Publication 560
taxmap/pubs/p560-019.htm#en_us_publink10009012Amounts paid to plan participants from a qualified plan are called
distributions. Distributions may be nonperiodic, such as lump-sum distributions,
or periodic, such as annuity payments. Also, certain loans may be treated as
distributions. See
Loans Treated as Distributions in Publication 575.
taxmap/pubs/p560-019.htm#en_us_publink10009013A qualified plan must provide that each participant will either:
- Receive his or her entire interest (benefits) in the plan
by the required beginning date (defined later), or
- Begin receiving regular periodic distributions by the required
beginning date in annual amounts calculated to distribute the participant's
entire interest (benefits) over his or her life expectancy or over the joint
life expectancy of the participant and the designated beneficiary (or over a
shorter period).
These distribution rules apply individually to each qualified
plan. You cannot satisfy the requirement for one plan by taking a distribution
from another. The plan must provide that these rules override any inconsistent
distribution options previously offered.
taxmap/pubs/p560-019.htm#en_us_publink10009014If the account balance of a qualified plan participant is to
be distributed (other than as an annuity), the plan administrator must figure
the minimum amount required to be distributed each distribution calendar year.
This minimum is figured by dividing the account balance by the applicable life
expectancy. For details on figuring the minimum distribution, see
Tax on Excess Accumulation
in Publication 575.
taxmap/pubs/p560-019.htm#en_us_publink10009016Generally, each participant must receive his or her entire benefits
in the plan or begin to receive periodic distributions of benefits from the plan
by the required beginning date.
A participant must begin to receive distributions from his or
her qualified retirement plan by April 1 of the first year after the later of
the following years.
- Calendar year in which he or she reaches age 701/2.
- Calendar year in which he or she retires from employment with
the employer maintaining the plan.
However, the plan may require the participant to begin receiving
distributions by April 1 of the year after the participant reaches age 70
1/
2 even if the participant has not retired.
If the participant is a 5% owner of the employer maintaining
the plan, the participant must begin receiving distributions by April 1 of the
first year after the calendar year in which the participant reached age 701/2. For more information, see
Tax on Excess Accumulation
in Publication 575.
taxmap/pubs/p560-019.htm#en_us_publink10009017The distribution required to be made by April 1 is treated as
a distribution for the starting year. (The starting year is the year in which
the participant meets (1) or (2) above, whichever applies.) After the starting
year, the participant must receive the required distribution for each year by
December 31 of that year. If no distribution is made in the starting year,
required distributions for 2 years must be made in the next year (one by April 1
and one by December 31).
taxmap/pubs/p560-019.htm#en_us_publink10009018See Publication 575 for the special rules covering distributions
made after the death of a participant.
taxmap/pubs/p560-019.htm#en_us_publink10009020Generally, distributions cannot be made until one of the following
occurs.
- The employee retires, dies, becomes disabled, or otherwise
severs employment.
- The plan ends and no other defined contribution plan is established
or continued.
- In the case of a 401(k) plan that is part of a profit-sharing
plan, the employee reaches age 591/2
or suffers financial hardship. For the rules on hardship distributions,
including the limits on them, see Regulations section 1.401(k)-1(d).
- The employee becomes eligible for a qualified reservist distribution
(defined below).
 | Certain distributions listed above may be subject to the
tax on early distributions discussed later. |
taxmap/pubs/p560-019.htm#en_us_publink1000120996A qualified reservist distribution is a distribution from an
IRA or an elective deferral account made after September 11, 2001, to a military
reservist or a member of the National Guard who has been called to active duty
for at least 180 days or for an indefinite period. All or part of a qualified
reservist distribution can be recontributed to an IRA. The additional 10% tax on
early distributions does not apply to a qualified reservist distribution.
taxmap/pubs/p560-019.htm#en_us_publink10009022Distributions from a qualified plan minus a prorated part of
any cost basis are subject to income tax in the year they are distributed. Since
most recipients have no cost basis, a distribution is generally fully taxable.
An exception is a distribution that is properly rolled over as discussed under
Rollover, below.
The tax treatment of distributions depends on whether they are
made periodically over several years or life (periodic distributions) or are
nonperiodic distributions. See
Taxation of Periodic Payments
and
Taxation of Nonperiodic Payments
in Publication 575 for a detailed description of how distributions are taxed,
including the 10-year tax option or capital gain treatment of a lump-sum
distribution.
Note.A recipient of a distribution from a designated Roth account
will have a cost basis since designated Roth contributions are made on an
after-tax basis. Also, a distribution from a designated Roth account is tax-free
if certain conditions are met. See
Qualified distributions under
Qualified Roth Contribution Program, earlier.
taxmap/pubs/p560-019.htm#en_us_publink10009024The recipient of an eligible rollover distribution from a qualified
plan can defer the tax on it by rolling it over into a traditional IRA or
another eligible retirement plan. However, it may be subject to withholding as
discussed under
Withholding requirement,
later. Beginning in 2010, a rollover can be made to a Roth IRA
from a qualified plan regardless of your income or filing status.
taxmap/pubs/p560-019.htm#en_us_publink10009025This is a distribution of all or any part of an employee's balance
in a qualified retirement plan that is not any of the following.
- A required minimum distribution. See
Required Distributions,
earlier.
- Any of a series of substantially equal payments made at least
once a year over any of the following periods.
- The employee's life or life expectancy.
- The joint lives or life expectancies of the employee and
beneficiary.
- A period of 10 years or longer.
- A hardship distribution.
- The portion of a distribution that represents the return of
an employee's nondeductible contributions to the plan. See
Employee Contributions,
earlier, and
Rollover of nontaxable amounts, below.
- Loans treated as distributions.
- Dividends on employer securities.
- The cost of any life insurance coverage provided under a qualified
retirement plan.
- Similar items designated by the IRS in published guidance.
See, for example, the Instructions for Forms 1099-R and 5498.
taxmap/pubs/p560-019.htm#en_us_publink10009026You may be able to roll over the nontaxable part of a distribution
to another qualified retirement plan or a section 403(b) plan, or to a
traditional IRA. The transfer must be made either through a direct
(trustee-to-trustee) rollover to a qualified retirement plan or a section 403(b)
plan that separately accounts for the taxable and nontaxable parts of the
rollover or through a rollover to an IRA.
Note.A distribution from a designated Roth account can be rolled
over to another designated Roth account or to a Roth IRA. If the rollover is to
a Roth IRA, it can be rolled over by any rollover method, but if the rollover is
to another designated Roth account, it must be rolled over directly
(trustee-to-trustee).
taxmap/pubs/p560-019.htm#en_us_publink10009029For more information about rollovers, see
Rollovers
in Pubs. 575 and 590.
taxmap/pubs/p560-019.htm#en_us_publink10009030If, during a year, a qualified plan pays to a participant one
or more eligible rollover distributions (defined earlier) that are reasonably
expected to total $200 or more, the payor must withhold 20% of each distribution
for federal income tax.
taxmap/pubs/p560-019.htm#en_us_publink10009031If, instead of having the distribution paid to him or her, the
participant chooses to have the plan pay it directly to an IRA or another
eligible retirement plan (a
direct rollover), no withholding is required.
If the distribution is not an eligible rollover distribution,
defined earlier, the 20% withholding requirement does not apply. Other
withholding rules apply to distributions such as long-term periodic
distributions and required distributions (periodic or nonperiodic). However, the
participant can still choose not to have tax withheld from these distributions.
If the participant does not make this choice, the following withholding rules
apply.
- For periodic distributions, withholding is based on their
treatment as wages.
- For nonperiodic distributions, 10% of the taxable part is
withheld.
taxmap/pubs/p560-019.htm#en_us_publink10009032If no income tax is withheld or not enough tax is withheld, the
recipient of a distribution may have to make estimated tax payments. For more
information, see
Withholding Tax and Estimated Tax
in Publication 575.
taxmap/pubs/p560-019.htm#en_us_publink1000135959If a distribution is an eligible rollover distribution, as discussed
earlier, you must provide a written notice to the recipient that explains the
following rules regarding such distributions.
- That the distribution may be directly transferred to an eligible
retirement plan and information about which distributions are eligible for this
direct transfer.
- That tax will be withheld from the distribution if it is not
directly transferred to an eligible retirement plan.
- That the distribution will not be subject to tax if transferred
to an eligible retirement plan within 60 days after the date the recipient
receives the distribution.
- Certain other rules that may be applicable.
Notice 2009-68, 2009-39 I.R.B. 423, available at
www.irs.gov/irb/2009-39_IRB/ar14.html, contains two updated safe harbor section 402(f) notices that
plan administrators may provide recipients of eligible rollover distributions.
If the plan allows in-plan Roth rollovers, the 402(f) notice must be amended to
reflect this. Notice 2010-84, 2010-51 I.R.B. 872, available at
www.irs.gov/irb/2010-51_IRB/ar11html
contains guidance on how to modify a 402(f) notice for in-plan Roth rollovers.
taxmap/pubs/p560-019.htm#en_us_publink1000135960The notice generally must be provided no less than 30 days and
no more than 90 days before the date of a distribution.
taxmap/pubs/p560-019.htm#en_us_publink1000135961The written notice must be provided individually to each distributee
of an eligible rollover distribution. Posting of the notice is not sufficient.
However, the written requirement may be satisfied through the use of electronic
media if certain additional conditions are met. See Regulations section
1.401(a)-21.
taxmap/pubs/p560-019.htm#en_us_publink1000201300Failure to give 402(f) notice will result in a tax of $100 for
each failure, with a total not exceeding $50,000 per calendar year. The tax will
not be imposed if it is shown that such failure is due to reasonable cause and
not to willful neglect.
taxmap/pubs/p560-019.htm#en_us_publink10009033If a distribution is made to an employee under the plan before
he or she reaches age 591/2, the employee may have to pay a 10% additional tax on the distribution.
This tax applies to the amount received that the employee must include in
income.
taxmap/pubs/p560-019.htm#en_us_publink10009034The 10% tax will not apply if distributions before age 59
1/
2 are made in any of the following circumstances.
- Made to a beneficiary (or to the estate of the employee) on
or after the death of the employee.
- Made due to the employee having a qualifying disability.
- Made as part of a series of substantially equal periodic payments
beginning after separation from service and made at least annually for the life
or life expectancy of the employee or the joint lives or life expectancies of
the employee and his or her designated beneficiary. (The payments under this
exception, except in the case of death or disability, must continue for at least
5 years or until the employee reaches age 591/2, whichever is the longer period.)
- Made to an employee after separation from service if the separation
occurred during or after the calendar year in which the employee reached age 55.
- Made to an alternate payee under a QDRO.
- Made to an employee for medical care up to the amount allowable
as a medical expense deduction (determined without regard to whether the
employee itemizes deductions).
- Timely made to reduce excess contributions under a 401(k)
plan.
- Timely made to reduce excess employee or matching employer
contributions (excess aggregate contributions).
- Timely made to reduce excess elective deferrals.
- Made because of an IRS levy on the plan.
- Made as a qualified reservist distribution.
- Made as a permissible withdrawal from an EACA.
taxmap/pubs/p560-019.htm#en_us_publink10009035To report the tax on early distributions, file Form 5329, Additional
Taxes on Qualified Plans (Including IRAs) and Other Tax-Favored Accounts. See
the form instructions for additional information about this tax.
taxmap/pubs/p560-019.htm#en_us_publink10009036If you are or have been a 5% owner of the business maintaining
the plan, amounts you receive at any age that are more than the benefits
provided for you under the plan formula are subject to an additional tax. This
tax also applies to amounts received by your successor. The tax is 10% of the
excess benefit includible in income.
To determine whether or not you are a 5% owner, see section 416.
taxmap/pubs/p560-019.htm#en_us_publink10009038Include on Form 1040, line 59, any tax you owe for an excess
benefit. On the dotted line next to the total, write "Sec. 72(m)(5)" and write
in the amount.
taxmap/pubs/p560-019.htm#en_us_publink10009039The amount subject to the additional tax is not eligible for
the optional methods of figuring income tax on a lump-sum distribution. The
optional methods are discussed under
Lump-Sum Distributions
in Publication 575.
taxmap/pubs/p560-019.htm#en_us_publink10009040A 20% or 50% excise tax is generally imposed on the cash and
fair market value of other property an employer receives directly or indirectly
from a qualified plan. If you owe this tax, report it on Schedule I of Form
5330. See the form instructions for more information.
taxmap/pubs/p560-019.htm#en_us_publink10009041An employer or the plan will have to pay an excise tax if both
the following occur.
- A defined benefit plan or money purchase pension plan is amended
to provide for a significant reduction in the rate of future benefit accrual.
- The plan administrator fails to notify the affected individuals
and the employee organizations representing them of the reduction in writing.
A plan amendment that eliminates or reduces any early retirement
benefit or retirement-type subsidy reduces the rate of future benefit accrual.
The notice must be written in a manner calculated to be understood
by the average plan participant and must provide enough information to allow
each individual to understand the effect of the plan amendment. It must be
provided within a reasonable time before the amendment takes effect.
The tax is $100 per participant or alternate payee for each day
the notice is late, the total tax cannot be more than $500,000 during the tax
year. It is imposed on the employer, or, in the case of a multi-employer plan,
on the plan.