36 tagged with "Retirement Plans"
Explore retirement plan options, contribution limits, and strategies for business owners
Section 457(b) and 457(f) Deferred Compensation Plans: Stacking Pre-Tax Savings on a 403(b) or 401(k)
A 2026 guide to Section 457(b) and 457(f) plans — how public-sector and nonprofit employees can defer up to $49,000 pre-tax by stacking a 457(b) on a 403(b), and how nonprofit executives use 457(f) without triggering the substantial-risk-of-forfeiture tax trap.
Section 7702B Long-Term Care Insurance: Deduct Premiums, Trade Old Policies, and Keep the Estate Intact
Section 7702B defines tax-qualified long-term care insurance — age-indexed premium deductions up to $6,200 per person in 2026, tax-free benefits under the per diem cap, Section 1035 exchanges from old life or annuity contracts, and hybrid life-LTC structures for aging owners and retirees.
SECURE 2.0 Section 101: Mandatory Auto-Enrollment for New 401(k) and 403(b) Plans (2026 Compliance Guide)
SECURE 2.0 Section 101 requires new 401(k) and 403(b) plans established after December 29, 2022 to auto-enroll employees at a 3-10% default deferral with 1% annual escalation. A 2026 compliance guide covering EACA notices, the four exemptions, QDIA selection, the 90-day permissible withdrawal, and the December 31, 2026 plan amendment deadline.
Qualified Charitable Distributions in 2026: A $111,000 Tax-Free Path From IRA to Charity
A complete 2026 guide to Qualified Charitable Distributions — the IRS-sanctioned strategy that lets retirees age 70½ and older route up to $111,000 from an IRA directly to a qualified charity without recognizing the distribution as taxable income.
Section 415(c) Annual Additions Limit for 2026: The $72,000 Cap Explained
Section 415(c) caps total 2026 annual additions to a defined contribution plan at $72,000 — covering employee deferrals, employer matches, and after-tax contributions. The math behind the mega backdoor Roth, the catch-up rules that sit outside the cap, and the EPCRS correction order if the limit is blown.
401(k) Safe Harbor Plan Design: How Small Employers Bypass ADP and ACP Nondiscrimination Testing and Avoid Top-Heavy Minimums
A practical guide for small employers comparing the three IRS safe harbor 401(k) formulas — basic match, enhanced match, and 3% nonelective — alongside QACA auto-enrollment rules, SECURE 2.0 startup and contribution tax credits, notice deadlines, and the vesting and bookkeeping details that decide whether ADP, ACP, and top-heavy testing actually go away.
Defined Benefit Plans: The Six-Figure Tax Shelter Most Solo Professionals Miss
Defined benefit and cash balance plans let high-earning solo professionals over 45 deduct $150,000 to $290,000 a year — three to four times what a SEP-IRA or Solo 401(k) allows. This guide walks through the contribution math, candidate profile, costs, deadlines, and how to stack a DB plan on top of a Solo 401(k).
ERISA Fiduciary Duties for 401(k) Plan Sponsors: Personal Liability and the 3(38) Investment Manager
ERISA Section 409 imposes personal liability on 401(k) plan fiduciaries, and the corporate veil does not shield small business owners. This guide explains the prudent-expert standard, the Tibble v. Edison duty to monitor, and how hiring a Section 3(38) investment manager shifts investment discretion — and most related liability — away from the plan sponsor.
Mandatory Roth Catch-Up Contributions in 2026: Why High Earners Over $150,000 Are Losing the Pre-Tax Choice
Beginning January 1, 2026, SECURE 2.0 forces employees with prior-year FICA wages above $150,000 to make 401(k) catch-up contributions on a Roth basis—$8,000 standard, $11,250 for ages 60–63—with no pre-tax option. Here is exactly who is affected, what it costs in real dollars, and the steps to take before the first paycheck of 2026.
401(k) Hardship Withdrawals and Plan Loans Under SECURE 2.0: When to Tap Retirement Funds Without Wrecking Your Future
A record 6% of 401(k) participants took a hardship withdrawal in 2025. This guide compares hardship withdrawals, plan loans, and SECURE 2.0 penalty-free distributions—with the actual tax math, deemed-distribution traps, and a decision framework for when to tap retirement funds.
ESOP Section 1042 Rollover: How C-Corp Owners Can Sell to Employees and Defer (or Eliminate) Capital Gains Tax
Section 1042 of the IRC lets a C-corporation owner selling shares to an ESOP defer federal capital gains tax indefinitely — and potentially eliminate it through step-up at death. This guide covers the five qualifying conditions, what counts as Qualified Replacement Property, the floating-rate-note diversification strategy, and the trade-offs founders should weigh against a strategic sale.
Nonqualified Deferred Compensation: Section 409A, Rabbi Trusts, and the 20% Penalty Executives Need to Avoid
Section 409A lets companies defer executive pay above 401(k) limits, but a single misstep triggers immediate taxation on every vested dollar plus a 20% federal penalty and premium interest. Here is how NQDC plans, rabbi trusts, and the six permissible distribution triggers actually work.