Publication 3991 |
2001 Tax Year |
2002 Changes
Simplified Employee Pensions (SEPs)
Contribution limit increased. For plan years beginning after December
31, 2001, the annual limit on the amount of employer contributions to a SEP
increases to the lesser of the following amounts.
- 25% of an eligible employee's compensation.
- $40,000 (subject to cost-of-living adjustments after 2002).
Deduction limit. For years beginning after 2001, the following changes
apply to the SEP deduction limit.
Elective deferrals (SARSEPs). Elective deferrals under a SARSEP
are not subject to the deduction limit that applies to employer contributions.
Also, elective deferrals are not taken into account when figuring the amount you
can deduct for employer contributions that are not elective deferrals.
Definition of compensation. Compensation for figuring the
deduction for employer contributions includes elective deferrals under a SARSEP.
More information. For more information about SEPs, see
Publication 560,
Retirement Plans for Small Business.
403(b) Plans
Figuring catch-up contributions. When figuring allowable catch-up
contributions, combine all contributions made by your employer on your behalf to
the following plans.
- Qualified retirement plans.
- 403(b) plans.
- Simplified employee pensions (SEP).
- SIMPLE plans.
The total amount of the catch-up contributions to all plans maintained by your
employer cannot exceed the annual limit. For 2002, the limit is $1,000.
Rollovers to and from 403(b) plans. If a distribution includes both
pre-tax contributions and after-tax contributions, the portion of the
distribution that is rolled over is treated as consisting first of pre-tax
amounts (contributions and earnings that would be includible in income if no
rollover occurred). This means that if you roll over an amount that is at least
as much as the pre-tax portion of the distribution, you do not have to include
any of the distribution in income.
Years of service for church employees and ministers. If you are a
minister or church employee, treat all of your years of service as an employee of
a church or a convention or association of churches as years of service with one
employer. Prior law required church employees and ministers to figure years of
service separately for each employer.
As a minister or church employee, all contributions made to 403(b) plans on
your behalf, as an employee of a church or a convention or association of
churches, are considered made by one employer.
Foreign missionaries. If you are a foreign missionary, contributions to
your 403(b) account will not be treated as exceeding the limit on annual
additions if the contributions are not more than the greater of:
- $3,000, or
- Your includible compensation.
More information. For more information about 403(b) plans, see
Publication 571, Tax-
Sheltered Annuity Plans (403(b) Plans).
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