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IRS unveils Code Sec. 409A deferred compensation voluntary corrections program
Taxpayers will be pleased to find that the IRS has, as promised, unveiled a voluntary
corrections program under Code Sec. 409A for unintentional operational failures
of nonqualified deferred compensation plans. The definition of nonqualified deferred
compensation casts a wide net and includes such common payments as stock options,
delayed bonuses, severance plans, and tiered pay plans. The new IRS program comes
in three parts. There is no relief for intentional violations of Code Sec. 409A,
or for plan terms that fail to comply with Code Sec. 409A. The new program only
covers unintentional operational noncompliance with the new rules.
The initial program will address routine violations. The three parts of the voluntary
corrections program include:
- Correction of operational failures in the same year to avoid income tax
inclusion;
- Transitional relief limiting the amount includible in income for operational
failures occurring before 2010; and
- A proposed permanent corrections program for larger amounts.
Same-year corrections
Under the program, if an unintentional operational failure is corrected in the same
year that it occurred, the employee (or independent contractor) does not have to
include any amount in income. An employer must correct the violation and take commercially
reasonable steps to prevent recurring failure. An employer claiming relief for a
same-year correction must attach to a timely filed tax return for the year of the
failure a statement entitled "Sec. 409A Relief under Notice 2007-100."
Improper deferral
If a deferred amount is paid in the year it should have been deferred, or before
a selected payout event, the amount will be treated as timely deferred if the employee
repays the amount by the end of his or her tax year in which the payment was made.
A second type of operational error that can be corrected in the same year is an
improper deferral of an amount that should have been paid currently. The excess
amount is not treated as deferred compensation if it is paid to the employee by
the last day of the employee's year in which the amount was withheld.
Transition relief
An amount owed may be limited under the second program for an employee's taxable
year beginning before 2010. Moreover, there is no relief if the plan's service provider
is being audited for the year in which the failure occurred.
If your business makes any other payment to employees other than straight immediate
wage payments, you need to be concerned about Code Section 409A rules. Please do
not hesitate to call this office for further details.
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If and only to the extent that this publication contains contributions from tax
professionals who are subject to the rules of professional conduct set forth in
Circular 230, as promulgated by the United States Department of the Treasury, the
publisher, on behalf of those contributors, hereby states that any U.S. federal
tax advice that is contained in such contributions was not intended or written to
be used by any taxpayer for the purpose of avoiding penalties that may be imposed
on the taxpayer by the Internal Revenue Service, and it cannot be used by any taxpayer
for such purpose.
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