginning
date would be April 1, 2004. Q-4. Must distributions made before the
employee's required beginning date satisfy section 401(a)(9)? A-4. Lifetime distributions made before the
employee's required beginning date for calendar years before the
employee's first distribution calendar year, as defined in A-1(b) of
Sec. 1.401(a)(9)-5,need not be made in accordance with section
401(a)(9). However, if distributions commence before the employee's
required beginning date under a particular distribution option, such as
in the form of an annuity, the distribution option fails to satisfy
section 401(a)(9) at the time distributions commence if, under terms of
the particular distribution option, distributions to be made for the
employee's first distribution calendar year or any subsequent
distribution calendar year will fail to satisfy section 401(a)(9). Q-5. If distributions have begun to an
employee before the employee’s death (in accordance with section
401(a)(9)(A)(ii)), how must distributions be made after an employee's
death? A-5. Section 401(a)(9)(B)(i) provides that
if the distribution of the employee's interest has begun in accordance
with section401(a)(9)(A)(ii) and the employee dies before his entire
interest has-been distributed to him, the remaining portion of such
interest must be distributed at least as rapidly as under the
distribution method being used under section 401(a)(9)(A)(ii) as of the
date of his death. The amount required to be distributed for each
distribution calendar year following the calendar year of death
generally depends on whether a distribution is in the form of
distributions from an individual account under a defined contribution
plan or annuity payments under a defined benefit plan. For the method of
determining the required minimum distribution in accordance with section
401(a)(9)(B)(i) from an individual account, see A-5(a) of Sec.
1.401(a)(9)-5 for the calculation of the distribution period that
applies when an employee dies after the employee's required beginning
date. In the case of annuity payments from a defined benefit plan or an
annuity contract, see Sec. 1.401(a)(9)-6. Q-6. For purposes of section 401(a)(9)(B),
when are distributions considered to have begun to the employee in
accordance with section401(a)(9)(A)(ii)? A-6. (a) General rule. Except as otherwise
provided in A-10 offset. 1.401(a)(9)-6, distributions are not treated as
having begun to the employee in accordance with section 401(a)(9)(A)(ii)
until the employee’s required beginning date, without regard to
whether payments have been made before that date. For example, if
employee A upon retirement in 2002, the calendar year A attains age
65\1/2\, begins receiving installment distributions from a
profit-sharing plan over a period not exceeding the joint life and last
survivor expectancy of And A's beneficiary, benefits are not treated as
having begun in accordance with section 401(a)(9)(A)(ii) until April 1,
2008 (the April1 following the calendar year in which A attains age
70\1/2\).Consequently, if such employee dies before April 1, 2008 (A's
required beginning date), distributions after A's death must be made in
accordance with section 401(a)(9)(B)(ii) or (iii) and (iv) Andes.
1.401(a)(9)-4, and not section 401(a)(9)(B)(i). This is the case without
regard to whether the plan has distributed the minimum distribution for
the first distribution calendar year (as defined in A-1(b) of Sec.
1.401(a)(9)-5) before A's death. (b) If a plan provides, in accordance with
A-2(e) of this section, that the required beginning date for purposes of
section 401(a)(9) feral employees is April 1 of the calendar year
following the calendar year in which the employee attains age 70\1/2\,
an employee who dies after the required beginning date determined under
the plan terms mistreated as dying after the employee's required
beginning date for purposes of A-5(a) of this section even though the
employee dies before the April 1 following the calendar year in which
the employee retires. Sec.
1.401(a)(9)-3 Death before required beginning date. Q-1. If an employee dies before the
employee's required beginning date, how must the employee's entire
interest be distributed in order to satisfy section 401(a)(9)? A-1. a) Except as otherwise provided in A-10 of
Sec. 1.401(a)(9)-6, if an employee dies before the employee's required
beginning date(and, thus, generally before distributions are treated as
having begun in accordance with section 401(a)(9)(A)(ii)), distribution
of the employee’s entire interest must be made in accordance with one
of the methods described in section 401(a)(9)(B)(ii) or (iii). One
method (the five-year rule in section 401(a)(9)(B)(ii)) requires that
the entire interest of the employee be distributed within five years of
the employee’s death regardless of who or what entity receives the
distribution. Another method (the life expectancy rule in
section401(a)(9)(B)(iii)) requires that any portion of an employee's
interest payable to (or for the benefit of) a designated beneficiary be
distributed, commencing within one year of the employee's death, over
the life of such beneficiary (or over a period not extending beyond the
life expectancy of such beneficiary). Section 401(a)(9)(B)(iv) provides
special rules where the designated beneficiary is the surviving spouse
of the employee, including a special commencement date for distributions
under section 401(a)(9)(B)(iii) to the surviving spouse. (b) See A-4 of this section for the rules
for determining which of the methods described in paragraph (a) applies.
See A-3 of this section to determine when distributions under the
exception to the five-year rule in section 401(a)(9)(B)(iii) and (iv)
must commence. See A-2 of this section to determine when the five-year
period in section401(a)(9)(B)(ii) ends. For distributions using the life
expectancy rule in section 401(a)(9)(B)(iii) and (iv), see Sec.
1.401(a)(9)-4 in order to determine the designated beneficiary under
section 401(a)(9)(B)(iii)and (iv), see Sec. 1.401(a)(9)-5 for the rules
for determining the required minimum distribution under a defined
contribution plan, and see Sec. 1.401(a)(9)-6 for required minimum
distributions under defined benefit plans. Q-2. By when must the employee's entire
interest be distributed in order to satisfy the five-year rule in
section 401(a)(9)(B)(ii)? [[Page 3937]] A-2. In order to satisfy the five-year rule
in section401(a)(9)(B)(ii), the employee's entire interest must be
distributed byte end of the calendar year which contains the fifth
anniversary of the date of the employee's death. For example, if an
employee dies on January 1, 2002, the entire interest must be
distributed by the end of2007, in order to satisfy the five-year rule in
section401(a)(9)(B)(ii). Q-3. When are distributions required to
commence in order to satisfy the life expectancy rule in section
401(a)(9)(B)(iii) and (iv)? A-3. (a) No spouse beneficiary. In order to
satisfy the life expectancy rule in section 401(a)(9)(B)(iii), if the
designated beneficiary is not the employee's surviving spouse,
distributions must commence on or before the end of the calendar year
immediately following the calendar year in which the employee died. This
rule also applies to the distribution of the entire remaining benefit if
another individual is a designated beneficiary in addition to the
employee’s surviving spouse. See A-2 and A-3 of Sec. 1.401(a)(9)-8,
however, if the employee's benefit is divided into separate accounts (or
segregated shares, in the case of a defined benefit plan).(b) Spousal
beneficiary. In order to satisfy the rule in section401(a)(9)(B)(iii)
and (iv), if the sole designated beneficiary is the employee’s
surviving spouse, distributions must commence on or before the later
of-- (1) The end of the calendar year
immediately following the calendar year in which the employee died;
and(2) The end of the calendar year in which the employee would have
attained age 70\1/2\. Q-4. How is it determined whether the
five-year rule in section401(a)(9)(B)(ii) or the life expectancy rule in
section401(a)(9)(B)(iii) and (iv) applies to a distribution? A-4. (a) No plan provision. If a plan does
not adopt an optional provision described in paragraph (b) or (c) of
this A-4 specifying the method of distribution after the death of an
employee, distribution must be made as follows: (1) If the employee has a designated
beneficiary, as determined under Sec. 1.401(a)(9)-4, distributions are
to be made in accordance with the life expectancy rule in section
401(a)(9)(B)(iii) and (iv). (2) If the employee has no designated
beneficiary, distributions are to be made in accordance with the
five-year rule in section401(a)(9)(B)(ii). (b) Optional plan provisions. The plan may
adopt a provision specifying either that the five-year rule in section
401(a)(9)(B)(ii)will apply to certain distributions after the death of
an employee even if the employee has a designated beneficiary or that
distribution in every case will be made in accordance with the five-year
rule in section 401(a)(9)(B)(ii). Further, a plan need not have the same
method of distribution for the benefits of all employees. (c) Elections. A plan may adopt a provision
that permits employees(or beneficiaries) to elect on an individual basis
whether the five-year rule in section 401(a)(9)(B)(ii) or the life
expectancy rule in section 401(a)(9)(B)(iii) and (iv) applies to
distributions after the death of an employee who has a designated
beneficiary. Such an election must be made no later than the earlier of,
the end of the calendar yearn which distribution would be required to
commence in order to satisfy the requirements for the life expectancy
rule in section401(a)(9)(B)(iii) and (iv) (see A-3 of this section for
the determination of such calendar year), or the end of the calendar
year which contains the fifth anniversary of the date of death of the
employee. As of the date determined under the life expectancy rule, the
election must be irrevocable with respect to the beneficiary (and all
subsequent beneficiaries) and must apply to all subsequent calendar
years. If a plan provides for the election, the plan may also specify
the method of distribution that applies if neither the employee nor the
beneficiary makes the election. If neither the employee nor the
beneficiary elects a method and the plan does not specify which method
applies, distribution must be made in accordance with paragraph (a). Q-5. If the employee's surviving spouse is
the employee’s designated beneficiary and such spouse dies after the
employee, but before distributions have begun to the surviving spouse
under section401(a)(9)(B)(iii) and (iv), how is the employee's interest
to be distributed? A-5. Pursuant to section 401(a)(9)(B)(iv)(II),
if the surviving spouse dies after the employee, but before
distributions to such spouse have begun under section 401(a)(9)(B)(iii)
and (iv), the five-year rule in section 401(a)(9)(B)(ii) and the life
expectancy rule in section401(a)(9)(B)(iii) are to be applied as if the
surviving spouse were the employee. In applying this rule, the date of
death of the surviving spouse shall be substituted for the date of death
of the employee. However, in such case, the rules in section 401(a)(9)(B)(iv)
are not available to the surviving spouse of the deceased employee's
surviving spouse. Q-6. For purposes of section 401(a)(9)(B)(iv)(II),
when redistributions considered to have begun to the surviving spouse? A-6. Distributions are considered to have
begun to the surviving spouse of an employee, for purposes of section
401(a)(9)(B)(iv)(II), on the date, determined in accordance with A-3 of
this section, on which distributions are required to commence to the
surviving spouse, even though payments have actually been made before
that date. See A-11 offset. 1.401(a)(9)-6 for a special rule for
annuities. Sec.
1.401(a)(9)-4 Determination of the designated beneficiary. Q-1. Who is a designated beneficiary under
section 401(a)(9)(E)? A-1. A designated beneficiary is an
individual who is designated as a beneficiary under the plan. An
individual may be designated as beneficiary under the plan either by the
terms of the plan or, if the plan so provides, by an affirmative
election by the employee (or the employee’s surviving spouse)
specifying the beneficiary. A beneficiary designated as such under the
plan is an individual who is entitled to apportion of an employee's
benefit, contingent on the employee's death or another specified event.
For example, if a distribution is in the form of a joint and survivor
annuity over the life of the employee and another individual, the plan
does not satisfy section 401(a)(9) unless such other individual is a
designated beneficiary under the plan. A designated beneficiary need not
be specified by name in the plan or byte employee to the plan in order
to be a designated beneficiary soling as the individual who is to be the
beneficiary is identifiable under the plan as of the date the
beneficiary is determined under A-4of this section. The members of a
class of beneficiaries capable of expansion or contraction will be
treated as being identifiable if it impossible, as of the date the
beneficiary is determined, to identify the class member with the
shortest life expectancy. The fact that an employee’s interest under
the plan passes to a certain individual under applicable state law does
not make that individual a designated beneficiary unless the individual
is designated as a beneficiary under the plan. Q-2. Must an employee (or the employee's
spouse) make an affirmative election specifying a beneficiary for a
person to be a designated beneficiary under section 40l(a)(9)(E)? [[Page 3938]] A-2. No. A designated beneficiary is an
individual who is designated as a beneficiary under the plan whether or
not the designation under the plan was made by the employee. The choice
of beneficiary is subject to the requirements of sections
401(a)(11),414(p), and 417. Q-3. May a person other than an individual
be considered to be a designated beneficiary for purposes of section
401(a)(9)? A-3. (a) No. Only individuals may be
designated beneficiaries for purposes of section 401(a)(9). A person
that is not an individual, such as the employee's estate, may not be a
designated beneficiary, and, if person other than an individual is
designated as a beneficiary of an employee’s benefit, the employee
will be treated as having no designated beneficiary for purposes of
section 401(a)(9). However, see A-5 of this section for special rules which
apply to trusts.(b) If an employee is treated as having no designated
beneficiary, for distributions under a defined contribution plan, the
distribution period under section 401(a)(9)(A)(ii) after the death of
the employees limited to the period described in A-5(a)(2) of Sec.
1.401(a)(9)-5(the remaining life expectancy of the employee determined
in accordance with A-5(c)(3) of Sec. 1.401(a)(9)-5). Further, in such
case, except as provided in A-10 of Sec. 1.401(a)(9)-6, if the employee
dies before the employee’s required beginning date, distribution must
be made in accordance with the 5-year rule in section 401(a)(9)(B)(ii). Q-4. When is the designated beneficiary
determined? A-4. (a) General rule. Except as provided
in paragraph (b) Andes. 1.401(a)(9)-6, the employee's designated
beneficiary will be determined based on the beneficiaries designated as
of the last day of the calendar year following the calendar year of the
employee's death. Consequently, except as provided in Sec.
1.401(a)(9)-6, any person who was a beneficiary as of the date of the
employee's death, but is not beneficiary as of that later date (e.g.,
because the person disclaims entitlement to the benefit in favor of
another beneficiary or because the person receives the entire benefit to
which the person is entitled before that date), is not taken into
account in determining the employee’s designated beneficiary for
purposes of determining the distribution period for required minimum
distributions after the employee’s death. (b) Surviving spouse. As provided in A-5 of
Sec. 1.401(a)(9)-3, in the case in which the employee's spouse is the
designated beneficiary’s of the date described in paragraph (a) of
this A-5, and the surviving spouse dies after the employee and before
the date on which distributions have begun to the spouse under section
401(a)(9)(B)(iii)and (iv), the rule in section 40l(a)(9)(B)(iv)(II) will
apply. Thus, the relevant designated beneficiary for determining the
distribution period is the designated beneficiary of the surviving
spouse. Such designated beneficiary will be determined as of the last
day of the calendar year following the calendar year of surviving
spouse's death. If, as of such last day, there is no designated
beneficiary under the plan with respect to that surviving spouse,
distribution must be maiden accordance with the 5-year rule in section
401(a)(9)(B)(ii) and A-2of Sec. 1.401(a)(9)-3. (c) Multiple beneficiaries. Notwithstanding
anything in this A-4 to the contrary, the rules in A-7 of Sec.
1.401(a)(9)-5 apply if more than one beneficiary is designated with
respect to an employee as of the date on which the designated
beneficiary is to be determined in accordance with paragraphs (a) and
(b) of this A-4. Q-5. If a trust is named as a beneficiary
of an employee, will the beneficiaries of the trust with respect to the
trust's interest in the employee’s benefit be treated as having been
designated as beneficiaries of the employee under the plan for purposes
of determining the distribution period under section 401(a)(9)? A-5. (a) Only an individual may be a
designated beneficiary for purposes of determining the distribution
period under section401(a)(9). Consequently, a trust is not a designated
beneficiary even though the trust is named as a beneficiary. However, if
the requirements of Paragraph (b) of this A-5 are met, the beneficiaries
of the trust will be treated as having been designated as beneficiaries
of the employee under the plan for purposes of determining the
distribution period under section 401(a)(9). (b) The requirements of this paragraph (b)
are met if, during any period during which required minimum
distributions are being determinedly treating the beneficiaries of the
trust as designated beneficiaries of the employee, the following
requirements are met: (1) The trust is a valid trust under state
law, or would be but forth fact that there is no corpus. (2) The trust is irrevocable or will, by
its terms, become irrevocable upon the death of the employee. (3) The beneficiaries of the trust who are
beneficiaries with respect to the trust's interest in the employee's
benefit are identifiable from the trust instrument within the meaning of
A-1 of this section. (4) The documentation described in A-6 of
this section has been provided to the plan administrator. (c) In the case of payments to a trust
having more than one beneficiary, see A-7 of Sec. 1.401(a)(9)-5 for the
rules for determining the designated beneficiary whose life expectancy
will bemused to determine the distribution period. If the beneficiary of
the trust named as beneficiary is another trust, the beneficiaries of
the other trust will be treated as having been designated as
beneficiaries of the employee under the plan for purposes of determining
the distribution period under section 401(a)(9)(A)(ii), provided that
the requirements of paragraph (b) of this A-5 are satisfied with respect
touch other trust in addition to the trust named as beneficiary. Q-6. If a trust is named as a beneficiary
of an employee, what documentation must be provided to the plan
administrator? A-6. (a) Required minimum distributions
before death. In order to satisfy the documentation requirement of this
A-6 for required minimum distributions under section 401(a)(9) to
commence before the death of an employee, the employee must comply with
either paragraph (a)(1) or (2) of this A-6: (1) The employee provides to the plan
administrator a copy of the trust instrument and agrees that if the
trust instrument is amended at any time in the future, the employee
will, within a reasonable time, provide to the plan administrator a copy
of each such amendment. (2) The employee-- (i) Provides to the plan administrator a
list of all of the beneficiaries of the trust (including contingent and
remaindermen beneficiaries with a description of the conditions on their
entitlement); (ii) Certifies that, to the best of the
employee's knowledge, this list is correct and complete and that the
requirements of paragraphs(b)(1), (2), and (3) of A-5 of this section
are satisfied; (iii) Agrees that, if the trust instrument
is amended at any time in the future, the employee will, within a
reasonable time, provide to the plan administrator corrected
certifications to the extent that the amendment changes any information
previously certified; and [[Page 3939]] (iv) Agrees to provide a copy of the trust
instrument to the plan administrator upon demand. (b) Required minimum distributions after
death. In order to satisfy the documentation requirement of this A-6 for
required minimum distributions after the death of the employee, by the
last day of the calendar year immediately following the calendar year in
which the employee died, the trustee of the trust must either-- (1) Provide the plan administrator with a
final list of all beneficiaries of the trust (including contingent and
remaindermen beneficiaries with a description of the conditions on their
entitlement) as of the end of the calendar year following the calendar
year of the employee's death; certify that, to the best of the
trustee’s knowledge, this list is correct and complete and that the
requirements of paragraph (b)(1), (2), and (3) of A-5 of this section
are satisfied; and agree to provide a copy of the trust instrument to
the plan administrator upon demand; or (2) Provide the plan administrator with a
copy of the actual trust document for the trust that is named as a
beneficiary of the employee under the plan as of the employee's date of
death. (c) Relief for discrepancy between trust
instrument and employee certifications or earlier trust instruments. (1)
If required minimum distributions are determined based on the
information provided to the plan administrator in certifications or
trust instruments described in paragraph (a)(1), (a)(2) or (b) of this
A-6, a plan will not fail to satisfy section 401(a)(9) merely because
the actual terms of the trust instrument are inconsistent with the
information in those certifications or trust instruments previously
provided to the plan administrator, but only if the plan administrator
reasonably relied on the information provided and the required minimum
distributions for calendar years after the calendar year in which the
discrepancy is discovered are determined based on the actual terms of
the trust instrument. (2) For purposes of determining the amount
of the excise tax under section 4974, the required minimum distribution
is determined for any year based on the actual terms of the trust in
effect during the year. Sec. 1.401(a)(9)-5 Required minimum
distributions from defined contribution plans. Q-1. If an employee's benefit is in the
form of an individual account under a defined contribution plan, what is
the amount required to be distributed for each calendar year? A-1. (a) General rule. If an employee's
accrued benefit is in the form of an individual account under a defined
contribution plan, the minimum amount required to be distributed for
each distribution calendar year, as defined in paragraph (b) of this
A-1, is equal to the quotient obtained by dividing the account
(determined under A-3 of this section) by the applicable distribution
period (determined under A-4 of this section). However, the required
minimum distribution amount will never exceed the entire vested account
balance on the date of the distribution. Further, the minimum
distribution required to be distributed on or before an employee's
required beginning date is always determined under section 401(a)(9)(A)(ii)
and this A-1 and not section 401(a)(9)(A)(i). (b) Distribution calendar year. A calendar
year for which a minimum distribution is required is a distribution
calendar year. If an employee’s required beginning date is April 1 of
the calendar year following the calendar year in which the employee
attains age 70\1/2\,the employee's first distribution calendar year is
the year the employee attains age 70\1/2\. If an employee's required
beginning date is April 1 of the calendar year following the calendar
year in which the employee retires, the calendar year in which the
employee retires is the employee's first distribution calendar year. In
the case of distributions to be made in accordance with the life
expectancy rule in Sec. 1.401(a)(9)-3 and in section 401(a)(9)(B)(iii)
and (iv), the first distribution calendar year is the calendar year
containing the date described in A-3(a) or A-3(b) of Sec. 1.401(a)(9)-3,
whichever inapplicable. (c) Time for distributions. The
distribution required to be made donor before the employee's required
beginning date shall be treated as the distribution required for the
employee's first distribution calendar year (as defined in paragraph (b)
of this A-1). The required minimum distribution for other distribution
calendar years, including the required minimum distribution for the
distribution calendar year in which the employee's required beginning
date occurs, must be made on or before the end of that distribution
calendar year. (d) Minimum distribution incidental benefit
requirement. If distributions are made in accordance with this section,
the minimum distribution incidental benefit requirement of section
401(a)(9)(G)will be satisfied. (e) Annuity contracts. Instead of
satisfying this A-1, the required minimum distribution requirement may
be satisfied by the purchase of an annuity contract from an insurance
company in accordance with A-4 of Sec. 1.401(a)(9)-6 with the employee's
entire individual account. If such an annuity is purchased after
distributions are required to commence (the required beginning date, in
the case of distributions commencing before death, or the date
determined under A-3 of Sec. 1.401(a)(9)-3, in the case of
distributions commencing after death), payments under the annuity
contract purchased will satisfy section 401(a)(9) for distribution
calendar years after the calendar year of the purchase if payments under
the annuity contract are made in accordance with Sec. 1.401(a)(9)-6. In
such a case, payments under the annuity contract will be treated as
distributions from the individual account for purposes of determining if
the individual account satisfies section 401(a)(9) for the calendar year
of the purchase. An employee may also purchase an annuity contract for a
portion of the employee’s account under the rules of A-2(c) of Sec.
1.401(a)(9)-8 Q-2. If an employee's benefit is in the
form of an individual account and, in any calendar year, the amount
distributed exceeds the minimum required, will credit be given in
subsequent calendar years for such excess distribution? A-2. If, for any distribution calendar
year, the amount distributed exceeds the minimum required, no credit
will be given in subsequent calendar years for such excess distribution. Q-3. What is the amount of the account of
an employee used for determining the employee's required minimum
distribution in the case of an individual account? A-3. (a) In the case of an individual
account, the benefit used in determining the required minimum
distribution for a distribution calendar year is the account balance as
of the last valuation date in the calendar year immediately preceding
that distribution calendar year(valuation calendar year) adjusted in
accordance with paragraphs (b)and (c) of this A-3. (b) The account balance is increased by the
amount of any contributions or forfeitures allocated to the account
balance as of dates in the valuation calendar year after the valuation
date. Contributions include contributions made after the close of the
valuation calendar year which are allocated as of dates in the valuation
calendar year. (c)(1) The account balance is decreased by
distributions made in the[[Page 3940]]valuation calendar year
after the valuation date. (2)(i) The following rule applies if any
portion of the required minimum distribution for the first distribution
calendar year is maiden the second distribution calendar year (i.e.,
generally, the distribution calendar year in which the required
beginning date occurs). In such case, for purposes of determining the
account balance to be used for determining the required minimum
distribution for the second distribution calendar year, distributions
described in paragraph(c)(1) shall include an additional amount. This
additional amount is equal to the amount of any distribution made in the
second distribution calendar year on or before the required beginning
date that is not in excess (when added to the amounts distributed in the
first calendar year) of the amount required to meet the required minimum
distribution for the first distribution calendar year. (ii) This paragraph (c)(2) is illustrated
by the following example: Example. (i) Employee X, born October 1,
1931, is an unmarried participant in a qualified defined contribution
plan (Plan Z). After retirement, X attains age 70\1/2\ in calendar year
2002. X's required
beginning date is April 1, 2003. As of the last valuation date under
Plan Z in calendar year 2001, which was on December 31,2001, the value
of X's account balance was $25,300. No contributions are made or amounts
forfeited after such date which are allocated in calendar year 2001. No
rollover amounts are received after such date by Plan Z on X's behalf
which were distributed by a qualified planer IRA in calendar years 2001,
2002, or 2003. The applicable distribution period from the table in
A-4(a)(2) for an individual age 71 is 25.3 years. The required minimum
distribution for calendar year 2002 is $1,000 ($25,300 divided by 25.3).
That amount is distributed to X on April 1, 2003. (ii) The value of X's account balance as of
December 31, 2002(the last valuation date under Plan Z in calendar year
2002) is$26,400. No contributions are made or amounts forfeited after
such date which are allocated in calendar year 2002. In order to
determine the benefit to be used in calculating the required minimum
distribution for calendar year 2003, the account balance of $26,400will
be reduced by $1,000, the amount of the required minimum distribution
for calendar year 2002 made on April 1, 2003.Consequently, the benefit
for purposes of determining the required minimum distribution for
calendar year 2003 is $25,400. (iii) If, instead of $1,000 being
distributed to X, $20,000 is distributed on April 1 2003, the account
balance of $26,400 would still be reduced by $1,000 in order to
determine the benefit to bemused in calculating the required minimum
distribution for calendar year 2003. The amount of the distribution made
on April 1, 2003, in order to meet the required minimum distribution for
2002 would still be $1,000. The remaining $19,000 ($20,000--$1,000) of
the distribution is not the required minimum distribution for 2002. Instead, the remaining $19,000 of the
distribution is sufficient to satisfy the required minimum distribution
requirement with respect to X for calendar year 2003. The amount which
is required to be distributed for calendar year 2003 is $1,040.10
($25,400 divided by24.4, the applicable distribution period for an
individual age 72). Consequently, no additional amount is
required to be distributed tux in 2003 because $19,000 exceeds
$1,040.10. However, pursuant to A-2 of this section, the remaining
$17,959.90 ($19,000-$1,040.10) may not be used to satisfy the required
minimum distribution requirements for calendar year 2004 or any
subsequent calendar years. (d) If an amount is distributed by one plan
and rolled over to another plan (receiving plan), A-2 of Sec.
1.401(a)(9)-7 provides additional rules for determining the benefit and
required minimum distribution under the receiving plan. If an amount is
transferred from one plan (transferor plan) to another plan (transferee
plan), A-3 andA-4 of Sec. 1.401(a)(9)-7 provide additional rules for
determining the amount of the required minimum distribution and the
benefit under both the transferor and transferee plans. Q-4. For required minimum distributions
during an employee’s lifetime, what is the applicable distribution
period? A-4. (a) General rule--(1) Applicable
distribution period. Excepts provided in paragraph (b) of this A-4, the
applicable distribution period for required minimum distributions for
distribution calendar years up to and including the distribution
calendar year that includes the employee's date of death is determined
using the table in paragraph(a)(2) for the employee's age as of the
employee's birthday in the relevant distribution calendar year. (2) Table for determining distribution
period--(i) General rule. The following table is used for determining
the distribution period for lifetime distributions to an employee. ------------------------------------------------------------------------ Distribution Age of the employee period ------------------------------------------------------------------------ 70...................................................
26.2 71...................................................
25.3 72...................................................
24.4 73...................................................
23.5 74...................................................
22.7 75...................................................
21.8 76...................................................
20.9 77...................................................
20.1 78...................................................
19.2 79...................................................
18.4 80...................................................
17.6 81...................................................
16.8 82...................................................
16.0 83...................................................
15.3 84...................................................
14.5 85...................................................
13.8 86...................................................
13.1 87...................................................
12.4 88...................................................
11.8 89...................................................
11.1 90...................................................
10.5 91...................................................
9.9 92...................................................
9.4 93...................................................
8.8 94...................................................
8.3 95...................................................
7.8 96...................................................
7.3 97...................................................
6.9 98...................................................
6.5 99...................................................
6.1 100..................................................
5.7 101..................................................
5.3 102..................................................
5.0 103..................................................
4.7 104..................................................
4.4 105..................................................
4.1 106..................................................
3.8 107..................................................
3.6 108..................................................
3.3 109..................................................
3.1 110..................................................
2.8 111..................................................
2.6 112..................................................
2.4 113..................................................
2.2 114..................................................
2.0 115 and
older........................................ 1.8 ------------------------------------------------------------------------ (ii) Authority for revised table. The table
in A-4(a)(2)(i) of this section may be replaced by any revised table
prescribed by the Commissioner in revenue rulings, notices, or other
guidance published in the Internal Revenue Bulletin. See Sec.
601.601(d)(2)(ii)(b) of this chapter. (b) Spouse is sole beneficiary. If the sole
designated beneficiary of an employee is the employee's surviving
spouse, for required minimum distributions during the employee's
lifetime, the applicable distribution period is the longer of the
distribution period determined in accordance with paragraph (a) of this
A-4 or the joint life expectancy of the employee and spouse using the
employee's and spouse’s attained ages as of the employee's and the
spouse's birthdays in the distribution calendar year. The spouse is sole
designated beneficiary for purposes of determining the applicable
distribution period for a distribution calendar year during the
employee's lifetime if the spouses the sole beneficiary of the
employee's entire interest at all times during the distribution calendar
year. Q-5. For required minimum distributions
after an employee's death, what is the applicable distribution period? A-5. (a) Death on or after the employee's
required beginning date. If an employee dies on or after [[Page 3941]] distribution has begun as determined under
A-6 of Sec. 1.401(a)(9)-2(generally after the employee's required
beginning date), in order to satisfy section 401(a)(9)(B)(i), the
applicable distribution period for distribution calendar years after the
distribution calendar year containing the employee's date of death is
either-- (1) If the employee has a designated
beneficiary as of the date determined under A-4 of Sec. 1.401(a)(9)-4,
the remaining life expectancy of the employee's designated beneficiary
determined in accordance with paragraph(c)(1) or (2) of A-5; or (2) If the employee does not have a
designated beneficiary as of the date determined under A-4(a) of Sec.
1.401(a)(9)-4, the remaining life expectancy of the employee determined
in accordance with paragraph (c)(3) of this A-5. (b) Death before an employee's required
beginning date. If an employee dies before distribution has begun as
determined under A-5 offset. 1.401(a)(9)-2 (generally before the
employee's required beginning date), in order to satisfy section
401(a)(9)(B)(iii) or (iv) and the life expectancy rule described in A-1
of Sec. 1.401(a)(9)-3, the applicable distribution period for
distribution calendar years after the distribution calendar year
containing the employee's date of deaths the remaining life expectancy
of the employee's designated beneficiary, determined in accordance with
paragraph(c)(1) or (2) of this A-5. (c) Life expectancy--(1) No spouse
designated beneficiary. The applicable distribution period measured by
the beneficiary's remaining life expectancy is determined using the
beneficiary's age as of the beneficiary’s birthday in the calendar
year immediately following the calendar year of the employee's death. In
subsequent calendar years the applicable distribution period is reduced
by one for each calendar year that has elapsed since the calendar year
immediately following the calendar year of the employee's death. (2) Spouse designated beneficiary. If the
surviving spouse of the employee is the employee's sole beneficiary, the
applicable period is measured by the surviving spouse's life expectancy
using the surviving spouse’s birthday for each distribution calendar
year for which a required minimum distribution is required after the
calendar year of the employee's death. For calendar years after the
calendar year of the spouse’s death, the spouse's remaining life
expectancy is the life expectancy of the spouse using the age of the
spouse as of the spouse’s birthday in the calendar year of the
spouse's death. In subsequent calendar years, the applicable
distribution period is reduced by one for each calendar year that has
elapsed since the calendar year immediately following the calendar year
of the spouse's death. (3) No designated beneficiary. The
applicable distribution period measured by the employee's remaining life
expectancy is the life expectancy of the employee using the age of the
employee as of the employee’s birthday in the calendar year of the
employee's death. In subsequent calendar years the applicable
distribution period is reduced by one for each calendar year that has
elapsed since the calendar year of death. Q-6. What life expectancies must be used
for purposes of determining required minimum distributions under section
401(a)(9)? A-6. (a) General rule. Unless otherwise
prescribed in accordance with paragraph (b) of this A-6, life
expectancies for purposes of determining required minimum distributions
under section 401(a)(9) must be computed using of the expected return
multiples in Tables V and Viol Sec. 1.72-9. (b) Revised expected return table. The
expected return multiples described in paragraph (a) of this A-6 may be
replaced by revised expected return multiples prescribed for use for
purposes of determining required minimum distributions under section
401(a)(9) byte Commissioner in revenue rulings, notices, and other
guidance published in the Internal Revenue Bulletin. Senesce.
601.601(d)(2)(ii)(b) of this chapter. Q-7. If an employee has more than one
designated beneficiary, which designated beneficiary's life expectancy
will be used to determine the applicable distribution period? A-7. (a) General rule. (1) Except as
otherwise provided in paragraph (c) of this A-7, if more than one
individual is designated as a beneficiary with respect to an employee as
of any applicable date for determining the designated beneficiary, the
designated beneficiary with the shortest life expectancy will be the
designated beneficiary for purposes of determining the distribution
period. However, except as otherwise provided in A-5 of Sec.
1.401(a)(9)-4 and paragraph (c)(1) of this A-7, if a person other than
an individual is designated as beneficiary, the employee will be treated
as not having any designated beneficiaries for purposes of section
401(a)(9) even if there are also individuals designated as
beneficiaries. (2) See A-2 of Sec. 1.401(a)(9)-8 for
special rules which apply fan employee's benefit under a plan is divided
into separate accounts(or segregated shares in the case of a defined
benefit plan) and the beneficiaries with respect to a separate account
differ from the beneficiaries of another separate account. (b) Contingent beneficiary. Except as
provided in paragraph (c)(1)of this A-7, if a beneficiary's entitlement
to an employee's benefit is contingent on an event other than the
employee's death or the death of another beneficiary, such contingent
beneficiary is considered to be a designated beneficiary for purposes of
determining which designated beneficiary has the shortest life
expectancy under paragraph (a) of this A-7. (c) Death contingency. (1) If a beneficiary
(subsequent beneficiary) is entitled to any portion of an employee's
benefit only if another beneficiary dies before the entire benefit to
which that other beneficiary is entitled has been distributed by the
plan, the subsequent beneficiary will not be considered a beneficiary
for purposes of determining who is the designated beneficiary with the
shortest life expectancy under paragraph (a) of this A-7 or whether
beneficiary who is not an individual is a beneficiary. This rule
doesn’t apply if the other beneficiary dies prior to the applicable
date for determining the designated beneficiary. (2) If the designated beneficiary whose
life expectancy is being used to calculate the distribution period dies
on or after the applicable date, such beneficiary's remaining life
expectancy wills bemused to determine the distribution period whether or
not a beneficiary with a shorter life expectancy receives the benefits. (3) This paragraph (c) is illustrated by
the following examples: Example 1. Employer L maintains a defined
contribution plan, Plan W. Unmarried Employee C dies in calendar year
2001 at age 30.As of December 31, 2002, D, the sister of C, is the
beneficiary foci’s account balance under Plan W. Prior to death C has
designated that, if D dies before C's entire account balance has been
distributed to D, E, mother of C and D, will be the beneficiary of the
account balance. Because E is only entitled, as a beneficiary, to any
portion of C's account if D dies before the entire account has been
distributed, E is disregarded in determining C's designated beneficiary.
Accordingly, even after D's death, D's life expectancy continues to be
used to determined the distribution period. Example 2. (i) Employer M maintains a
defined contribution plan, Plan X. Employee A, an employee of M, died in
2001 at the age of 55,survived by spouse, B, who was 50 years old. Prior
to A's death, Mad[[Page 3942]]established an account balance for A in
Plan X. A's account balances invested only in productive assets. A named
the trustee of testamentary trust (Trust P) established under A's will
as the beneficiary of all amounts payable from the A's account in Plan
After A's death. A copy of the Trust P and a list of the trust
beneficiaries were provided to the plan administrator of Plan X byte end
of the calendar year following the calendar year of A’ death. As of
the date of A's death, the Trust P was irrevocable and was a valid trust
under the laws of the state of A's domicile. AS account balance in Plan
X was includible in A's gross estate undersea. 2039. (ii) Under the terms of Trust P, all trust
income is payable annually to B, and no one has the power to appoint
Trust P principal to any person other than B. A's children, who are all
younger than, are the sole remainder beneficiaries of the Trust P. No
other person has a beneficial interest in Trust P. Under the terms of
the Trust P, B has the power, exercisable annually, to compel the
trustee to withdraw from A's account balance in Plan X an amount equal
to the income earned on the assets held in A's account in Plan during
the calendar year and to distribute that amount through Trust P to B.
Plan X contains no prohibition on withdrawal from AS account of amounts
in excess of the annual required minimum distributions under section
401(a)(9). In accordance with the terms of Plan X, the trustee of Trust
P elects, in order to satisfy section 401(a)(9), to receive annual
required minimum distributions using the life expectancy rule in section
401(a)(9)(B)(iii) for distributions over a distribution period equal to
B's life expectancy. If B exercises the withdrawal power, the trustee
must withdraw from A's account under Plan X the greater of the amount of
income earned in the account during the calendar year or the required
minimum distribution. However, under the terms of Trust Panda applicable
state law, only the portion of the Plan Distribution received by the
trustee equal to the income earned bay’s account in Plan X is required
to be distributed to B (along with any other trust income.) (iii) Because some amounts distributed from
A's account in Plan to Trust P may be accumulated in Trust P during B's
lifetime forth benefit of A's children, as remainder men beneficiaries
of Trust, even though access to those amounts are delayed until after
B's death, A's children are beneficiaries of A's account in Plan X in
addition to B and B is not the sole beneficiary of A's account. Thus the
designated beneficiary used to determine the distribution period from
A's account in Plan X is the beneficiary with the shortest life
expectancy. B's life expectancy is the shortest of all the potential
beneficiaries of the testamentary trust's interest in A's account in
Plan X (including remainder beneficiaries). Thus, the distribution
period for purposes of section 401(a)(9)(B)(iii) is B's life expectancy.
Because B is not the sole beneficiary of the testamentary trust's
interest in A's account in Plan X, the special rule in 401(a)(9)(B)(iv)
is not available and the annual required minimum distributions from the
account to Trust M must begin no later than the end of the calendar year
immediately following the calendar year of A's death. Example 3. (i) The facts are the same as
Example 2 except that the testamentary trust instrument provides that
all amounts distributed from A's account in Plan X to the trustee while
B is alive will be paid directly to B upon receipt by the trustee of
Trust P. (ii) In this case, B is the sole
beneficiary of A's account in Plan X for purposes of determining the
designated beneficiary under section 401(a)(9)(B)(iii) and (iv). No
amounts distributed from AS account in Plan X to Trust P are accumulated
in Trust P during B's lifetime for the benefit of any other beneficiary.
Because B is the sole beneficiary of the testamentary trust's interest
in A's account in Plan X, the annual required minimum distributions from
A's account to Trust P must begin no later than the end of the calendar
year in which A would have attained age 70\1/2\. rather than the
calendar year immediately following the calendar year of A's death.(d)
Designations by beneficiaries. (1) If the plan provides (or allows the
employee to specify) that, after the end of the calendar year following
the calendar year in which the employee died, any person or persons have
the discretion to change the beneficiaries of the employee, then, for
purposes of determining the distribution period after the employee's
death, the employee will be treated as not having designated a
beneficiary. However, such discretion will not be found to exist merely
because a beneficiary may designate a subsequent beneficiary for
distributions of any portion of the employee's benefit after the
beneficiary dies. (2) This paragraph (d) is illustrated by
the following example: Example. The facts are the same as in Example 1
in paragraph (c)(3) of this A-7, except that, as
permitted under the plan, Designates E as the beneficiary of any amount
remaining after the death of D rather than C making this designation. E
is still disregarded in determining C's designated beneficiary for
purposes of section 401(a)(9). Q-8. If a portion of an employee's
individual account is not vested as of the employee's required beginning
date, how is the determination of the required minimum distribution
affected? A-8. If the employee's benefit is in the
form of an individual account, the benefit used to determine the
required minimum distribution for any distribution calendar year will be
determined in accordance with A-1 of this section without regard to
whether or natal of the employee's benefit is vested. If any portion of
the employee’s benefit is not vested, distributions will be treated as
being paid from the vested portion of the benefit first. If, as of the
end of a distribution calendar year (or as of the employee's required
beginning date, in the case of the employee's first distribution
calendar year), the total amount of the employee's vested benefit isles
than the required minimum distribution for the calendar year, only the
vested portion, if any, of the employee's benefit is required to be
distributed by the end of the calendar year (or, if applicable, by the
employee’s required beginning date). However, the required minimum
distribution for the subsequent distribution calendar year must be
increased by the sum of amounts not distributed in prior calendar years
because the employee's vested benefit was less than the required minimum
distribution (subject to the limitation that the required minimum
distribution for that subsequent distribution calendar year will not
exceed the vested portion of the employee's benefit). In such case, an
adjustment for the additional amount distributed which corresponds to
the adjustment described in A-3(c)(2) of this section will be made to
the account used to determine the required minimum distribution for that
calendar year. Sec. 1.401(a)(9)-6 Required minimum
distributions as annuity payments.Q-1. How must annuity distributions
under a defined benefit plan be paid in order to satisfy section
401(a)(9)? A-1. (a) In order to satisfy section
401(a)(9), annuity distributions under a defined benefit plan must be
paid in periodic payments made at intervals not longer than one year
(payment intervals)for a life (or lives), or over a period certain not
longer than a life expectancy (or joint life and last survivor
expectancy) described in section 401(a)(9)(A)(ii) or section 401(a)(9)(B)(iii),
whichever inapplicable. The life expectancy (or joint life and last
survivor expectancy) for purposes of determining the length of the
period certain will be determined in accordance with A-3 of this
section. Once payments have commenced over a period certain, the period
certain may not be lengthened even if the period certain is shorter than
the maximum permitted. Life annuity payments must satisfy the minimum
distribution incidental benefit requirements of A-2 of this section. All
annuity payments (life and period certain) also must either be
nonincreasing or increase only as follows: (1) With any percentage increase in a
specified and generally recognized cost-of-living index; (2) To the extent of the reduction in the
amount of the employee’s payments to provide for a survivor benefit
upon death, but only if the beneficiary whose life was being used to
determine the [[Page 3943]] period described in section 401(a)(9)(A)(ii)
over which payments were being made dies or is no longer the employee's
beneficiary pursuant toad qualified domestic relations order within the
meaning of section414(p); (3) To provide cash refunds of employee
contributions upon the employee’s death; or (4) Because of an increase in benefits
under the plan. (b) The annuity may be a life annuity (or
joint and survivor annuity) with a period certain if the life (or lives,
if applicable)and period certain each meet the requirements of paragraph
(a) of thisA-1. For purposes of this section, if distribution is
permitted to beamed over the lives of the employee and the designated
beneficiary, references to life annuity include a joint and survivor
annuity. (c) Distributions under a variable annuity
will not be found to be increasing merely because the amount of the
payments varies with the investment performance of the underlying
assets. However, the Commissioner may prescribe additional requirements
applicable to such variable life annuities in revenue rulings, notices,
and other guidance published in the Internal Revenue Bulletin. Senesce.
601.601(d)(2)(ii)(b) of this chapter. (d)(1) Except as provided in (d)(2) of this
A-1, annuity payments must commence on or before the employee's required
beginning date(within the meaning of A-2 of Sec. 1.401(a)(9)-2). The
first payment which must be made on or before the employee's required
beginning date must be the payment which is required for one payment
interval. The second payment need not be made until the end of the next
payment interval even if that payment interval ends in the next calendar
year. Similarly, in the case of distributions commencing after death in
accordance with section 401(a)(9)(B)(iii) and (iv), the first payment
that must be made on or before the date determined under A-3(a) or (b)(whichever
is applicable) of Sec. 1.401(a)(9)-3 must be the payment which is
required for one payment interval. Payment intervals are the periods for
which payments are received, e.g., bimonthly, monthly, semi-annually, or
annually. All benefit accruals as of the last day of the first
distribution calendar year must be included in the calculation of the
amount of the life annuity payments for payment intervals ending on or
after the employee's required beginning date. (2) In the case of an annuity contract
purchased after the required beginning date, the first payment interval
must begin on or before the purchase date and the payment required for
one payment interval must beamed no later than the end of such payment
interval. (3) This paragraph (d) is illustrated by
the following example: Example. A defined benefit plan (Plan X)
provides monthly annuity payments of $500 for the life of unmarried
participants withal 10-year period certain. An unmarried participant (A)
in Plan Attains age 70 \1/2\ in 2001. In order to meet the requirements
of this paragraph, the first payment which must be made on behalf of
Avon or before April 1, 2002, will be $500 and the payments must
continue to be made in monthly payments of $500 thereafter for the life
and 10-year certain period. (e) If distributions from a defined benefit
plan are not in the form of an annuity, the employee's benefit will be
treated as an individual account for purposes of determining the
required minimum distribution. See Sec. 1.401(a)(9)-5. Q-2. How must distributions in the form of
a life (or joint and survivor) annuity be made in order to satisfy the
minimum distribution incidental benefit (MDIB) requirement of section
401(a)(9)(G)? A-2. (a) Life annuity for employee. If the
employee's benefit is payable in the form of a life annuity for the life
of the employee satisfying section 401(a)(9), the MDIB requirement of
section401(a)(9)(G) will be satisfied. (b) Joint and survivor annuity, spouse
beneficiary. If the employee’s sole beneficiary, as of the annuity
starting date for annuity payments, is the employee's spouse and the
distributions satisfy section 401(a)(9) without regard to the MDIB
requirement, the distributions to the employee will be deemed to satisfy
the MDIB requirement of section 401(a)(9)(G). For example, if an
employee’s benefit is being distributed in the form of a joint and
survivor annuity for the lives of the employee and the employee's spouse
and the spouse is the sole beneficiary of the employee, the amount of
the periodic payment payable to the spouse may always be 100 percent of
the annuity payment payable to the employee regardless of the difference
in the ages between the employee and the employee's spouse. However, the
amount of the payments under the annuity must be no increasing unless
specifically permitted under A-1 of this section. (c) Joint and survivor annuity, no spouse
beneficiary— (1)Explanation of rule. If distributions
commence under a distribution option that is in the form of a joint and
survivor annuity for the joint lives of the employee and a beneficiary
other than the employee’s spouse, the MDIB requirement will not be
satisfied as of the date distributions commence unless the distribution
option provides that annuity payments to be made to the employee on and
after the employee’s required beginning date will satisfy the
conditions of this paragraph. The periodic annuity payment payable to the
survivor must not at anytime on and after the employee's required
beginning date exceed the applicable percentage of the annuity payment
payable to the employee using the table below. Thus, this requirement
must be satisfied with respect to any benefit increase after such date,
including increases to reflect increases in the cost of living. The
applicable percentage is based on the excess of the age of the employee
over the age of the beneficiary as of their attained ages as of their
birthdays in calendar year. If the employee has more than one
beneficiary, the applicable percentage will be the percentage using the
age of the youngest beneficiary. Additionally, the amount of the annuity
payments must satisfy A-1 of this section. (2) Table. ------------------------------------------------------------------------ Applicable Excess of age of employee over age of
beneficiary percentage ------------------------------------------------------------------------ 10 years or
less........................................ 100 11......................................................
96 12......................................................
93 13......................................................
90 14......................................................
87 15......................................................
84 16......................................................
82 17......................................................
79 18......................................................
77 19......................................................
75 20......................................................
73 21......................................................
72 22......................................................
70 23......................................................
68 24......................................................
67 25......................................................
66 26......................................................
64 27......................................................
63 28......................................................
62 29......................................................
61 30......................................................
60 31......................................................
59 32......................................................
59 33......................................................
58 34......................................................
57 35......................................................
56 36......................................................
56 37......................................................
55 38......................................................
55 39......................................................
54 40......................................................
54 41......................................................
53 42......................................................
53 43......................................................
53 44 and
greater.......................................... 52 ------------------------------------------------------------------------ (3) Example. This paragraph (c) is
illustrated by the following example: [[Page 3944]] Example. Distributions commence on January
1, 2001 to an employee (Z), born March 1, 1935, after retirement at age
65. Z's daughter (Y), born February 5, 1965, is Z's beneficiary. The
distributions are in the form of a joint and survivor annuity for the
lives of Z and Y with payments of $500 a month to Z and upon Z's death
of $500 a month to Y, i.e., the projected monthly payment to Y is 100
percent of the monthly amount payable to Z. There is no provision under
the option for a change in the projected payments to Y as of April 1,
2006, Z's required beginning date. Consequently, as of January 1, 2001,
the date annuity distributions commence, the plan does not satisfy the
MDIB requirement in operation because, as of such date, the distribution
option provides that, as of Z's required beginning date, the monthly
payment to Y upon Z's death will exceed 60 percent of Z's monthly
payment (the maximum percentage for a difference of ages of 30 years). (d) Period certain and annuity features. If
a distribution form includes a life annuity and a period certain, the
amount of the annuity payments payable to the employee must satisfy
paragraph (c) of this A-2, and the period certain may not exceed the
period determined under A-3 of this section. Q-3. How long is a period certain under an
annuity contract permitted to extend? A-3. (a) Distributions commencing during
the employee's life--(1)Spouse beneficiary. If an employee's spouse is
the employee's sole beneficiary as of the annuity starting date, the
period certain for annuity distributions commencing during the life of
an employee with an annuity starting date on or after the employee's
required beginning date is not permitted to exceed the joint life and
last survivor expectancy of the employee and the spouse using the age of
the employee and spouse as of their birthdays in the calendar year that
contains the annuity starting date. (2) No spouse beneficiary. If an employee's
surviving spouse is not the employee's sole beneficiary as of the
annuity starting date, the period certain for any annuity distributions
during the life of the employee with an annuity starting date on or
after the employee’s required beginning date is not permitted to
exceed the shorter of the applicable distribution period for the
employee (determined in accordance with the table in A-4(a)(2) of Sec.
1.401(a)(9)-5) for the calendar year that contains on the annuity
starting date or the joint life and last survivor expectancy of the
employee and the employee’s designated beneficiary, determined using
the designated beneficiary as of the annuity starting date and using
their ages as of their birthdays in the calendar year that contains the
annuity starting date. See A-10for the rule for annuity payments with an
annuity starting date before the required beginning date. (b) Life expectancy rule. (1) If annuity
distributions commence after the death of the employee under the life
expectancy rule (under section 401(a)(9)(iii) or (iv)), the period
certain for any distributions commencing after death cannot exceed the
applicable distribution period determined under A-5(b) of Sec.
1.401(a)(9)-5 forth distribution calendar year that contains the annuity
starting date. (2) If the annuity starting date is in a
calendar year before the first distribution calendar year, the period
certain may not exceed the life expectancy of the designated beneficiary
using the beneficiary’s age in the year that contains the annuity
starting date. Q-4. May distributions be made from an
annuity contract which is purchased from an insurance company? A-4. Yes. Distributions may be made from an
annuity contract which’s purchased with the employee's benefit by the
plan from an insurance company and which makes payments that satisfy the
provisions of this section. In the case of an annuity contract purchased
from an insurance company, there is also an exception to the no
increasing requirement inA-1(a) of this section for an increase to
provide a cash refund upon the employee's death equal to the excess of
the amount of the premiums paid for the contract over the prior
distributions under the contract. If the payments actually made under
the annuity contract do not meet the requirements of section 401(a)(9),
the plan fails to satisfy section 401(a)(9). Q-5. In the case of annuity distributions
under a defined benefit plan, how must additional benefits which accrue
after the employee’s required beginning date is distributed in order
to satisfy section401(a)(9)? A-5. (a) In the case of annuity
distributions under a defined benefit plan, if any additional benefits
accrue after the employee’s required beginning date, distribution of
such amount as a separate identifiable component must commence in
accordance with A-1 of this section beginning with the first payment
interval ending in the calendar year immediately following the calendar
year in which such amount accrues. (b) A plan will not fail to satisfy section
401(a)(9) merely because there is an administrative delay in the
commencement of the distribution of the separate identifiable component,
provided that the actual payment of such amount commences as soon as
practicable but not later than by the end of the first calendar year
following the calendar year in which the additional benefit accrues, and
that the total amount paid during such first calendar year is not less
than the total amount that was required to be paid during that year
under A-5(a) of this section. Q-6. If a portion of an employee's benefit
is not vested as of the employee’s required beginning date, how is the
determination of the required minimum distribution affected? A-6. In the case of annuity distributions
from a defined benefit plan, if any portion of the employee's benefit is
not vested as of December 31 of a distribution calendar year (or as of
the employee’s required beginning date in the case of the employee's
first distribution calendar year), the portion which is not vested as of
such date will be treated as not having accrued for purposes of
determining the required minimum distribution for that distribution
calendar year. When an additional portion of the
employee's benefit becomes vested, such portion will be treated as an
additional accrual. See A-5 of this section for the rules for
distributing benefits which accrue under defined benefit plan after the
employee's required beginning date. Q-7. If an employee retires after the
calendar year in which the employee attains age 70\1/2\, for what period
must the employee’s accrued benefit under a defined benefit plan be
actuarially increased? A-7. (a) Actuarial increase starting date.
If an employee (other than a 5-percent owner) retires after the calendar
year in which the employee attains age 70\1/2\, in order to satisfy
section401(a)(9)(C)(iii), the employee's accrued benefit under a defined
benefit plan must be actuarially increased to take into account any
period after age 70\1/2\ in which the employee was not receiving any
benefits under the plan. The actuarial increase required to satisfy
section 401(a)(9)(C)(iii) must be provided for the period starting on
April 1 following the calendar year in which the employee attains
age70\1/2\. (b) Actuarial increase ending date. The
period for which the actuarial increase must be provided ends on the
date on which benefits commence after retirement in an amount sufficient
to satisfy section401(a)(9). (c) No application to plan providing it
required beginning date for all employees. If as permitted under A-2(e)
of Sec. 1.401(a)(9)-2,a plan provides that the required beginning date
for purposes of section 401(a)(9) for all employees is April 1 of the
calendar year following the calendar year in which the employee attained
age 70\1/2\(regardless of whether the employee is a 5-percent owner) and
the plan makes distributions[[Page 3945]]in an amount sufficient to
satisfy section 401(a)(9) using that required beginning date, no
actuarial increase is required under section 401(a)(9)(C)(iii). (d) No application to defined contribution
plans. The actuarial increase required under this A-7 does not apply to
defined contribution plans. (e) No application to governmental and
church plans. The actuarial increase required under this A-7 does not
apply to a governmental plan(within the meaning of section 414(d)) or a
church plan. For purposes of this paragraph, the term church plan means
a plan maintained by church for church employees, and the term church
means any church (as defined in section 3121(w)(3)(A)) or qualified
church-controlled organization (as defined in section 3121(w)(3)(B)). Q-8. What amount of actuarial increase is
required under section401(a)(9)(C)(iii)? A-8. In order to satisfy section 401(a)(9)(C)(iii),
the retirement benefits payable with respect to an employee as of the
end of the period for actuarial increases (described in A-7 of this
section) must be no less than: the actuarial equivalent of the
employee's retirement benefits that would have been payable as of the
date the actuarial increase must commence under A-7(a) of this section
if benefits had commenced on that date; plus the actuarial equivalent of
any additional benefits accrued after that date; reduced by the
actuarial equivalent of any distributions made with respect to the
employee's retirement benefits after that date. Actuarial equivalence is
determined using the plan’s assumptions for determining actuarial
equivalence for purposes of satisfying section 411. Q-9. How does the actuarial increase
required under section401(a)(9)(C)(iii) relate to the actuarial increase
required under section 411? A-9. In order for any of an employee's
accrued benefit to be nonforfeitable as required under section 411, a
defined benefit plan must make an actuarial adjustment to an accrued
benefit the payment of which is deferred past normal retirement age. The
only exception to this rule is that generally no actuarial adjustment is
required to reflect the period during which a benefit is suspended as
permitted under section 203(a)(3)(B) of the Employee Retirement Income
Security Act of 1974 (ERISA). The actuarial increase required under
section401(a)(9) for the period described in A-7 of this section is
generally the same as, and not in addition to, the actuarial increase
required for the same period under section 411 to reflect any delay in
the payment of retirement benefits after normal retirement age. However,
unlike the actuarial increase required under section 411, the actuarial
increase required under section 401(a)(9)(C) must be provided even
during the period during which an employee's benefit has been suspended
in accordance with ERISA section 203(a)(3)(B). Q-10. What rule applies if distributions
commence to an employee one date before the employee's required
beginning date over a period permitted under section 401(a)(9)(A)(ii)
and the distribution form is an annuity under which distributions are
made in accordance with the provisions of A-1 (and if applicable A-4) of
this section? A-10. (a) General rule. If distributions
irrevocably (except for acceleration) commence to an employee on a date
before the employee’s required beginning date over a period permitted
under section401(a)(9)(A)(ii) and the distribution form is an annuity
under which distributions are made in accordance with the provisions of
A-1 (and, if applicable, A-4) of this section, the annuity starting date
will be treated as the required beginning date for purposes of applying
the rules of this section and Sec. 1.401(a)(9)-3. Thus, for example, the
designated beneficiary distributions will be determined as of the
annuity starting date. Similarly, if the employee dies after the annuity
starting date but before the annuity starting date determined under A-2
of Sec. 1.401(a)(9)-2, after the employee's death, the remaining portion
of the employee's interest must continue to be distributed in accordance
with this section over the remaining period over which distributions
commenced (single or joint lives and, inapplicable, period certain). The
rules in Sec. 1.401(a)(9)-3 and section 401(a)(9)(B)(ii) or (iii) and
(iv) do not apply.(b) Period certain. If as of the employee's birthday
in the year that contains the annuity starting date, the age of the
employee asunder 70, the following rule applies in applying the rule in
paragraph (a)(2) of A-3 of this section. The
applicable distribution period forth employee (determined in accordance
with the table in A-4(a)(2) offset. 1.401(a)(9)-5) is 26.2 plus the
difference between 70 and the age of the employee as of the employee's
birthday in the year that contains the annuity starting date. Q-11. What rule applies if distributions
commence irrevocably(except for acceleration) to the surviving spouse of
an employee over a period permitted under section 401(a)(9)(B)(iii)(II)
before the date on which distributions are required to commence and the
distribution formic an annuity under which distributions are made as of
the date distributions commence in accordance with the provisions of A-1
(and inapplicable A-4) of this section,A-11. If distributions commence
irrevocably (except for acceleration) to the surviving spouse of an
employee over a period permitted under section 401(a)(9)(B)(iii)(II)
before the date on which distributions are required to commence and the
distribution form is an annuity under which distributions are made as of
the date distributions commence in accordance with the provisions of A-1
(and if applicable A-4) of this section, distributions will be
considered to have begun on the actual commencement date for purposes of
section401(a)(9)(B)(iv)(II). Consequently, in such case, A-5 offset.
1.401(a)(9)-3 and section 401(a)(9)(B)(ii) and (iii) will not apply upon
the death of the surviving spouse as though the surviving spouse were
the employee. Instead, the annuity distributions must continue to be
made, in accordance with the provisions of A-1 (and inapplicable A-4) of
this section over the remaining period over which distributions
commenced (single life and, if applicable, period certain). Sec. 1.401(a)(9)-7 Rollovers and Transfers. Q-1. If an amount is distributed by one
plan (distributing plan)and is rolled over to another plan, is the
benefit or the required minimum distribution under the distributing plan
affected by the rollover? A-1. No. If an amount is distributed by one
plan and is rolled overtop another plan, the amount distributed is still
treated as a distribution by the distributing plan for purposes of
section401(a)(9), notwithstanding the rollover. Q-2. If an amount is distributed by one
plan (distributing plan)and is rolled over to another plan (receiving
plan), how are the benefit and the required minimum distribution under
the receiving plan affected? A-2. If an amount is distributed by one
plan (distributing plan)and is rolled over to another plan (receiving
plan), the benefit of the employee under the receiving plan is increased
by the amount rolled over. However, the distribution has no impact on
the required minimum distribution to be made by the receiving plan for
the calendar year in which the rollover is received. But, if a required
minimum distributions required to be made by the receiving plan for the
following calendar year, the rollover amount must be considered to be
part of the[[Page 3946]]employee's benefit under the receiving plan.
Consequently, for purposes of determining any required minimum
distribution for the calendar year immediately following the calendar
year in which the amount rolled ovaries received by the receiving plan,
in the case in which the amount rolled over is received after the last
valuation date in the calendar year under the receiving plan, the
benefit of the employee as of such valuation date, adjusted in
accordance with A-3 of Sec. 1.401(a)(9)-5,will be increased by the
rollover amount valued as of the date of receipt. For purposes of
calculating the benefit under the receiving plan pursuant to the
preceding sentence, if the amount rolled over is received by the
receiving plan in a different calendar year from the calendar year in
which it is distributed by the distributing plan, the amount rolled over
is deemed to have been received by the receiving plan in the calendar
year in which it was distributed by the distributing plan. Q-3. In the case of a transfer of an amount
of an employee’s benefit from one plan (transferor plan) to another
plan (transferee plan), are there any special rules for satisfying the
required minimum distribution requirement or determining the employee's
benefit under the transferor plan? A-3. (a) In the case of a transfer of an
amount of an employee’s benefit from one plan to another, the transfer
is not treated as a distribution by the transferor plan for purposes of
section 401(a)(9).Instead, the benefit of the employee under the
transferor plan is decreased by the amount transferred. However, if any
portion of an employee’s benefit is transferred in a distribution
calendar year with respect to that employee, in order to satisfy section
401(a)(9), the transferor plan must determine the amount of the required
minimum distribution with respect to that employee for the calendar year
of the transfer using the employee's benefit under the transferor plan
before the transfer. Additionally, if any portion of an employee's
benefit is transferred in the employee's second distribution calendar
year but donor before the employee's required beginning date, in order
to satisfy section 401(a)(9), the transferor plan must determine the
amount of the required minimum distribution requirement for the
employee's first distribution calendar year based on the employee's
benefit under the transferor plan before the transfer. The transferor
plan may satisfy the required minimum distribution requirement for the
calendar year of the transfer (and the prior year if applicable) by
segregating the amount which must be distributed from the employee's
benefit and not transferring that amount. Such amount may be retained by
the transferor plan and distributed on or before the date required. (b) For purposes of determining any
required minimum distribution for the calendar year immediately
following the calendar year in which the transfer occurs, in the case of
a transfer after the last valuation date for the calendar year of the
transfer under the transferor plan, the benefit of the employee as of
such valuation date, adjusted in accordance with A-3 of Sec.
1.401(a)(9)-5, will be decreased by the amount transferred, valued as of
the date of the transfer. Q-4. If an amount of an employee's benefit
is transferred from one plan (transferor plan) to another plan
(transferee plan), how are the benefit and the required minimum
distribution under the transferee plan affected? A-4. In the case of a transfer from one
plan (transferor plan) to another (transferee plan), the general rule is
that the benefit of the employee under the transferee plan is increased
by the amount transferred. The transfer has no impact on the required
minimum distribution to be made by the transferee plan in the calendar
year in which the transfer is received. However, if a required minimum
distribution is required from the transferee plan for the following
calendar year, the transferred amount must be considered to be part of
the employee's benefit under the transferee plan. Consequently, for
purposes of determining any required minimum distribution for the
calendar year immediately following the calendar year in which the
transfer occurs, in the case of a transfer after the last valuation date
of the transferee plan in the transfer calendar year, the benefit of the
employee under the receiving plan valued as of such valuation date,
adjusted in accordance with A-3 of Sec. 1.401(a)(9)-5, will be increased
by the amount transferred valued as of the date of the transfer. Q-5. How are a spin-off, merger or
consolidation (as defined in Sec. 1.414(l)-1) treated for purposes of
determining an employee’s benefit and required minimum distribution
under section 401(a)(9)? A-5. For purposes of determining an
employee's benefit and required minimum distribution under section
401(a)(9), a spin-off, a merger, or consolidation (as defined in Sec.
1.414(l)-1) will be treated as a transfer of the benefits of the
employees involved. Consequently, the benefit and required minimum
distribution of each employee involved under the transferor and
transferee plans will be determined in accordance with A-3 and A-4 of
this section. Sec. 1.401(a)(9)-8 Special rules. Q-1. What distribution rules apply if an
employee is a participant in more than one plan? A-1. If an employee is a participant in
more than one plan, the plans in which the employee participates are not
permitted to be aggregated for purposes of testing whether the
distribution requirements of section 401(a)(9) are met. The distribution
of the benefit of the employee under each plan must separately meet the
requirements of section 401(a)(9). For this purpose, a plan described in
section 414(k) is treated as two separate plans, a defined contribution
plan to the extent benefits are based on an individual account and a
defined benefit plan with respect to the remaining benefits. Q-2. If an employee's benefit under a plan
is divided into separate accounts (or segregated shares in the case of a
defined benefit plan),do the distribution rules in section 401(a)(9) and
these regulations apply separately to each separate account (or
segregated share)? A-2. (a) Except as otherwise provided in
paragraphs (b) and (c) of this A-2, if an employee's account under a
defined contribution plan is divided into separate accounts (or if an
employee's benefit under a defined benefit plan is divided into
segregated shares in the case of a defined benefit plan) under the plan,
the separate accounts(or segregated shares) will be aggregated for
purposes of satisfying the rules in section 401(a)(9). Thus, except as
otherwise provided in paragraphs (b) and (c) of this A-2, all separate
accounts, including a separate account for nondeductible employee
contributions (under section 72(d)(2)) or for qualified voluntary
employee contributions (as defined in section 219(e)), will be
aggregated for purposes of section401(a)(9). (b) If, for lifetime distributions, as of
an employee's required beginning date (or the beginning of any
distribution calendar year beginning after the employee's required
beginning date), or in the case of distributions under section
401(a)(9)(B)(ii) or (iii) and (iv), as of the end of the year following
the year containing the employee's (or spouse’s, where applicable)
date of death, the beneficiaries with respect to a separate account (or
segregated share in the case of defined benefit plan) under the plan
differ from the beneficiaries with respect to the other separate
accounts (or segregate shares)[[Page 3947]]of the employee under the
plan, such separate account (or segregated share) under the plan need
not be aggregated with other separate accounts (or segregated shares)
under the plan in order to determine whether the distributions from such
separate account (or segregated share) under the plan satisfy section
401(a)(9). Instead, the rules in section 401(a)(9) may separately apply
to such separate account (or segregated share) under the plan. For
example, if, in the case of a distribution described in section
401(a)(9)(B)(iii) and (iv), the only beneficiary of a separate account
(or segregated share) under the planes the employee's surviving spouse,
and beneficiaries other than the surviving spouse are designated with
respect to the other separate accounts of the employee, distribution of
the spouse's separate account(or segregated share) under the plan need
not commence until the date determined under the first sentence in
A-3(b) of Sec. 1.401(a)(9)-3,even if distribution of the other separate
accounts (or segregated shares) under the plan must commence at an
earlier date. In the case oaf distribution after the death of an
employee to which section401(a)(9)(B)(i) does not apply, distribution
from a separate account(or segregated share) of an employee may be made
over a beneficiary’s life expectancy in accordance with section
401(a)(9)(B)(iii) and (iv)even through distributions from other separate
accounts (or segregated shares) under the plan with different
beneficiaries are being made in accordance with the five-year rule in
section 401(a)(9)(B)(ii). (c) A portion of an employee's account
balance under a defined contribution plan is permitted to be used to
purchase an annuity contract with a remaining amount maintained in the
separate account. In that case, the separate account under the plan must
be distributed in accordance with Sec. 1.401(a)(9)-5 in order to satisfy
section401(a)(9) and the annuity payments under the annuity contract
must satisfy Sec. 1.401(a)(9)-6 in order to satisfy section 401(a)(9). Q-3. What is a separate account or
segregated share for purposes of section 401(a)(9)? A-3. (a) For purposes of section 401(a)(9),
a separate account inane individual account is a portion of an
employee's benefit determinedly an acceptable separate accounting
including allocating investment gains and losses, and contributions and
forfeitures, on a pro databases in a reasonable and consistent matter
between such portion and any other benefits. Further, the amounts of
each such portion of the benefit will be separately determined for
purposes of determining the amount of the required minimum distribution
in accordance withes. 1.401(a)(9)-5. (b) A benefit in a defined benefit plan is
separated into segregated shares if it consists of separate identifiable
components which may be separately distributed. Q-4. Must a distribution that is required
by section 401(a)(9) tube made by the required beginning date to an
employee or that is required by section 401(a)(9)(B)(iii) and (iv) to be
made by the required time to a designated beneficiary who is a surviving
spouse beamed notwithstanding the failure of the employee, or spouse
where applicable, to consent to a distribution while a benefit is
immediately distributable? A-4. Yes. Section 411(a)(11) and section
417(e) (senesces. 1.411(a)(11)-1(c)(2) and 1.417(e)-1(c)) require
employee and spousal consent to certain distributions of plan benefits
while such benefits are immediately distributable. If an employee's
normal retirement age is later than the required beginning date for the
commencement of distributions under section 401(a)(9) and, therefore,
benefits are still immediately distributable, the plan must,
nevertheless, distribute plan benefits to the participant (or where
applicable, to the spouse) in a manner that satisfies the requirements
of section 401(a)(9). Section 401(a)(9) must be satisfied even though
the participant (or spouse, where applicable) fails to consent to the
distribution. In such a case, the plan may distribute in the form of
qualified joint and survivor annuity (QJSA) or in the form of qualified
pre-retirement survivor annuity (QPSA) and the consent requirements of
sections 411(a)(11) and 417(e) are deemed to be satisfied if the plan
has made reasonable efforts to obtain consent from the participant (or
spouse if applicable) and if the distribution otherwise meets the
requirements of section 417. If, because of section401(a)(11)(B), the
plan is not required to distribute in the form of ajar to a participant
or a QPSA to a surviving spouse, the plan may distribute the required
minimum distribution amount required at the time required to satisfy
section 401(a)(9) and the consent requirements of sections 411(a)(11)
and 417(e) are deemed to be satisfied if the plan has made reasonable
efforts to obtain consent from the participant(or spouse if applicable)
and if the distribution otherwise meets the requirements of section 417. Q-5. Who is an employee's spouse or
surviving spouse for purposes of section 401(a)(9)?A-5. Except as
otherwise provided in A-6(a) (in the case of distributions of a portion
of an employee's benefit payable to a former spouse of an employee
pursuant to a qualified domestic relations order), for purposes of
section 401(a)(9), an individual is a spouse or surviving spouse of an
employee if such individual is treated as the employee’s spouse under
applicable state law. In the case of distributions after the death of an
employee, for purposes of determining whether, under the life expectancy
rule in section401(a)(9)(B)(iii) and (iv), the provisions of section
401(a)(9)(B)(iv)apply, the spouse of the employee is determined as of
the date of death of the employee. Q-6. In order to satisfy section 401(a)(9),
are there any special rules which apply to the distribution of all or a
portion of an employee’s benefit payable to an alternate payee
pursuant to qualified domestic relations order as defined in section
414(p) (QDRO)? A-6. (a) A former spouse to whom all or a
portion of the employee’s benefit is payable pursuant to a QDRO will
be treated as a spouse(including a surviving spouse) of the employee for
purposes of section401(a)(9), including the minimum distribution
incidental benefit requirement, regardless of whether the QDRO
specifically provides that the former spouse is treated as the spouse
for purposes of sections401(a)(11) and 417. (b)(1) If a QDRO provides that an
employee's benefit is to be divided and a portion is to be allocated to
an alternate payee, such portion will be treated as a separate account
(or segregated share)which separately must satisfy the requirements of
section 401(a)(9) and may not be aggregated with other separate accounts
(or segregated shares) of the employee for purposes of satisfying
section 401(a)(9).Except as otherwise provided in paragraph (b)(2) of this A-6, distribution of such
separate account allocated to an alternate payee pursuant to a QDRO must
be made in accordance with section 401(a)(9). For example, in general,
distribution of such account will satisfy section 401(a)(9)(A) if
required minimum distributions from such account during the employee's
lifetime begin not later than the employee's required beginning date and
the required minimum distribution is determined in accordance with Sec.
1.401(a)(9)-5 for each distribution calendar year using an applicable
distribution period determined under A-4 of Sec. 1.401(a)(9)-5 using the
age of the employee in the distribution calendar year for purposes of
using the[[Page 3948]]table in A-4(a)(2) of Sec. 1.401(a)(9)-5 if
applicable or ages of the employee and spousal alternate payee if their
joint life expectancy is longer than the distribution period using that
table. The determination of whether distribution from such account after
the death of the employee to the alternate payee will be made in
accordance with section401(a)(9)(B)(i) or section 401(a)(9)(B)(ii) or
(iii) and (iv) will depend on whether distributions have begun as
determined under A-5 ores. 1.401(a)(9)-2 (which provides, in general,
that distributions aren’t treated as having begun until the employee's
required beginning date even though payments may actually have begun
before that date).For example, if the alternate payee dies before the
employee and distribution of the separate account allocated to the
alternate payee pursuant to the QDRO is to be made to the alternate
payee’s beneficiary, such beneficiary may be treated as a designated
beneficiary for purposes of determining the required minimum
distribution required from such account after the death of the employee
if the beneficiary of the alternate payee is an individual and if such
beneficiary is a beneficiary under the plan or specified to or in the
plan. Specification in or pursuant to the QDRO will also be treated as
specification to the plan. (2) Distribution of the separate account
allocated to an alternate payee pursuant to a QDRO satisfy the
requirements of section401(a)(9)(A)(ii) if such account is to be
distributed, beginning not later than the employee's required beginning
date, over the life of the alternate payee (or over a period not
extending beyond the life expectancy of the alternative payee). Also, if
the plan permits the employee to elect whether distribution upon the
death of the employee will be made in accordance with the five-year rule
in section401(a)(9)(B)(ii) or the life expectancy rule in
section401(a)(9)(B)(iii) and (iv) pursuant to A-4(c) of Sec.
1.401(a)(9)-3,such election is to be made only by the alternate payee
for purposes of distributing the separate account allocated to the
alternate payee pursuant to the QDRO. If the alternate payee dies after
distribution of the separate account allocated to the alternate payee
pursuant to ardor has begun (determined under A-5 of Sec. 1.401(a)(9)-2)
but before the employee dies, distribution of the remaining portion of
that portion of the benefit allocated to the alternate payee must be
made in accordance with the rules in Sec. 1.401(a)(9)-5 or Sec.
1.401(a)(9)-6for distributions during the life of the employee. Only
after the death of the employee is the amount of the required minimum
distribution determined in accordance with the rules that apply after
the death of the employee. (c) If a QDRO does not provide that an
employee's benefit is to be divided but provides that a portion of an
employee's benefit (otherwise payable to the employee) is to be paid to
an alternate payee, such portion will not be treated as a separate
account (or segregated share)of the employee. Instead, such portion will
be aggregated with any amount distributed to the employee and will be
treated as having been distributed to the employee for purposes of
determining whether the required minimum distribution requirement has
been satisfied with respect to that employee. Q-7. Will a plan fail to satisfy section
401(a)(9) where it is not legally permitted to distribute to an
alternate payee all or a portion of an employee's benefit payable to an
alternate payee pursuant to ardor within the period specified in section
414(p)(7)? A-7. A plan will not fail to satisfy
section 401(a)(9) merely because it fails to distribute a required
amount during the period in which the issue of whether a domestic
relations order is a QDRO is being determined pursuant to section
414(p)(7), provided that the period does not extend beyond the 18-month
period described in section414(p)(7)(E). To the extent that a
distribution otherwise required under section 401(a)(9) is not made
during this period, this amount and any additional amount accrued during
this period will be treated although it is not vested during the period
and any distributions with respect to such amounts must be made under
the relevant rules for non-vested benefits described in either A-8 of
Sec. 1.401(a)(9)-5 or A-6of Sec. 1.401(a)(9)-6. Q-8. Will a plan fail to satisfy section
401(a)(9) where an individual’s distribution from the plan is less
than the amount otherwise required to satisfy section 401(a)(9) under
Sec. 1.401(a)(9)-5 or Sec. 1.401(a)(9)-6 because distributions were
being paid under an annuity contract issued by a life insurance company
in state insurer delinquency proceedings and have been reduced or
suspended by reasons of such state proceedings? A-8. A plan will not fail to satisfy
section 401(a)(9) merely because an individual's distribution from the
plan is less than the amount otherwise required to satisfy section
401(a)(9) under Sec. 1.401(a)(9)-5 or Sec. 1.401(a)(9)-6
because distributions were being paid under an annuity contract issued
by a life insurance companying state insurer delinquency proceedings and
have been reduced or suspended by reasons of such state proceedings. To
the extent that a distribution otherwise required under section
401(a)(9) is not made during the state insurer delinquency proceedings,
this amount and any additional amount accrued during this period will be
treated as thought is not vested during the period and any distributions
with respect to such amounts must be made under the relevant rules for
nonvestedbenefits described in either A-8 of Sec. 1.401(a)(9)-5 or A-6
of Sec. 1.401(a)(9)-6. Q-9. Will a plan fail to qualify as a
pension plan within the meaning of section 401(a) solely because the
plan permits distributions to commence to an employee on or after April
1 of the calendar year following the calendar year in which the employee
attains age 70\1/2\even though the employee has not retired or attained
the normal retirement age under the plan as of the date on which such
distributions commence? A-9. No. A plan will not fail to qualify as
a pension plan within the meaning of section 401(a) solely because the
plan permits distributions to commence to an employee on or after April
1 of the calendar year following the calendar year in which the employee
attains age 70\1/2\ even though the employee has not retired or attained
the normal retirement age under the plan as of the date on which such
distributions commence. This rule applies without regard to whether or
not the employee is a 5-percent owner with respect to the plan year
ending in the calendar year in which distributions commence. Q-10. Is the distribution of an annuity
contract a distribution for purposes of section 401(a)(9)? A-10. No. The distribution of an annuity
contract is not a distribution for purposes of section 401(a)(9). Q-11. Will a payment by a plan after the
death of an employee fail to be treated as a distribution for purposes
of section 401(a)(9)solely because it is made to an estate or a trust? A-11. A payment by a plan after the death
of an employee will not fail to be treated as a distribution for
purposes of section 401(a)(9)solely because it is made to an estate or a
trust. As a result, the estate or trust which receives a payment from a
plan after the death of an employee need not distribute the amount of
such payment to the beneficiaries of the estate or trust in accordance
with section401(a)(9)(B). However, pursuant to A-3 of Sec.
1.401(a)(9)-4,distribution to the estate must satisfy the five-year rule
in section401(a)(9)(B)(iii) if the distribution to the employee had not
begun (as defined in[[Page 3949]]A-6 of Sec. 1.401(a)(9)-2) as of the
employee's date of death, and pursuant to A-3 of Sec. 1.401(a)(9)-4, an
estate may not be a designated beneficiary. See A-5 and A-6 of Sec.
1.401(a)(9)-4 for provisions under which beneficiaries of a trust with
respect to the trust’s interest in an employee's benefit are treated
as having been designated as beneficiaries of the employee under the
plan. Q-12. Will a plan fail to satisfy section
411 if the plan is amended to eliminate benefit options that do not
satisfy section401(a)(9)? A-12. Nothing in section 401(a)(9) permits
a plan to eliminate feral participants a benefit option that could not
otherwise be eliminated pursuant to section 411(d)(6). However, a plan
must provide that, notwithstanding any other plan provisions, it will
not distribute benefits under any option that does not satisfy section
401(a)(9). SeeA-3 of Sec. 1.401(a)(9)-1. Thus, the plan, notwithstanding
section411(d)(6), must prevent participants from electing benefit
options that do not satisfy section 401(a)(9). Q-13. Is a plan disqualified merely because
it pays benefits under designation made before January 1, 1984, in
accordance with section242(b)(2) of the Tax Equity and Fiscal
Responsibility Act (TEFRA)? A-13. No. Even though the distribution
requirements added by Defrayer retroactively repealed by the Tax Reform
Act of 1984 (TRA of1984), the transitional election rule in section
242(b) was preserved. Satisfaction of the spousal consent requirements
of section 417(a) and (e) (added by the Retirement Equity Act of
1984) will not be considered revocation of the pre-1984 designation.
However, sections 401(a)(11)and 417 must be satisfied with respect to
any distribution subject to those sections. The election provided in
section 242(b) of TEFRA is hereafter referred to as a section 242(b)(2)
election. Q-14. In the case in which an amount is
transferred from one plan(transferor plan) to another plan (transferee
plan), may the transferee plan distribute the amount transferred in
accordance with a section242(b)(2) election made under either the
transferor plan or under the transferee plan? A-14. (a) In the case in which an amount is
transferred from one plan to another plan, the amount transferred may be
distributed in accordance with a section 242(b)(2) election made under
the transferor plan if the employee did not elect to have the amount
transferred and if the amount transferred is separately accounted for by
the transferee plan. However, only the benefit attributable to the
amount transferred, plus earnings thereon, may be distributed in
accordance with the section 242(b)(2) election made under the transferor
plan. If the employee elected to have the amount transferred, the
transfer will be treated as a distribution and rollover of the amount
transferred for purposes of this section. (b) In the case in which an amount is
transferred from one plan to another plan, the amount transferred may
not be distributed in accordance with a section 242(b)(2) election made
under the transferee plan. If a section 242(b)(2) election was made
under the transferee plan, the amount transferred must be separately
accounted for. If the amount transferred is not separately accounted for
under the transferee plan, the section 242(b)(2) election under the
transferee plan is revoked and section 401(a)(9) will apply to
subsequent distributions byte transferee plan. (c) A merger, spin-off, or consolidation,
as defined in Sec. 1.414(l)-1(b), will be treated as a transfer for
purposes of the section 242(b)(2) election. Q-15. If an amount is distributed by one
plan (distributing plan)and rolled over into another plan (receiving
plan), may the receiving plan distribute the amount rolled over in
accordance with a section242(b)(2) election made under either the
distributing plan or the receiving plan? A-15. No. If an amount is distributed by
one plan and rolled over into another plan, the receiving plan must
distribute the amount rolled over in accordance with section 401(a)(9)
whether or not the employee made a section 242(b)(2) election under the
distributing plan. Further, if the amount rolled over was not
distributed in accordance with the election, the election under the
distributing plan is revoked and section 401(a)(9) will apply to all
subsequent distributions by the distributing plan. Finally, if the
employee made a section 242(b)(2)election under the receiving plan and
such election is still in effect, the amount rolled over must be
separately accounted for under the receiving plan and distributed in
accordance with section 401(a)(9). If amounts rolled over are not
separately accounted for, any section242(b)(2) election under the
receiving plan is revoked and section401(a)(9) will apply to subsequent
distributions by the receiving plan. Q-16. May a section 242(b)(2) election be
revoked after the date by which distributions are required to commence
in order to satisfy section 401(a)(9) and this section of the
regulations? A-16. Yes. A section 242(b)(2) election may
be revoked after the date by which distributions are required to
commence in order to satisfy section 401(a)(9) and this section of the
regulations. However, if the section 242(b)(2) election is revoked after
the date by which distributions are required to commence in order to
satisfy section401(a)(9) and this section of the regulations and the
total amount of the distributions which would have been required to be
made prior to the date of the revocation in order to satisfy section
401(a)(9), but for the section 242(b)(2) election, have not been made,
the trust must distribute by the end of the calendar year following the
calendar yearn which the revocation occurs the total amount not yet
distributed which was required to have been distributed to satisfy the
requirements of section 401(a)(9) and continue distributions in
accordance with such requirements. Par. 3-4. Section 1.403(b)-2 is added to
read as follows: Sec. 1.403(b)-2 Required minimum
distributions from annuity contracts purchased, or custodial accounts or
retirement income accounts established, by a section 501(c)(3)
organization or a public school. Q-1. Are section 403(b) contracts subject
to the distribution rules provided in section 401(a)(9)? A-1. (a) Yes. Section 403(b) contracts are
subject to the distribution rules provided in section 401(a)(9). For
purposes of this section the term section 403(b) contract means an
annuity contract described in section 403(b)(1), custodial account
described in section403(b)(7), or a retirement income account described
in section403(b)(9). (b) For purposes of applying the
distribution rules in section401(a)(9), section 403(b) contracts will be
treated as individual retirement annuities described in section 408(b)
and individual retirement accounts described in section 408(a) (IRAs).
Consequently, except as otherwise provided in paragraph (c), the
distribution rules in section 401(a)(9) will be applied to section
403(b) contracts in accordance with the provisions in Sec. 1.408-8. (c)(1) The required beginning date for
purposes of section403(b)(9) is April 1, of the calendar year following
the later of the calendar year in which the employee attains 70\1/2\ or
the calendar year in which the employee retires from employment with the
employer maintaining the plan. The concept of 5-percent owner has no
application in the case of employees of employers described in
section403(b)(1)(A).[[Page 3950]] (2) The rule in A-5 of Sec. 1.408-8 does
not apply to section403(b) contracts. Thus, the surviving spouse of an
employee is not permitted to treat a section 403(b) contract of which
the spouse is the sole beneficiary as the spouse's own section 403(b)
contract. Q-2. To what benefits under section 403(b)
contracts, do the distribution rules provided in section 401(a)(9)
apply? A-2. (a) The distribution rules provided in
section 401(a)(9) apply to all benefits under section 403(b) contracts
accruing after December31, 1986 (post-'86 account balance). The
distribution rules provided in section 401(a)(9) do not apply to the
balance of the account balance under the section 403(b) contract valued
as of December 31, 1986,exclusive of subsequent earnings (pre-'87
account balance).Consequently, the post-'86 account balance includes
earnings after December 31, 1986 on contributions made before January 1,
1987, in addition to the contributions made after December 31, 1986 and
earnings thereon. The issuer or custodian of the section 403(b) contract
must keep records that enable it to identify the pre-'87 account balance
and subsequent changes as set forth in paragraph (b) of this A-2 and
provide such information upon request to the relevant employee or
beneficiaries with respect to the contract. If the issuer does not keep
such records, the entire account balance will be treated as subject to
section 401(a)(9). (b) In applying the distribution rules in
section 401(a)(9), only the post-'86 account balance is used to
calculate the required minimum distribution required for a calendar
year. The amount of any distribution required to satisfy the required
minimum distribution requirement for a calendar year will be treated as
being paid from thepost-'86 account balance. Any amount distributed in a
calendar year in excess of the required minimum distribution requirement
for a calendar year will be treated as paid from the pre-'87 account
balance. The pre-'87 account balance for the next calendar year will be
permanently reduced by the deemed distributions from the account. (c) The pre-'86 account balance and the
post-'87 account balance have no relevance for purposes of determining
the amount includible in income under section 72. Q-3. Must the value of the account balance
under a section 403(b)contract as of December 31, 1986 be distributed in
accordance with the minimum distribution incidental benefit requirement? A-3. Distributions of the entire account
balance of a section403(b) contract, including the value of the account
balance under the contract or account as of December 31, 1986, must
satisfy the minimum distribution incidental benefit requirement.
However, distributions attributable to the value of the account balance
under the contract or account as of December 31, 1986 is treated as
satisfying the minimum distribution incidental benefit requirement if
such distributions satisfy the rules in effect as of July 27, 1987,
interpreting 1.401-1(b)(1)(i). Q-4. Is the required minimum distribution
from one section 403(b)contract of an employee permitted to be
distributed from another section 403(b) contract in order to satisfy
section 401(a)(9)? A-4. Yes. The required minimum distribution
must be separately determined for each section 403(b) contract of an
employee. However, such amounts may then be totaled and the total
distribution taken fro many one or more of the individual section 403(b)
contracts. However, under this rule, only amounts in section 403(b)
contracts that an individual holds as an employee may be aggregated.
Amounts in section403(b) contracts that an individual holds as a
beneficiary of the same decedent may be aggregated, but such amounts may
not be aggregated with amounts held in section 403(b) contracts that the
individual holds as the employee or as the beneficiary of another
decedent. Distributions from section 403(b) contracts or accounts will
not satisfy the distribution requirements from IRAs, nor will
distributions from IRA's satisfy the distribution requirements from
section 403(b) contracts or accounts. Par. 5. Section Sec. 1.408-8 is added to
read as follows: Sec. 1.408-8 Distribution requirements for individual
retirement plans. The following questions and answers relate
to the distribution rules for IRAs provided in sections 408(a)(6) and
408(b)(3). Q-1. Are individual retirement plans (IRAs)
subject to the distribution rules provided in section 401(a)(9) and
Sacs. 1.401(a)(9)-1 through 1.401(a)(9)-8 for qualified plans? A-1. (a) Yes. Except as otherwise provided
in this section, Erasure subject to the required minimum distribution
rules provided in section 401(a)(9) and Sacs. 1.401(a)(9)-1 through
1.401(a)(9)-8 for qualified plans. For example, whether the five year
rule or the life expectancy rule applies to distribution after death
occurring before the IRA owner's required beginning date will be
determined in accordance with Sec. 1.401(a)(9)-3, the rules of Sec.
1.401(a)(9)-4apply for purposes of determining an IRA owner's designated
beneficiary, the amount of the required minimum distribution required
for each calendar year from an individual account will be determined in
accordance with Sec. 1.401(a)(9)-5, and whether annuity payments frogman
individual retirement annuity satisfy section 401(a)(9) will be
determined under Sec. 1.401(a)(9)-6. For this purpose the term Miamians
an individual retirement account or annuity described in section408(a)
or (b). (b) For purposes of applying the required
minimum distribution rules in Sacs. 1.401(a)(9)-1 through 1.401(a)(9)-8
for qualified plans, the IRA trustee, custodian, or issuer is treated as
the plan administrator, and the IRA owner is substituted for the
employee Q-2. Are employer contributions under a
simplified employee pension(defined in section 408(k)) or a SIMPLE IRA
(defined in section 408(p))treated as contributions to an IRA? A-2. Yes. IRAs that receive employer
contributions under simplified employee pension (defined in section
408(k)) or a SIMPLE plan (defined in section 408(p)) are treated as IRAs
for purposes of section 401(a) and are, therefore, subject to the
distribution rules in this section. Q-3. In the case of distributions from an
IRA, what does the term required beginning date mean? A-3. In the case of distributions from an
IRA, the term required beginning date means April 1 of the calendar year
following the calendar year in which the individual attains age 70\1/2\. Q-4. When is the amount of a distribution
from a IRA not eligible for rollover because the amount is a required
minimum distribution? A-4. The amount of a distribution that is a
required minimum distribution from an IRA and thus not eligible for
rollover is determined in the same manner as provided in Q&A-7 of
Sec. 1.402(c)-2for distributions from qualified plans. For example, if a
required minimum distribution is required for a calendar year, the
amounts distributed during a calendar year from an IRA are treated as
required minimum distributions under section 401(a)(9) to the extent
that the total required minimum distribution for the year under
section401(a)(9) for that IRA has not been satisfied. This requirement
may be satisfied by a distribution from the IRA or, as permitted under
A-8 of this section, from another IRA. [[Page 3951]] Q-5. May an individual's surviving spouse
elect to treat such spouse’s entire interest as a beneficiary in an
individual's IRA upon the death of the individual (or the remaining part
of such interest if distribution to the spouse has commenced) as the
spouse's own account? A-5. (a) The surviving spouse of an
individual may elect in the manner described in paragraph (b) of this
A-5 to treat the spouse’s entire interest as a beneficiary in an
individual's IRA (or the remaining part of such interest if distribution
thereof has commenced to the spouse) as the spouse's own IRA. This
election is permitted tube made at any time after the distribution of
the required minimum amount for the account for the calendar year
containing the individual’s date of death. In order to make this
election, the spouse must be the sole beneficiary of the IRA and have an
unlimited right to withdrawal amounts from the IRA. This requirement is
not satisfied if trust is named as beneficiary of the IRA even if the
spouse is the sole beneficiary of the trust. If the surviving spouse
makes such an election, the surviving spouse's interest in the IRA would
then be subject to the distribution requirements of section
401(a)(9)(A)applicable to the spouse as the IRA owner rather than those
of section401(a)(9)(B) applicable to the surviving spouse as the
decedent Ironer’s beneficiary. Thus, the required minimum distribution
for the year of the election and each subsequent year would be
determined under section 401(a)(9)(A) with the spouse as IRA owner and
not section401(a)(9)(B). (b) The election described in paragraph (a)
of this A-5 is made byte-surviving spouse redesign ting the account as
the account in the name of the surviving spouse as IRA owner rather than
as beneficiary. Alternatively, a surviving spouse eligible to make the
election is deemed to have made the election if, at any time, either of
the following occurs: (1) Any required amounts in the account
(including any amounts that have been rolled over or transferred, in
accordance with the requirements of section 408(d)(3)(A)(i), into an
individual retirement account or individual retirement annuity for the
benefit of such surviving spouse) have not been distributed within the
appropriate time period applicable to the surviving spouse as
beneficiary under section401(a)(9)(B); or (2) Any additional amounts are contributed
to the account (or to the account or annuity to which the surviving
spouse has rolled such amounts over, as described in (1) above) which
are subject, or deemed to be subject, to the distribution requirements
of section401(a)(9)(A). (c) The result of an election described in
paragraph (b) of this A-5 is that the surviving spouse shall then be
considered the IRA owner for whose benefit the trust is maintained for
all purposes under the Code (e.g. section 72(t)). Q-6. How is the benefit determined for
purposes of calculating the required minimum distribution from an IRA? A-6. For purposes of determining the
required minimum distribution required to be made from an IRA in any
calendar year, the account balance of the IRA as of the December 31 of
the calendar year immediately preceding the calendar year for which
distributions are being made will be substituted in A-3 of Sec.
1.401(a)(9)-5 for the account of the employee. The account balance as of
December 31 of such calendar year is the value of the IRA upon close of
business on such December 31. However, for purposes of determining the
required minimum distribution for the second distribution calendar year
for an individual, the account balance as of December 31 of such
calendar year must be reduced by any distribution (as described in
A-3(c)(2) offset. 1.401(a)(9)-5) made to satisfy the required minimum
distribution requirements for the individual's first distribution
calendar year after such date. Q-7. What rules apply in the case of a
rollover to an IRA of an amount distributed by a qualified plan or
another IRA? A-7. If the surviving spouse of an employee
rolls over a distribution from a qualified plan, such surviving spouse
may elect to treat the IRA as the spouse's own IRA in accordance with
the provisions in A-5 of this section. In the event of any other
rollover to an IRA of an amount distributed by a qualified plan or
another IRA, the rules in Sec. 1.401(a)(9)-3 will apply for purposes of
determining the account balance for the receiving IRA and the required
minimum distribution from the receiving IRA. However, because the value
of the account balance is determined as of December 31 of the year
preceding the year for which the required minimum distribution is being
determined and notes of a valuation date in the preceding year, the
account balance of the receiving IRA need not be adjusted for the amount
received as provided in A-2 of Sec. 1.401(a)(9)-7 in order to determine
the required minimum distribution for the calendar year following the
calendar year in which the amount rolled over is received, unless the
amount received is deemed to have been received in the immediately
preceding year, pursuant to A-2 of Sec. 1.401(a)(9)-7. In that case, for
purposes of determining the required minimum distribution for the
calendar year in which such amount is actually received, the account
balance of the receiving IRA as of December 31 of the preceding year
must be adjusted by the amount received in accordance with A-2 offset.
1.401(a)(9)-7. Q-8. What rules apply in the case of a
transfer from one IRA to another? A-8. In the case of a transfer from one IRA
to another IRA, the rules in A-3 or A-4 of Sec. 1.401(a)(9)-7 will apply
for purposes of determining the account balance of, and the required
minimum distribution from, the IRAs involved. Thus, the transferor IRA
must distribute in the year of the transfer any amount required
determined without regard to the transfer. For purposes of determining
the account balance of the transferee IRA and the transferor IRA, the
account balance need not be adjusted for the amount transferred as
provided inA-4(a) of Sec. 1.401(a)(9)-7 in order to calculate the
required minimum distribution for the calendar year following the
calendar year of the transfer, because the account balance is determined
as of December 31of the calendar year immediately preceding the calendar
year for which the required minimum distribution is being determined. Q-9. Is the required minimum distribution
from one IRA of an owner permitted to distributed from another IRA in
order to satisfy section401(a)(9). A-9. Yes. The required minimum distribution
must be calculated separately for each IRA. However, such amounts may
then be totaled and the total distribution taken from any one or more of
the individual IRAs. However, under this rule, only amounts in IRAs that
an individual holds as the IRA owner may be aggregated. Amounts in IRAs
that an individual holds as a beneficiary of the same decedent may be
aggregated, but such amounts may not be aggregated with amounts held
inures that the individual holds as the IRA owner or as the beneficiary
of another decedent. Distributions from section 403(b) contracts or
accounts will not satisfy the distribution requirements from IRAs, nor
will distributions from IRAs satisfy the distribution requirements from
section 403(b) contracts or accounts. Distributions from Roth
IRAs(defined in section 408A) will not satisfy the distribution
requirements applicable to IRAs or section 403(b) accounts or contracts
and distributions from IRAs or section 403(b) contracts or accounts will
not[[Page 3952]]satisfy the distribution requirements from Roth IRAs. Q-10. Is the trustee of an IRA required to
report the amount that’s required to be distributed from that IRA? A-10. Yes. The trustee of an IRA is
required to report to the Internal Revenue Service and to the IRA owner
the amount required to be distributed from the IRA for each calendar
year at the time and in the manner prescribed in the instructions to the
applicable Federal tax forms, as well as any additional information as
required by such forms or such instructions. PART 54--PENSION EXCISE TAXES Par. 6. The authority citation for part 54
is amended by adding the following citation to read as follows: Authority: 26 U.S.C. 7805 * * *. Sec. 54.4974-2 is also issued under 26
U.S.C. 4974. Par. 7. Section after Sec. 54.4974-2 is
added to read as follows: Sec. 54.4974-2 Excise tax on accumulations
in qualified retirement plans. Q-1. Is any tax imposed on a payee under
any qualified retirement plan or any eligible deferred compensation plan
(as defined in section457(b)) to whom an amount is required to be
distributed for a taxable year if the amount distributed during the
taxable year is less than the required minimum distribution? A-1. Yes. If the amount distributed to a
payee under any qualified retirement plan or any eligible deferred
compensation plan (as defined in section 457(b)) for a calendar year is
less than the required minimum distribution for such year, an excise tax
is imposed on such payee under section 4974 for the taxable year
beginning with or within the calendar year during which the amount is
required to be distributed. The tax is equal to 50 percent of the amount
by which such required minimum distribution exceeds the actual amount
distributed during the calendar year. Section 4974 provides that this
tax shall be paid by the payee. For purposes of section 4974, the term
required minimum distribution means the required minimum distribution
amount required to be distributed pursuant to section 401(a)(9),
403(b)(10),408(a)(6), 408(b)(3), or 457(d)(2), as the case may be, and
the regulations thereunder. Except as otherwise provided in Q&A-6,
the required minimum distribution for a calendar year is the required
minimum distribution amount required to be distributed during the
calendar year. Q&A-6 provides a special rule for amounts required to
be distributed by an employee's (or individual's) required beginning
date. Q-2. For purposes of section 4974, what is
a qualified retirement plan? A-2. For purposes of section 4974, each of
the following is qualified retirement plan-- (a) A plan described in section 401(a)
which includes a trust exempt from tax under section 501(a); (b) An annuity plan described in section
403(a); (c) An annuity contract, custodial account,
or retirement income account described in section 403(b); (d) An individual retirement account
described in section 408(a);(e) An individual retirement annuity
described in section 408(b); or (f) Any other plan, contract, account, or
annuity that, at anytime, has been treated as a plan, account, or
annuity described in (a)through (e) of this A-2, whether or not such
plan, contract, account, or annuity currently satisfies the applicable
requirements for such treatment. Q-3. If a payee's interest under a
qualified retirement plan is in the form of an individual account, how
is the required minimum distribution for a given calendar year
determined for purposes of section 4974? A-3. (a) General rule. If a payee's
interest under a qualified retirement plan is in the form of an
individual account and distribution of such account is not being made
under an annuity contract purchased in accordance with A-4 of Sec.
1.401(a)(9)-6, the amount of the required minimum distribution for any
calendar year for purposes of section 4974 is the required minimum
distribution amount required to be distributed for such calendar year in
order to satisfy the required minimum distribution requirements in Sec.
1.401(a)(9)-5 as provided in the following (whichever is applicable)-- (1) Section 401(a)(9) and Sacs.
1.401(a)(9)-1 through 1.401(a)(9)-8in the case of a plan described in
section 401(a) which includes trust exempt under section 501(a) or an
annuity plan described in section 403(a)); (2) Section 403(b)(10) and Sec. 1.403(b)-2
(in the case of an annuity contract, custodial account, or retirement
income account described in section 403(b)); or (3) Section 408(a)(6) or (b)(3) and Sec.
1.408-8 (in the case of an individual retirement account or annuity
described in section 408(a) or(b)). (b) Default provisions. Unless otherwise
provided under the qualified retirement plan (or, if applicable, the
governing instrument of the qualified retirement plan), the default
provisions in A-4(a) offset. 1.401(a)(9)-3 apply in determining the
required minimum distribution for purposes of section 4974. (c) Five year rule. If the five-year rule
in section401(a)(9)(B)(ii) applies to the distribution to a payee, no
amount is required to be distributed for any calendar year to satisfy
the applicable enumerated section in paragraph (a) of this A-3 until the
calendar year which contains the date five years after the date of the
employee’s death. For the calendar year which contains the date five
years after the employee's death, the required minimum distribution
amount required to be distributed to satisfy the applicable enumerated
section is the payee's entire remaining interest in the qualified
retirement plan. Q-4. If a payee's interest in a qualified
retirement plan is being distributed in the form of an annuity, how is
the amount of the required minimum distribution determined for purposes
of section 4974? A-4. If a payee's interest in a qualified
retirement plan is being distributed in the form of an annuity (either
directly from the plan, in the case of a defined benefit plan, or under
an annuity contract purchased from an insurance company), the amount of
the required minimum distribution for purposes of section 4974 will be
determined as follows: (a) Permissible annuity distribution
option. A permissible annuity distribution option is an annuity contract
(or, in the case of annuity distributions from a defined benefit plan, a
distribution option) which specifically provides for distributions
which, if made as provided, would for every calendar year equal or
exceed the required minimum distribution amount required to be
distributed to satisfy the applicable section enumerated in paragraph
(a) of A-2 of this section for every calendar year. If the annuity
contract (or, in the case of annuity distributions from a defined
benefit plan, a distribution option) under which distributions to the
payee are being made is permissible annuity distribution option, the
required minimum distribution for a given calendar year will equal the
amount which the annuity contract (or distribution option) provides is
to be distributed for that calendar year. (b) Impermissible annuity distribution
option. An impermissible annuity distribution option is an annuity
contract (or, in the case of annuity distributions from a defined
benefit plan, a distribution option) under which distributions to the
payee are being made that specifically provides for[[Page
3953]]distributions which, if made as provided, would for any calendar
year be less than the required minimum distribution amount required to
be distributed to satisfy the applicable section enumerated in
paragraph(a) of A-2 of this section. If the annuity contract (or, in the
case of annuity distributions from a defined benefit plan, the
distribution option) under which distributions to the payee are being
made is an impermissible annuity distribution option, the required
minimum distribution for each calendar year will be determined as
follows: (1) If the qualified retirement plan under
which distributions are being made is a defined benefit plan, the
required minimum distribution amount required to be distributed each
year will be the amount which would have been distributed under the plan
if the distribution option under which distributions to the payee were
being made was the following permissible annuity distribution option: (i) In the case of distributions commencing
before the death of the employee, if there is a designated beneficiary
under the impermissible annuity distribution option for purposes of
section 401(a)(9), the permissible annuity distribution option is the
joint and survivor annuity option under the plan for the lives of the
employee and the designated beneficiary which provides for the greatest
level amount payable to the employee determined on an annual basis. If
the plan doesn’t provide such an option or there is no designated
beneficiary under the impermissible distribution option for purposes of
section401(a)(9), the permissible annuity distribution option is the
life annuity option under the plan payable for the life of the employee
in level amounts with no survivor benefit. (ii) In the case of distributions
commencing after the death of the employee, if there is a designated
beneficiary under the impermissible annuity distribution option for
purposes of section 401(a)(9), the permissible annuity distribution
option is the life annuity option under the plan payable for the life of
the designated beneficiary in level amounts. If there is no designated
beneficiary, the five-year rule in section 401(a)(9)(B)(ii) applies. See
paragraph (b)(3) of thisA-4. The determination of whether or not there
is a designated beneficiary and the determination of which designated
beneficiary’s life is to be used in the case of multiple beneficiaries
will be maiden accordance with Sec. 1.401(a)(9)-4 and A-7 of Sec.
1.401(a)(9)-5. If the defined benefit plan does not provide for
distribution in the form of the applicable permissible distribution
option, the required minimum distribution for each calendar year will be
an amount as determined byte Commissioner. (2) If the qualified retirement plan under
which distributions are being made is a defined contribution plan and
the impermissible annuity distribution option is an annuity contract
purchased from an insurance company, the required minimum distribution
amount required to be distributed each year will be the amount which
would have been distributed in the form of an annuity contract under the
permissible annuity distribution option under the plan determined in
accordance with paragraph (b)(1) of this A-4 for defined benefit plans.
If the defined contribution plan does not provide the applicable
permissible annuity distribution option, the required minimum
distribution for each calendar year will be the amount which would have
been distributed under an annuity described below in paragraph (b)(2)(i)
or (ii) of thisA-4 purchased with the employee's or individual's account
used to purchase the annuity contract which is the impermissible annuity
distribution option. (i) In the case of distributions commencing
before the death of the employee, if there is a designated beneficiary
under the impermissible annuity distribution option for purposes of
section 401(a)(9), the annuity is a joint and survivor annuity for the
lives of the employee and the designated beneficiary which provides
level annual payments and which would have been a permissible annuity
distribution option. However, the amount of the periodic payment which
would have been payable to the survivor will be the applicable
percentage under the table in A-2(b) of Sec. 1.401(a)(9)-6 of the amount
of the periodic payment which would have been payable to the employee or
individual. If there is no designated beneficiary under the
impermissible distribution option for purposes of section 401(a)(9), the
annuity is a life annuity for the life of the employee with no survivor
benefit which provides level annual payments and which would have been a
permissible annuity distribution option. (ii) In the case of a distribution
commencing after the death of the employee, if there is a designated
beneficiary under the impermissible annuity distribution option for
purposes of section401(a)(9), the annuity option is a life annuity for
the life of the designated beneficiary which provides level annual
payments and which would have been permissible annuity distribution
option. If there is no designated beneficiary, the five-year rule in
section 401(a)(9)(B)(ii)applies. See paragraph (b)(3) of this A-4. The
amount of the payments under the annuity contract will be determined
using the interest rate and actuarial tables prescribed under section
7520 determined using the date determined under A-3 of 1.401(a)(9)-3
when distributions are required to commence and using the age of the
beneficiary as of the beneficiary’s birthday in the calendar year that
contains that date. The determination of whether or not there is a
designated beneficiary and the determination of which designated
beneficiary's life is to bemused in the case of multiple beneficiaries
will be made in accordance with Sec. 1.401(a)(9)-3 and A-7 of Sec.
1.401(a)(9)-5.(3) If the five-year rule in section 401(a)(9)(B)(ii)
applies to the distribution to the payee under the contract (or
distribution option), no amount is required to be distributed to satisfy
the applicable enumerated section in paragraph (a) of this A-4 until the
calendar year which contains the date five years after the date of the
employee’s death. For the calendar year which contains the date five
years after the employee's death, the required minimum distribution
amount required to be distributed to satisfy the applicable enumerated
section is the payee's entire remaining interest in the annuity contract
(or under the plan in the case of distributions from a defined benefit
plan). Q-5. If there is any remaining benefit with
respect to an employee(or IRA owner) after any calendar year in which
the entire remaining benefit is required to be distributed under
section, what is the amount of the required minimum distribution for
each calendar year subsequent to such calendar year?A-5. If there is any
remaining benefit with respect to an employee(or IRA owner) after the
calendar year in which the entire remaining benefit is required to be
distributed, the required minimum distribution for each calendar year
subsequent to such calendar year is the entire remaining benefit. Q-6. If a payee has an interest under an
eligible deferred compensation plan (as defined in section 457(b)), how
is the required minimum distribution for a given taxable year of the
payee determined for purposes of section 4974? A-6. If a payee has an interest under an
eligible deferred compensation plan (as defined in section 457(b)), the
required minimum distribution for a given taxable year of the
payee[[Page 3954]]determined for purposes of section 4974 is determined
under section457(d). Q-7. With respect to which calendar year is
the excise tax under section 4974 imposed in the case in which the
amount not distributed is an amount required to be distributed by April
1 of a calendar year (byte employee's or individual's required beginning
date)?A-7. In the case in which the amount not paid is an amount
required to be paid by April 1 of a calendar year, such amount is a
required minimum distribution for the previous calendar year, i.e., for
the employee’s or the individual's first distribution calendar year.
However, the excise tax under section 4974 is imposed for the calendar
year containing the last day by which the amount is required to be
distributed, i.e., the calendar year containing the employee's or
individual’s required beginning date, even though the preceding
calendar year is the calendar year for which the amount is required tube
distributed. Pursuant to A-2 of Sec. 1.401(a)(9)-5, amounts distributed
in the employee's or individual's first distribution calendar year will
reduce the amount required to be distributed in the next calendar year
by the employee's or individual's required beginning date. There is also
a required minimum distribution for the calendar year which contains the
employee's required beginning date. Such distribution is also required
to be made during the calendar year which contains the employee's
required beginning date. Q-8. Are there any circumstances when the
excise tax under section4974 for a taxable year may be waived? A-8. (a) Reasonable cause. The tax under
section 4974(a) may bewailed if the payee described in section 4974(a)
establishes to the satisfaction of the Commissioner the following-- (1) The shortfall described in section
4974(a) in the amount distributed in any taxable year was due to
reasonable error; and (2) Reasonable steps are being taken to
remedy the shortfall. (b) Automatic Waiver. The tax under section
4974 will be automatically waived, unless the Commissioner determines
otherwise, if-- (1) The payee described in section 4974(a)
is an individual who is the sole beneficiary and whose required minimum
distribution amount for a calendar year is determined under the life
expectancy rule described in Sec. 1.401(a)(9)-3 A-3 in the case of an
employee's death before the employee’s required beginning date; and (2) The employee's or individuals entire
benefit to which that beneficiary is entitled is distributed by the end
of the fifth calendar year following the calendar year that contains the
employee's date of death. Robert E. Wenzel, Deputy Commissioner of Internal Revenue.
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