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- can one become ineligible once eligible in 403(b)?
See "Once In, Always In - Q2" (about 36 minutes in, and be selected directly from indexing list) Once eligible to defer, the future actual hours worked are never taken into account again for deferrals, but can be excluded from employer contributions It also doesn't seem to trigger all less than 20 hour employees to become eligible
- Placing a hold on participants account
The legislative history for the bill that created QDROs states that the plan administrator can freeze the account for a reasonable amount of time once the PA receives notice of a forthcoming QDRO It's in H R Rep No 99-841 at pg 4945 (conference report from 1986) and the Joint Committee on Taxation's Explantion of Technical Corrections to
- Once eligible always eligible rule - 401(k) Plans - BenefitsLink . . .
Once eligible always eligible "rule" By Guest JMH1962 February 13, 2012 in 401(k) Plans Recommended Posts
- Annual Service Requirement for Mandatory Employee Contributions?
Does the “once in, always in” concept applicable to eligibility for elective deferrals also apply to eligibility for employer contributions, and if so, what is the legal authority requiring such treatment? By way of background, we have a client that is a school (the “School”) that sponsors a 403(b) plan (the “Plan”)
- Form 5500EZ, assets dip below $250,000 - BenefitsLink Message Boards
Makes me nervous to not file Do people skip a year if the plan's assets don't exceed $250,000? Or is it recommended you recommend to the client to keep filing? OR by chance, is an EZ plan required to keep filing once a form was filed (even if assets are less than $250,000 now)?
- Excluded Class Employee works 1000 hours - What next?
Once you determined they have the 1,000 hours in the 12 months what is the plan's entry dates? If it is the 1 1, 7 1 following the person doesn't enter the plan until 1 1 2023 and wouldn't get a 2022 contribution
- Changing from eligible to excluded class - 401(k) Plans - BenefitsLink . . .
Once you solve if these people are in an excluded class or not it solves all your questions It might add the problem the plan struggles to pass coverage but that is a future conversation To some degree I am not sure you aren't mixing up the coverage rules that say when a person is a factor in the test and rules plan provisions that say when a
- Full Time to Part Time - 401(k) Plans - BenefitsLink Message Boards
The first paragraph in WIFBR's follow-up is not dealing with allocation conditions; it is the fail-safe mechanism for ensuring that the service-based excluded class ends at the time prescribed by IRC 410(a), i e , an employee forever ceases to be able to be a part-time employee (for purposes of the excluded class) once one year of service (for
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