Business owners may not be able to set aside as much as they’d
like in tax-advantaged retirement plans. Typically, they’re older and more
highly compensated than their employees, but restrictions on contributions to
401(k) and profit-sharing plans can hamper retirement-planning efforts. One
solution may be a cash balance plan.
Defined benefit plan with a twist
The two most popular qualified retirement plans — 401(k) and
profit-sharing plans — are defined contribution
plans. These plans specify the amount that goes into an employee’s retirement
account today, typically a percentage of compensation or a specific dollar
amount.
In contrast, a cash balance plan is a defined benefit plan, which
specifies the amount a participant will receive in retirement. But unlike
traditional defined benefit plans, such as pensions, cash balance plans express
those benefits in the form of a 401(k)-style account balance, rather than a
formula tied to years of service and salary history.
The plan allocates annual “pay credits” and “interest credits”
to hypothetical employee accounts. This allows participants to earn benefits
more uniformly over their careers, and provides a clearer picture of benefits
than a traditional pension plan.
Greater savings for owners
A cash balance plan offers significant advantages for business
owners — particularly those who are behind on their retirement saving and whose
employees are younger and lower-paid. In 2017, the IRS limits employer
contributions and employee deferrals to defined contribution plans to $54,000
($60,000 for employees age 50 or older). And nondiscrimination rules, which
prevent a plan from unfairly favoring highly compensated employees (HCEs), can
reduce an owner’s contributions even further.
But cash balance plans aren’t bound by these limits. Instead, as
defined benefit plans, they’re subject to a cap on annual benefit payouts in
retirement (currently, $215,000), and the nondiscrimination rules require that
only benefits for
HCEs and non-HCEs be comparable.
Contributions may be as high as necessary to fund those
benefits. Therefore, a company may make sizable contributions on behalf of
owner/employees approaching retirement (often as much as three or four times
defined contribution limits), and relatively smaller contributions on behalf of
younger, lower-paid employees.
There are some potential risks. The most notable one is that,
unlike with profit-sharing plans, you can’t reduce or suspend contributions
during difficult years. So, before implementing a cash balance plan, it’s
critical to ensure that your company’s cash flow will be steady enough to meet
its funding obligations.
Right for you?
Although cash balance plans can be more expensive than defined
contribution plans, they’re a great way to turbocharge your retirement savings.
We can help you decide whether one might be right for you.
© 2017
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