Publication 560 |
2001 Tax Year |
Kinds of Plans
There are two basic kinds of qualified plans--defined contribution plans and defined benefit plans--and different rules apply to each.
You can have more than one qualified plan, but your contributions to all the plans must not total more than the overall limits discussed under
Contributions and Employer Deduction, later.
Defined Contribution Plan
A defined contribution plan provides an individual account for each participant in the plan. It provides benefits to a participant largely based on
the amount contributed to that participant's account. Benefits are also affected by any income, expenses, gains, losses, and forfeitures of other
accounts that may be allocated to an account. A defined contribution plan can be either a profit-sharing plan or a money purchase pension plan.
Profit-sharing plan.
A profit-sharing plan is a plan for sharing your business profits with your employees. However, you do not have to make contributions out of net
profits to have a profit-sharing plan.
The plan does not need to provide a definite formula for figuring the profits to be shared. But, if there is no formula, there must be systematic
and substantial contributions.
The plan must provide a definite formula for allocating the contribution among the participants and for distributing the accumulated funds to the
employees after they reach a certain age, after a fixed number of years, or upon certain other occurrences.
In general, you can be more flexible in making contributions to a profit-sharing plan than to a money purchase pension plan (discussed next) or a
defined benefit plan (discussed later). But the maximum deductible contribution may be less under a profit-sharing plan (see Limits on
Contributions and Benefits, later).
Forfeitures under a profit-sharing plan can be allocated to the accounts of remaining participants in a nondiscriminatory way or they can be used
to reduce your contributions.
Money purchase pension plan.
Contributions to a money purchase pension plan are fixed and are not based on your business profits. For example, if the plan requires that
contributions be 10% of the participants' compensation without regard to whether you have profits (or the self-employed person has earned income), the
plan is a money purchase pension plan. This applies even though the compensation of a self-employed individual as a participant is based on earned
income derived from business profits.
Defined Benefit Plan
A defined benefit plan is any plan that is not a defined contribution plan. Contributions to a defined benefit plan are based on what is needed to
provide definitely determinable benefits to plan participants. Actuarial assumptions and computations are required to figure these contributions.
Generally, you will need continuing professional help to have a defined benefit plan.
Forfeitures under a defined benefit plan cannot be used to increase the benefits any employee would otherwise receive under the plan. Forfeitures
must be used instead to reduce employer contributions.
Previous| First | Next
Publication Index | IRS-Forms Main | Home
|