Feds delay upcoming 401(k) fee deadline
Good news: Employers have been granted another compliance delay. This one involves 401(k) fee disclosures and comes courtesy of the Department of Labor (DOL).
Recently, the DOL announced it’ll give 401(k) plan sponsors a temporary reprieve from disclosing the detailed investment info they had been required to provide by Aug. 30, 2013.
As you know, last year was the first year in which employers were required to provided this info.
After the initial disclosures, firms were then supposed to provide this info “at least annually thereafter.”
But in response to concerns about the current deadline, the DOL is granting this one-time delay. The biggest concern was the timing of the August deadline.
Employees wouldn’t get their 401(k) fee-disclosure statements at the same time as their other end-of-the-year statements and benefits-enrollment materials, and chances are the disclosures wouldn’t have the impact the feds intended.
A chance to ‘reset’ distributions
Now, instead of delivering the second set of disclosures 12 months from the initial set, plan sponsors can furnish this info up to 18 months after they delivered the first disclosures and reset their distribution schedule.
So if a company provided its first set of disclosures on Aug. 25, 2012, it has until Feb. 25, 2014, to issue the next set. Following this, plan sponsors will have to furnish this info “at least annually.”
Free Training & Resources
White Papers
Provided by UJET
Further Reading
The demand for finance chiefs is growing. Yet more companies are replacing their CFOs. Even so, CFOs are a lot less worried about AI taking...
How many times has your Finance team seen the word “processing” on their laptop screens this week? Instant payments, both via T...
Brace yourself: About a third of accountants are making multiple errors every week. Fifty-nine percent are goofing up on a monthly basis, i...
Employer health insurance plan costs are set to spike for next year. All the experts are in agreement on that point. The only question is j...
A lot more contractors and businesses like yours that receive payments via CashApp, PayPal or Venmo have been bracing for getting a 2022 Fo...
Although Congress isn’t famous for cooperation, there was enough bipartisan support for the Secure 2.0 Act of 2022 (pages 817-946 of ...