Retirement savers and employers should be aware of the following SECURE 2.0 provisions that take effect in 2024:
Employer-sponsored Roth plans. With a Roth IRA, future distributions may be exempt from tax, unlike payouts from traditional IRAs. Employers can offer comparable benefits to participants in employer-sponsored Roth accounts, including Roth 401(k), Roth 403(b), and Roth 457 plans. These accounts must be funded with after-tax contributions. Usually, contributions are made through regular payroll deductions.
Roth IRA participants aren’t required to take lifetime RMDs. But up until now, participants in employer-sponsored Roth plans did have to take RMDs. Beginning in 2024, SECURE 2.0 puts participants in employer-sponsored Roth accounts on equal footing with Roth IRA owners by not requiring them to take lifetime RMDs.
Emergency withdrawals. Generally, a 10% tax penalty potentially applies to early withdrawals made before age 59½ from tax-deferred retirement accounts, such as traditional IRAs and company-sponsored qualified retirement plan accounts. However, there are several exceptions to the 10% penalty, such as withdrawals taken while disabled or to pay qualified higher education expenses. SECURE 2.0 creates a new exception for distributions made after 2023 that are used for emergencies that are “unforeseeable or immediate financial needs relating to personal or family emergency expenses.”
Beware: Only one distribution of up to $1,000 is allowed per year. Furthermore, the participant must repay the distribution within three years, and no subsequent distributions can be made during the three-year period unless repayment occurs.
Pension-linked emergency savings accounts (PLESAs). Separate from the penalty-free emergency withdrawals described above, SECURE 2.0 enables providers of 401(k) and other qualified plans to offer ESAs to participants with “unforeseeable or immediate financial needs relating to personal or family emergency expenses.” These accounts are funded with post-tax Roth contributions and can be automatically enrolled. Funds are invested in interest-bearing accounts with no minimum contribution or balance requirements.
The maximum annual contribution to a PLESA is $2,500 (indexed annually for inflation). Participants must be allowed to take at least one withdrawal per month. The first four withdrawals are exempt from administrative fees. Plans can be amended to allow PLESAs after 2023. (The IRS recently released guidance on PLESAs in Notice 2024-22 and the U.S. Department of Labor published answers to frequently asked questions about the accounts.)
New early withdrawal exception for domestic abuse victims. SECURE 2.0 adds an exception to the 10% tax penalty on early withdrawals from retirement accounts after 2023 made by participants self-certifying that they’ve been victimized by domestic abuse. The maximum withdrawal allowed is the lesser of:
- $10,000, indexed annually for inflation, or
- 50% of the account balance.
Participants can repay these amounts over three years and obtain refunds for tax paid on distributions.
IRA catch-up contributions. Participants in IRAs, including both traditional and Roth IRAs, who are 50 or older can make additional catch-up contributions to their accounts. Previously, the annual limit on catch-up contributions was set statutorily at $1,000. SECURE 2.0 authorizes indexing for inflation, beginning in 2024. The limit remains $1,000 in 2024, but under this provision, it may increase in future years.
Student loan payments. SECURE 2.0 provides an opportunity for qualified plan participants to repay their student loan debts. It authorizes employers to make matching contributions to qualified student loan payments after 2023, subject to nondiscrimination requirements. For these purposes, a qualified student loan payment is a debt incurred by the employee solely to pay qualified higher education expenses.
Section 529 rollovers. A Section 529 plan is a tax-favored account used to fund higher education expenses. Parents and grandparents can contribute to these accounts within generous limits and benefit several family members. But what happens with funds left in the account after graduation? Under SECURE 2.0, funds can be rolled over to a Roth IRA without any tax, subject to annual Roth IRA contribution limits, up to a lifetime cap of $35,000. To be eligible for this option, the account must have been open for more than 15 years.
Mandatory distributions. To ease administrative obligations of employers operating 401(k) plans, current tax law permits a company to transfer the vested 401(k) benefits of former employees if they have an account balance of more than $1,000 but no more than $5,000. SECURE 2.0 permits employers to make these mandatory distributions, starting in 2024, for former employees if the account balance is as high as $7,000 — an increase of $2,000.
Hardship 403(b) distributions. 403(b) plans are qualified plans operated by not-for-profit entitles that are similar to 401(k) plans. Under SECURE 2.0, for plan years beginning after 2023, 403(b) plans can accommodate hardship distributions under rules that essentially mirror those for 401(k)s. This includes provisions on qualified nonelective contributions, matching contributions and earnings on contributions.
SECURE 2.0 will have a wide-ranging impact in 2024. Individuals may take steps to maximize benefits, while employers could be required to make plan amendments.