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(b)lines Ask the Experts – Employer Contribution Availability for Hardship Withdrawals
“Can employer contributions to 403(b)(1) fixed/variable annuities be
withdrawn for financial hardship? I reviewed the 403(b) regulations in this
regard, but could not find a reference to hardship.”
Michael A. Webb, vice
president, Cammack Retirement Group, answers:
The
reason you could not locate a specific reference to hardship in the final
403(b) regulations governing distributions of employer contributions to
custodial accounts is that there is indeed no such reference! However, to
answer your question, the Experts believe that it is important to examine what
the regulation DOES state, as well as provide the historical context of the
regulation.
Up
until the issuance of final regulations, there were no clear distribution
restrictions on employer contributions to 401(b)(1) fixed/variable annuities at
all. The only statutory restrictions that applied to employer contributions
were with respect to 403(b)(7) custodial accounts. It was not clear that
employer contributions to a fixed/variable annuity could not be withdrawn for
any reason, though many people thought that the 401(a) plan restrictions
applicable to “money purchase” and “profit sharing” plans, as applicable,
applied to 403(b)(1) plans as well.
The
updated final 403(b) regulations, for
the first time, clarified this and placed distribution restrictions on amounts
invested in 403(b)(1) annuities as follows (boldface our emphasis), essentially confirming that limitations
similar to the 401(a) “profit sharing” plan limitations applied:
§1.403(b)-6 Timing of
distributions and benefits.
“(b) Distributions from contracts other than
custodial accounts or amounts attributable to section 403(b) elective
deferrals. Except as provided in paragraph (c) of this section relating to
distributions from custodial accounts, paragraph (d) of this section relating
to distributions attributable to section 403(b) elective deferrals,
§1.403(b)-4(f) (relating to correction of excess deferrals), or §1.403(b)-10(a)
(relating to plan termination), a section 403(b) contract is permitted to
distribute retirement benefits to the participant no earlier than upon the earlier of the participant’s severance from
employment or upon the prior occurrence of some event, such as after a fixed
number of years, the attainment of a stated age, or disability. See
§1.401-1(b)(1)(ii) for additional guidance. This paragraph (b) does not apply
to after-tax employee contributions or earnings thereon.”
So,
though hardship is not specifically referenced, the term “some event” is used,
which includes such non-hardship events, such as completion of a fixed number
of years in the plan or attainment of a stated age. The regulations reference
§1.401-1(b)(1)(ii) which also does not refer to hardship, but provide some
additional reasons for distribution, as follows:
§1.401-1(b)(1)(ii)
Qualified pension, profit-sharing, and stock bonus plans.
“(ii)
A profit-sharing plan is a plan established and maintained by an employer to
provide for the participation in his profits by his employees or their
beneficiaries. The plan must provide a definite predetermined formula for
allocating the contributions made to the plan among the participants and for
distributing the funds accumulated under
the plan after a fixed number of years, the attainment of a stated age, or upon
the prior occurrence of some event such as layoff, illness, disability,
retirement, death, or severance of employment. A formula for allocating the
contributions among the participants is definite if, for example, it provides
for an allocation in proportion to the basic compensation of each participant.
A plan (whether or not it contains a definite predetermined formula for
determining the profits to be shared with the employees) does not qualify under
section 401(a) if the contributions to the plan are made at such times or in
such amounts that the plan in operation discriminates in favor of officers,
shareholders, persons whose principal duties consist in supervising the work of
other employees, or highly compensated employees. For the rules with respect to
discrimination, see §§1.401-3 https://www.law.cornell.edu/cfr/text/26/1.401-3
and 1.401-4 https://www.law.cornell.edu/cfr/text/26/1.401-4.
A profit-sharing plan within the meaning
of section 401 is primarily a plan of deferred compensation, but the amounts
allocated to the account of a participant may be used to provide for him or his
family incidental life or accident or health insurance.”
Classifying
illness as an event that would permit a distribution lends additional support
to the notion that the “some event” could also include financial hardship,
though not explicitly stated in the regulations. If the regulation included the
occurrence of non-hardship events as reasons for distribution, it would not
seem reasonable that distributions could also be made for financial hardship,
since a financial hardship event would be more restrictive than some of the
events cited. As always, however, benefits counsel with specific expertise in
this area should be consulted before allowing 403(b)(1) fixed/variable annuity
employer contributions to be distributed for financial hardship.
Finally,
it should be noted that after-tax and rollover contributions, as cited in the
final 403(b) regulations above, are not subject to these distribution rules and
thus may be withdrawn at any time if the plan so permits. However, employee contributions as a
condition of employment or pursuant to a one-time irrevocable election of
whether to participate in the plan (more commonly referred to as employee
mandatory contributions) would be
subject to these distribution rules, since only elective deferrals and
custodial accounts are not subject to this regulation and instead are subject
to stricter in-service distribution rules.
NOTE:
This feature is to provide general information only, does not constitute
legal advice, and cannot be used or substituted for legal or tax advice.