A cafeteria plan is a written plan that allows your employees to
choose between receiving cash or taxable benefits instead of certain
qualified benefits for which the law provides an exclusion from wages.
If an employee chooses to receive a qualified benefit under the plan,
the fact that the employee could have received cash or a taxable
benefit instead will not make the qualified benefit taxable.
Generally, a cafeteria plan does not include any plan that offers a
benefit that defers pay. However, a cafeteria plan can include a
qualified 401(k) plan as a benefit. Also, certain life insurance plans
maintained by educational institutions can be offered as a benefit
even though they defer pay.
A cafeteria plan cannot include the following benefits
discussed in chapter 2.
- Athletic facilities.
- De minimis (minimal) benefits.
- Educational assistance.
- Employee discounts.
- Lodging on your business premises.
- Meals.
- Moving expense reimbursements.
- No-additional-cost services.
- Transportation (commuting) benefits.
- Tuition reduction.
- Working condition benefits.
It also cannot include scholarships or fellowships (discussed
in Publication 520,
Scholarships and Fellowships).
Qualified benefits.
Qualified benefits include the following benefits discussed in
chapter 2.
- Accident and health benefits (but not medical savings
accounts or long-term care insurance).
- Adoption assistance.
- Dependent care assistance.
- Group-term life insurance coverage (including costs that
cannot be excluded from wages).
Employee.
For these plans, treat the following individuals as employees.
- A current common-law employee.
- A full-time life insurance agent who is a current statutory
employee.
- A leased employee who has provided services to you on a
substantially full-time basis for at least a year if the services are
performed under your primary direction or control.
Exception for S corporation shareholders.
Do not treat a 2% shareholder of an S corporation as an employee of
the corporation. A 2% shareholder is someone who directly or
indirectly owns (at any time during the year) more than 2% of the
corporation's stock or stock with more than 2% of the voting power.
Plans that favor highly compensated employees.
If your plan favors highly compensated employees as to eligibility
to participate, contributions, or benefits, you must include in their
wages the value of taxable benefits they could have selected. A plan
you maintain under a collective bargaining agreement does not favor
highly compensated employees.
A highly compensated employee for this purpose is any of the
following employees.
- An officer.
- A shareholder who owns more than 5% of the voting power or
value of all classes of the employer's stock.
- An employee who is highly compensated based on the facts and
circumstances.
- A spouse or dependent of a person described in (1), (2), or
(3).
Plans that favor key employees.
If your plan favors key employees, you must include in their wages
the value of taxable benefits they could have selected. A plan favors
key employees if more than 25% of the total of the nontaxable benefits
you provide for all employees under the plan go to key employees.
However, a plan you maintain under a collective bargaining agreement
does not favor key employees.
A key employee during 2001 is generally an employee who is either
of the following.
- An officer having, for any year listed below, annual pay of
more than the listed amount.
- 1997 -- $62,500
- 1998 -- $65,000
- 1999 -- $65,000
- 2000 -- $67,500
- 2001 -- $70,000
- An employee who, for 2001 or any of the 4 preceding years,
was any of the following.
- One of the 10 employees having annual pay of more than
$35,000 and owning the largest interests in your business.
- A 5% owner of your business.
- A 1% owner of your business whose annual pay was more than
$150,000.
Form 5500.
If you maintain a cafeteria plan, you must report information about
the plan each year by the last day of the 7th month after the plan
year ends. Use Form 5500 and Schedule F (Form 5500). See the form
instructions for information on extensions of time to file.
More information.
For more information about cafeteria plans, see section 125 of the
Internal Revenue Code and the related regulations.
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