Publication 560
taxmap/pubs/p560-009.htm#en_us_publink10008870taxmap/pubs/p560-009.htm#TXMP7d8f6947Useful items
You may want to see:
Publications 3998 Choosing A Retirement Solution for Your Small Business 4284 SIMPLE IRA Plan Checklist 4334 SIMPLE IRA Plans for Small Businesses Forms (and Instructions) W-2 :
Wage and Tax Statement 5304-SIMPLE :
Savings Incentive Match Plan for Employees of Small Employers
(SIMPLE)–Not for Use With a Designated Financial Institution 5305-SIMPLE :
Savings Incentive Match Plan for Employees of Small Employers
(SIMPLE)–for Use With a Designated Financial Institution 8880:
Credit for Qualified Retirement Savings Contributions 8881:
Credit for Small Employer Pension Plan Startup Costs A savings incentive match plan for employees (SIMPLE plan) is
a written arrangement that provides you and your employees with a simplified way
to make contributions to provide retirement income. Under a SIMPLE plan,
employees can choose to make salary reduction contributions to the plan rather
than receiving these amounts as part of their regular pay. In addition, you will
contribute matching or nonelective contributions.
SIMPLE plans can only be maintained on a calendar-year basis.
A SIMPLE plan can be set up in either of the following ways.
- Using SIMPLE IRAs (SIMPLE IRA plan).
- As part of a 401(k) plan (SIMPLE 401(k) plan).
 | Many financial institutions will help you set up a SIMPLE
plan. |
taxmap/pubs/p560-009.htm#en_us_publink10008872A SIMPLE IRA plan is a retirement plan that uses SIMPLE IRAs
for each eligible employee. Under a SIMPLE IRA plan, a SIMPLE IRA must be set up
for each eligible employee. For the definition of an eligible employee, see
Who Can Participate in a SIMPLE IRA Plan,
later.
taxmap/pubs/p560-009.htm#en_us_publink10008873You can set up a SIMPLE IRA plan if you meet both the following
requirements.
- You meet the employee limit.
- You do not maintain another qualified plan unless the other
plan is for collective bargaining employees.
taxmap/pubs/p560-009.htm#en_us_publink10008874You can set up a SIMPLE IRA plan only if you had 100 or fewer
employees who received $5,000 or more in compensation from you for the preceding
year. Under this rule, you must take into account all employees employed at any
time during the calendar year regardless of whether they are eligible to
participate. Employees include self-employed individuals who received earned
income and leased employees (defined in chapter 1).
Once you set up a SIMPLE IRA plan, you must continue to meet
the 100-employee limit each year you maintain the plan.
taxmap/pubs/p560-009.htm#en_us_publink10008875If you maintain the SIMPLE IRA plan for at least 1 year and you
cease to meet the 100-employee limit in a later year, you will be treated as
meeting it for the 2 calendar years immediately following the calendar year for
which you last met it.
A different rule applies if you do not meet the 100-employee
limit because of an acquisition, disposition, or similar transaction. Under this
rule, the SIMPLE IRA plan will be treated as meeting the 100-employee limit for
the year of the transaction and the 2 following years if both the following
conditions are satisfied.
- Coverage under the plan has not significantly changed during
the grace period.
- The SIMPLE IRA plan would have continued to qualify after
the transaction if you had remained a separate employer.
 | The grace period for acquisitions, dispositions, and similar
transactions also applies if, because of these types of transactions, you do not
meet the rules explained under Other qualified plan or Who Can Participate in a
SIMPLE IRA Plan, below. |
taxmap/pubs/p560-009.htm#en_us_publink10008877The SIMPLE IRA plan generally must be the only retirement plan
to which you make contributions, or to which benefits accrue, for service in any
year beginning with the year the SIMPLE IRA plan becomes effective.
taxmap/pubs/p560-009.htm#en_us_publink10008878If you maintain a qualified plan for collective bargaining employees,
you are permitted to maintain a SIMPLE IRA plan for other employees.
taxmap/pubs/p560-009.htm#en_us_publink10008879taxmap/pubs/p560-009.htm#en_us_publink10008880Any employee who received at least $5,000 in compensation during
any 2 years preceding the current calendar year and is reasonably expected to
receive at least $5,000 during the current calendar year is eligible to
participate. The term "employee" includes a self-employed individual who
received earned income.
You can use less restrictive eligibility requirements (but not
more restrictive ones) by eliminating or reducing the prior year compensation
requirements, the current year compensation requirements, or both. For example,
you can allow participation for employees who received at least $3,000 in
compensation during any preceding calendar year. However, you cannot impose any
other conditions for participating in a SIMPLE IRA plan.
taxmap/pubs/p560-009.htm#en_us_publink10008881The following employees do not need to be covered under a SIMPLE
IRA plan.
- Employees who are covered by a union agreement and whose retirement
benefits were bargained for in good faith by the employees' union and you.
- Nonresident alien employees who have received no U.S. source
wages, salaries, or other personal services compensation from you.
taxmap/pubs/p560-009.htm#en_us_publink10008882Compensation for employees is the total wages, tips, and other
compensation from the employer subject to federal income tax withholding and the
amounts paid for domestic service in a private home, local college club, or
local chapter of a college fraternity or sorority. Compensation also includes
the employee's salary reduction contributions made under this plan and, if
applicable, elective deferrals under a section 401(k) plan, a SARSEP, or a
section 403(b) annuity contract and compensation deferred under a section 457
plan required to be reported by the employer on Form W-2. If you are
self-employed, compensation is your net earnings from self-employment (line 4,
Section A, or line 6, Section B, of Schedule SE (Form 1040)) before subtracting
any contributions made to the SIMPLE IRA plan for yourself and without regard to
any deduction for self-employed health insurance.
taxmap/pubs/p560-009.htm#en_us_publink10008883You can use Form 5304-SIMPLE or Form 5305-SIMPLE to set up a
SIMPLE IRA plan. Each form is a model savings incentive match plan for employees
(SIMPLE) plan document. Which form you use depends on whether you select a
financial institution or your employees select the institution that will receive
the contributions.
Use Form 5304-SIMPLE if you allow each plan participant to select
the financial institution for receiving his or her SIMPLE IRA plan
contributions. Use Form 5305-SIMPLE if you require that all contributions under
the SIMPLE IRA plan be deposited initially at a designated financial
institution.
The SIMPLE IRA plan is adopted when you have completed all appropriate
boxes and blanks on the form and you (and the designated financial institution,
if any) have signed it. Keep the original form. Do not file it with the IRS.
taxmap/pubs/p560-009.htm#en_us_publink10008884If you set up a SIMPLE IRA plan using Form 5304-SIMPLE or Form
5305-SIMPLE, you can use the form to satisfy other requirements, including the
following.
- Meeting employer notification requirements for the SIMPLE
IRA plan. Page 3 of Form 5304-SIMPLE and Page 3 of Form 5305-SIMPLE contain a
Model Notification to Eligible Employees
that provides the necessary information to the employee.
- Maintaining the SIMPLE IRA plan records and proving you set
up a SIMPLE IRA plan for employees.
taxmap/pubs/p560-009.htm#en_us_publink10008885You can set up a SIMPLE IRA plan effective on any date from January
1 through October 1 of a year, provided you did not previously maintain a SIMPLE
IRA plan. This requirement does not apply if you are a new employer that comes
into existence after October 1 of the year the SIMPLE IRA plan is set up and you
set up a SIMPLE IRA plan as soon as administratively feasible after your
business comes into existence. If you previously maintained a SIMPLE IRA plan,
you can set up a SIMPLE IRA plan effective only on January 1 of a year. A SIMPLE
IRA plan cannot have an effective date that is before the date you actually
adopt the plan.
taxmap/pubs/p560-009.htm#en_us_publink10008886SIMPLE IRAs are the individual retirement accounts or annuities
into which the contributions are deposited. A SIMPLE IRA must be set up for each
eligible employee. Forms 5305-S, SIMPLE Individual Retirement Trust Account, and
5305-SA, SIMPLE Individual Retirement Custodial Account, are model trust and
custodial account documents the participant and the trustee (or custodian) can
use for this purpose.
A SIMPLE IRA cannot be a Roth IRA. Contributions to a SIMPLE
IRA will not affect the amount an individual can contribute to a Roth or
traditional IRA.
taxmap/pubs/p560-009.htm#en_us_publink10008887A SIMPLE IRA must be set up for an employee before the first
date by which a contribution is required to be deposited into the employee's
IRA. See
Time limits for contributing funds,
later, under
Contribution Limits. taxmap/pubs/p560-009.htm#en_us_publink10008888You may be able to claim a tax credit for part of the ordinary
and necessary costs of starting a SIMPLE IRA plan that first became effective in
2010. For more information, see
Credit for startup costs under
Reminders, earlier.
taxmap/pubs/p560-009.htm#en_us_publink10008889If you adopt a SIMPLE IRA plan, you must notify each employee
of the following information before the beginning of the election period.
- The employee's opportunity to make or change a salary reduction
choice under a SIMPLE IRA plan.
- Your decision to make either matching contributions or nonelective
contributions (discussed later).
- A summary description provided by the financial institution.
- Written notice that his or her balance can be transferred
without cost or penalty if they use a designated financial institution.
taxmap/pubs/p560-009.htm#en_us_publink10008890The election period is generally the 60-day period immediately
preceding January 1 of a calendar year (November 2 to December 31 of the
preceding calendar year). However, the dates of this period are modified if you
set up a SIMPLE IRA plan in mid-year (for example, on July 1) or if the 60-day
period falls before the first day an employee becomes eligible to participate in
the SIMPLE IRA plan.
A SIMPLE IRA plan can provide longer periods for permitting employees
to enter into salary reduction agreements or to modify prior agreements. For
example, a SIMPLE IRA plan can provide a 90-day election period instead of the
60-day period. Similarly, in addition to the 60-day period, a SIMPLE IRA plan
can provide quarterly election periods during the 30 days before each calendar
quarter, other than the first quarter of each year.
taxmap/pubs/p560-009.htm#en_us_publink10008891Contributions are made up of salary reduction contributions and
employer contributions. You, as the employer, must make either matching
contributions or nonelective contributions, defined later. No other
contributions can be made to the SIMPLE IRA plan. These contributions, which you
can deduct, must be made timely. See
Time limits for contributing funds,
later.
taxmap/pubs/p560-009.htm#en_us_publink10008892The amount the employee chooses to have you contribute to a SIMPLE
IRA on his or her behalf cannot be more than $11,500 for 2010 (same for 2011).
These contributions must be expressed as a percentage of the employee's
compensation unless you permit the employee to express them as a specific dollar
amount. You cannot place restrictions on the contribution amount (such as
limiting the contribution percentage), except to comply with the $11,500 (same
for 2011) limit.
If you or an employee participates in any other qualified plan
during the year and you or your employee have salary reduction contributions
(elective deferrals) under those plans, the salary reduction contributions under
a SIMPLE IRA plan also count toward the overall annual limit ($16,500 for 2010
and same for 2011) on exclusion of salary reduction contributions and other
elective deferrals.
taxmap/pubs/p560-009.htm#en_us_publink10008893A SIMPLE IRA plan can permit participants who are age 50 or over
at the end of the calendar year to also make catch-up contributions. The
catch-up contribution limit for 2010 and 2011 for SIMPLE IRA plans is $2,500.
Salary reduction contributions are not treated as catch-up contributions for
2010 until they exceed $11,500 (same for 2011). However, the catch-up
contribution a participant can make for a year cannot exceed the lesser of the
following amounts.
- The catch-up contribution limit.
- The excess of the participant's compensation over the salary
reduction contributions that are not catch-up contributions.
taxmap/pubs/p560-009.htm#en_us_publink10008894You are generally required to match each employee's salary reduction
contributions on a dollar-for-dollar basis up to 3% of the employee's
compensation. This requirement does not apply if you make nonelective
contributions as discussed later.
taxmap/pubs/p560-009.htm#en_us_publink10008895In 2010, your employee, John Rose, earned $25,000 and chose to
defer 5% of his salary. Your net earnings from self-employment are $40,000, and
you choose to contribute 10% of your earnings to your SIMPLE IRA. You make 3%
matching contributions. The total contribution you make for John is $2,000,
figured as follows.
Salary reduction contributions ($25,000 × .05)
| $1,250 |
Employer matching contribution ($25,000 × .03)
| 750 |
| Total contributions | $2,000 |
| | |
The total contribution you make for yourself is $5,200, figured
as follows.
Salary reduction contributions ($40,000 × .10)
| $4,000 |
Employer matching contribution ($40,000 × .03)
| 1,200 |
| Total contributions | $5,200 |
taxmap/pubs/p560-009.htm#en_us_publink10008896If you choose a matching contribution less than 3%, the percentage
must be at least 1%. You must notify the employees of the lower match within a
reasonable period of time before the 60-day election period (discussed earlier)
for the calendar year. You cannot choose a percentage less than 3% for more than
2 years during the 5-year period that ends with (and includes) the year for
which the choice is effective.
taxmap/pubs/p560-009.htm#en_us_publink10008897Instead of matching contributions, you can choose to make nonelective
contributions of 2% of compensation on behalf of each eligible employee who has
at least $5,000 (or some lower amount you select) of compensation from you for
the year. If you make this choice, you must make nonelective contributions
whether or not the employee chooses to make salary reduction contributions. Only
$245,000 of the employee's compensation can be taken into account to figure the
contribution limit in 2010 (same for 2011).
If you choose this 2% contribution formula, you must notify the
employees within a reasonable period of time before the 60-day election period
(discussed earlier) for the calendar year.
taxmap/pubs/p560-009.htm#en_us_publink10008898In 2010, your employee, Jane Wood, earned $36,000 and chose to
have you contribute 10% of her salary. Your net earnings from self-employment
are $50,000, and you choose to contribute 10% of your earnings to your SIMPLE
IRA. You make a 2% nonelective contribution. Both of you are under age 50. The
total contribution you make for Jane is $4,320, figured as follows.
Salary reduction contributions ($36,000 × .10)
| $3,600 |
2% nonelective contributions ($36,000 × .02)
| 720 |
| Total contributions | $4,320 |
| | |
The total contribution you make for yourself is $6,000, figured
as follows.
Salary reduction contributions ($50,000 × .10)
| $5,000 |
2% nonelective contributions ($50,000 × .02)
| 1,000 |
| Total contributions | $6,000 |
taxmap/pubs/p560-009.htm#en_us_publink10008899Using the same facts as in Example 1, above, the maximum contribution
you make for Jane or for yourself if you each earned $75,000 is $13,000, figured
as follows.
Salary reduction contributions (maximum amount allowed)
| $11,500 |
2% nonelective contributions ($75,000 × .02)
| 1,500 |
| Total contributions | $13,000 |
taxmap/pubs/p560-009.htm#en_us_publink10008900You must make the salary reduction contributions to the SIMPLE
IRA within 30 days after the end of the month in which the amounts would
otherwise have been payable to the employee in cash. You must make matching
contributions or nonelective contributions by the due date (including
extensions) for filing your federal income tax return for the year. Certain
plans subject to Department of Labor rules may have an earlier due date for
salary reduction contributions.
taxmap/pubs/p560-009.htm#en_us_publink10008901You can deduct SIMPLE IRA contributions in the tax year within
which the calendar year for which contributions were made ends. You can deduct
contributions for a particular tax year if they are made for that tax year and
are made by the due date (including extensions) of your federal income tax
return for that year.
taxmap/pubs/p560-009.htm#en_us_publink10008902Your tax year is the fiscal year ending June 30. Contributions
under a SIMPLE IRA plan for the calendar year 2010 (including contributions made
in 2010 before July 1, 2010) are deductible in the tax year ending June 30,
2011.
taxmap/pubs/p560-009.htm#en_us_publink10008903You are a sole proprietor whose tax year is the calendar year.
Contributions under a SIMPLE IRA plan for the calendar year 2010 (including
contributions made in 2011 by April 18, 2011) are deductible in the 2010 tax
year.
taxmap/pubs/p560-009.htm#en_us_publink10008904Deduct the contributions you make for your common-law employees
on your tax return. For example, sole proprietors deduct them on Schedule C
(Form 1040), Profit or Loss From Business, or Schedule F (Form 1040), Profit or
Loss From Farming; partnerships deduct them on Form 1065, U.S. Return of
Partnership Income; and corporations deduct them on Form 1120, U.S. Corporation
Income Tax Return, or Form 1120S, U.S. Income Tax Return for an S Corporation.
Sole proprietors and partners deduct contributions for themselves
on line 28 of Form 1040, U.S. Individual Income Tax Return. (If you are a
partner, contributions for yourself are shown on the Schedule K-1 (Form 1065),
Partner's Share of Income, Deductions, Credits, etc., you receive from the
partnership.)
taxmap/pubs/p560-009.htm#en_us_publink10008905You can deduct your contributions and your employees can exclude
these contributions from their gross income. SIMPLE IRA plan contributions are
not subject to federal income tax withholding. However, salary reduction
contributions are subject to social security, Medicare, and federal unemployment
(FUTA) taxes. Matching and nonelective contributions are not subject to these
taxes.
taxmap/pubs/p560-009.htm#en_us_publink10008906Do not include SIMPLE IRA plan contributions in the "Wages, tips,
other compensation box" of Form W-2. However, salary reduction contributions
must be included in the boxes for social security and Medicare wages. Also
include the proper code in box 12. For more information, see the Instructions
for Forms W-2 and W-3.
taxmap/pubs/p560-009.htm#en_us_publink10008907Distributions from a SIMPLE IRA are subject to IRA rules and
generally are includible in income for the year received. Tax-free rollovers can
be made from one SIMPLE IRA into another SIMPLE IRA. However, a rollover from a
SIMPLE IRA to a non-SIMPLE IRA can be made tax free only after a 2-year
participation in the SIMPLE IRA plan.
Generally, you or your employee must begin to receive distributions
from a SIMPLE-IRA by April 1 of the first year after the calendar year in which
you or your employee reaches age 701/2. However, under the Worker, Retiree, and Employer Recovery
Act of 2008, required minimum distributions (RMDs) for 2009 are waived for
SIMPLE IRAs. As a result, if you reach 701/2
in 2009 your first RMD, normally due by April 1, 2010, is waived. You are still
required to take your RMD for 2010 on or before December 31, 2010.
Early withdrawals generally are subject to a 10% additional tax.
However, the additional tax is increased to 25% if funds are withdrawn within 2
years of beginning participation.
taxmap/pubs/p560-009.htm#en_us_publink10008908See Publication 590 for information about IRA rules, including
those on the tax treatment of distributions, rollovers, required distributions,
and income tax withholding.
taxmap/pubs/p560-009.htm#en_us_publink10008909If you need more help to set up and maintain SIMPLE IRA plans,
see the following IRS notice.
taxmap/pubs/p560-009.htm#en_us_publink10008910This notice contains questions and answers about the implementation
and operation of SIMPLE IRA plans, including the election and notice
requirements for these plans. See Notice 98-4, 1998-1 C.B. 269.