Required Minimum Distributions+, 58644-58653 [2024-14543]
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Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 139 / Friday, July 19, 2024 / Proposed Rules
meeting, another alternate to act in his
or her place: Provided, that such
alternate represents the same group
(grower or handler) as the member and
is not from the same sales constituency
as another acting member or acting
alternate member in that district. In the
event of the death, removal, resignation
or disqualification of a member, the
alternate shall act for the member until
a successor is appointed and has
qualified.
(b) Alternate members may be from
the same sales constituency as the
member for whom they serve as an
alternate. In the event a member and his
or her alternate are absent from a
meeting of the Board, another alternate
may act for the member following the
requirements of § 930.28(a), provided
this does not create a sales constituency
conflict with the other members of that
district.
(c) The Board, with the approval of
the Secretary, may establish rules and
regulations necessary and incidental to
the administration of this section.
■ 6. Amend § 930.52 by revising
paragraphs (a) and (d) to read as follows:
§ 930.52 Establishment of districts subject
to volume regulations.
(a) The districts in which handlers
shall be subject to any volume
regulations implemented in accordance
with this part shall be those districts in
which the average annual production of
cherries over the prior 5 years has
exceeded 6 million pounds. Handlers
shall become subject to volume
regulation implemented in accordance
with this part in the crop year that
follows any 5-year period in which the
6-million-pound average production
requirement is exceeded in that district.
*
*
*
*
*
(d) Any district producing a crop
which is less than 50 percent of the
average annual production in that
district in the previous 5 years would be
exempt from any volume regulation if,
in that year, a restricted percentage is
established.
*
*
*
*
*
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§ 930.62
[Amended]
7. Amend § 930.62 by removing in
introductory text of paragraph (a) the
text ‘‘§ 940.51’’ and adding in its place
the text ‘‘§ 930.51’’.
■
Erin Morris,
Associate Administrator, Agricultural
Marketing Service.
[FR Doc. 2024–15629 Filed 7–18–24; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 3410–02–P
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DEPARTMENT OF THE TREASURY
Internal Revenue Service
26 CFR Part 1
[REG–103529–23]
RIN 1545–BQ66
Required Minimum Distributions+
Internal Revenue Service (IRS),
Treasury.
ACTION: Notice of proposed rulemaking
and notice of public hearing.
AGENCY:
This document sets forth
proposed regulations that would
provide guidance relating to required
minimum distributions from qualified
plans; section 403(b) annuity contracts,
custodial accounts, and retirement
income accounts; individual retirement
accounts and annuities; and eligible
deferred compensation plans under
section 457. These proposed regulations
would affect administrators of, and
participants in, those plans; owners of
individual retirement accounts and
annuities; employees for whom amounts
are contributed to section 403(b)
annuity contracts, custodial accounts, or
retirement income accounts; and
beneficiaries of those plans, contracts,
accounts, and annuities. This document
also provides notice of a public hearing.
DATES: Written or electronic comments
must be received by September 17,
2024. A public hearing on this proposed
regulation has been scheduled for
September 25, 2024, at 10:00 a.m. ET.
Requests to speak and outlines of topics
to be discussed at the public hearing
must be received by September 17,
2024. If no outlines are received by
September 17, 2024, the public hearing
will be cancelled.
ADDRESSES: Commenters are strongly
encouraged to submit public comments
electronically via the Federal
eRulemaking Portal at
www.regulations.gov (indicate IRS and
REG–103529–23) by following the
online instructions for submitting
comments. Once submitted to the
Federal eRulemaking Portal, comments
cannot be edited or withdrawn. The
Department of the Treasury (Treasury
Department) and the IRS will publish
for public availability any comment
submitted electronically or on paper to
its public docket on
www.regulations.gov. Send paper
submissions to: CC:PA:01:PR (REG–
103529–23), Room 5203, Internal
Revenue Service, P.O. Box 7604, Ben
Franklin Station, Washington, DC
20044.
SUMMARY:
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FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Concerning the proposed regulations,
call Brandon M. Ford or Jessica S.
Weinberger at (202) 317–6700;
concerning submission of comments,
the hearing, and the access code to
attend the hearing by telephone, call
Vivian Hayes at (202) 317–6901 (not
toll-free numbers) or email
publichearings@irs.gov (preferred).
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Background
This document sets forth proposed
amendments to the Income Tax
Regulations (26 CFR part 1) under
section 401(a)(9) of the Internal Revenue
Code of 1986 (Code). Section 401(a)(9)
sets forth required minimum
distribution rules for plans qualified
under section 401(a). These rules are
incorporated by reference in section
408(a)(6) and (b)(3) for individual
retirement accounts and individual
retirement annuities (collectively, IRAs);
section 403(b)(10) for annuity contracts,
custodial accounts, and retirement
income accounts described in section
403(b) (section 403(b) plans); and
section 457(d)(2) for eligible deferred
compensation plans. The determination
of the required minimum distribution is
also relevant for purposes of the related
excise tax under section 4974 and the
definition of eligible rollover
distribution in section 402(c).
The Rules and Regulations section of
this issue of the Federal Register
includes final regulations that amend
the Income Tax Regulations and Excise
Tax Regulations (26 CFR parts 1 and 54)
relating to sections 401(a)(9), 402(c),
403(b), 408, 457, and 4974 (T.D. 10001).
The background section in the preamble
to those final regulations (2024 final
regulations) describes those provisions.
Explanation of Provisions
A. Overview
These proposed regulations would
address various provisions that were
reserved in the 2024 final regulations.
These proposed regulations address
sections 107, 202, 204, 302, 325, and
327 of the SECURE 2.0 Act of 2022
(SECURE 2.0 Act), enacted on December
29, 2022, as Division T of the
Consolidated Appropriations Act, 2023,
Public Law 117–328, 136 Stat. 4459
(2022), and certain other issues.
B. Determination of Applicable Age for
Employees Born in 1959
The 2024 final regulations include
rules for determining an employee’s
applicable age, as defined in section
401(a)(9)(C)(v), which is a component of
the determination of the employee’s
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required beginning date. Under those
rules, which reflect the amendment to
section 401(a)(9)(C) made by section 107
of the SECURE 2.0 Act, an employee’s
applicable age varies based on the
employee’s date of birth. However, as
noted in the preamble to the 2024 final
regulations, employees who were born
in 1959 are described in section
401(a)(9)(C)(v)(I) of the Code (which
provides that the applicable age for
those employees is age 73) as well as
section 401(a)(9)(C)(v)(II) (which
provides that the applicable age for
those employees is age 75).
The 2024 final regulations reserve
§ 1.401(a)(9)–2(b)(2)(v) for the
determination of the applicable age for
employees born in 1959, and these
proposed regulations would fill in the
reserved paragraph. Under the proposed
regulations, the applicable age for an
employee who was born in 1959 would
be age 73.
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C. Purchase of Annuity Contract With
Portion of Employee’s Individual
Account—Rules of Operation for
Aggregation Option
The 2024 final regulations include
guidance issued pursuant to section 204
of the SECURE 2.0 Act (relating to the
application of section 401(a)(9) of the
Code in a situation in which an
employee’s interest in a defined
contribution plan is partially annuitized
by using a portion of the employee’s
individual account to purchase an
annuity contract). Specifically,
§ 1.401(a)(9)–5(a)(5)(iv) provides that, in
lieu of satisfying section 401(a)(9)
separately with respect to an annuity
contract purchased with a portion of the
employee’s account and the remaining
account balance, a plan may permit an
employee to elect to satisfy section
401(a)(9) for the annuity contract and
that account balance in the aggregate by
adding the fair market value of the
contract to the remaining account
balance and treating payments under
the annuity contract as distributions
from the employee’s individual account.
However, the 2024 final regulations
reserve § 1.401(a)(9)–5(a)(5)(v) for rules
of operation with respect to this
aggregation option, and these proposed
regulations would fill in the reserved
paragraph.
Under proposed § 1.401(a)(9)–
5(a)(5)(v), the fair market value of the
annuity contract would be determined
as of December 31 of the calendar year
preceding the distribution calendar
year. In addition, beginning with the
determination used for the 2026
distribution calendar year, the
determination would have to be made
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using the applicable method set forth in
§ 1.408A–4, Q&A–14(b)(2).1
D. Distributions From Designated Roth
Accounts
Section 325 of the SECURE 2.0 Act
added a new paragraph (5) to section
402A(d) of the Code, which provides
that the provisions of section
401(a)(9)(A) (requiring that minimum
distributions be paid during an
employee’s lifetime) and the incidental
death benefit requirements of section
401(a) do not apply to any designated
Roth account. The 2024 final regulations
include limited guidance relating to the
application of that new paragraph.
Specifically, in the case of an
employee for whom only a portion of
the employee’s account under a defined
contribution plan is held in a designated
Roth account described in section
402A(b)(2), § 1.401(a)(9)–5(b)(3) of the
2024 final regulations provides that, for
distribution calendar years up to and
including the calendar year that
includes the employee’s date of death,
amounts held in that designated Roth
account are not taken into account for
purposes of determining the account
balance that is used to calculate the
required minimum distribution.
However, the 2024 final regulations
reserve § 1.401(a)(9)–5(g)(2)(iii) for rules
regarding how distributions from a
designated Roth account are treated for
purposes of section 401(a)(9), and these
proposed regulations fill in the reserved
paragraph.
Under proposed § 1.401(a)(9)–
5(g)(2)(iii), a distribution from a
designated Roth account made in a
calendar year for which the employee is
required to take a minimum distribution
under the plan would not count towards
satisfying that requirement. Consistent
with this rule, the proposed regulations
would provide that such a distribution
is not treated as a required minimum
distribution for purposes of § 1.402(c)–
2(f). Thus, the distribution could be
rolled over to a Roth IRA if it otherwise
meets the requirements to be an eligible
rollover distribution.
E. Corrective Distributions Giving Rise to
Reduction or Waiver of the Section 4974
Excise Tax
The 2024 final regulations include
guidance relating to the application of
section 4974(e) (as added to the Code by
section 302(b) of the SECURE 2.0 Act).
Specifically, § 54.4974–1(a)(2) provides
that, in the case of a taxpayer who
doesn’t receive the full required
1 Section 1.408A–4, Q&A–14(b)(2) sets forth rules
for determining the fair market value of a traditional
IRA that is an individual retirement annuity if that
IRA is converted to a Roth IRA.
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minimum distribution under any
qualified retirement plan (as defined in
section 4974(c) of the Code) or any
eligible deferred compensation plan (as
defined in section 457(b)) for a calendar
year, the excise tax under section 4974
is reduced from 25 percent of the
shortfall to 10 percent if, by the last day
of the correction window, the taxpayer:
(1) receives a corrective distribution
from the applicable plan in the amount
of the shortfall; and (2) submits a return
reflecting that reduced tax.
In addition, the 2024 final regulations
provide for an automatic waiver of the
section 4974 excise tax associated with
a failure by a beneficiary of an
individual to take a required minimum
distribution in the calendar year in
which the individual died if that
individual had not already satisfied the
minimum distribution requirement for
that year provided that the failure is
corrected within a specified period
(generally by the end of the following
calendar year). Specifically, § 54.4974–
1(g)(3)(iii) provides for an automatic
waiver of the excise tax under section
4974 if, by the tax filing deadline
(including extensions thereof) for the
taxable year of the beneficiary that
begins with or within the calendar year
of the individual’s death (or, if later, the
last day of the calendar year following
that calendar year), the beneficiary takes
a corrective distribution in the amount
needed to satisfy the minimum
distribution requirement for the
calendar year of the death of the
individual.
The 2024 final regulations reserve
§ 1.401(a)(9)–5(g)(2)(iv) for the treatment
of corrective distributions that give rise
to a reduction or waiver of the section
4974 excise tax, and these proposed
regulations would fill in that reserved
paragraph. Under proposed
§ 1.401(a)(9)–5(g)(2)(iv), a corrective
distribution described in section 4974(e)
or § 54.4974–1(g)(3)(iii) would not be
taken into account for purposes of
determining whether § 1.401(a)(9)–5 is
satisfied for the calendar year in which
the corrective distribution is made.
Thus, under the proposed regulations, if
a missed required minimum
distribution is corrected by a
distribution made in a subsequent
calendar year, the required minimum
distribution for that subsequent year
must be made in addition to the
corrective distribution. Furthermore,
under § 1.402(c)–2(f)(1) of the 2024 final
regulations, the corrective distribution
is treated as a required minimum
distribution and thus is not eligible for
rollover.
These proposed regulations would
make a conforming change to § 1.408–
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8(g)(2) under which these corrective
distributions would not be taken into
account for purposes of determining
whether § 1.408–8 of the 2024 final
regulations is satisfied for the calendar
year in which the corrective distribution
is made. In addition, because § 1.408–
8(b)(3) of the 2024 final regulations
provides that the determination of
whether a distribution from an IRA is a
required minimum distribution (and
thus not eligible for rollover pursuant to
section 408(d)(3)(E)) is made in the
same manner as provided in § 1.402(c)–
2(f) and (j), the treatment under
§ 1.402(c)–2(f)(1) of the corrective
distribution as a required minimum
distribution (and thus not eligible for
rollover) would also apply for purposes
of section 408(d)(3)(E).
F. Spousal Election Under Section 327
of the SECURE 2.0 Act
The 2024 final regulations permit a
defined contribution plan to provide
that, if an employee participating in the
plan dies before the required beginning
date, then an eligible designated
beneficiary of the employee (including
the employee’s surviving spouse) may
elect to receive the beneficiary’s interest
under the plan under the 10-year rule or
as annual payments over a period not
extending beyond the beneficiary’s life
expectancy.2 Section 401(a)(9)(B)(iv)(I)
through (III) of the Code, as amended by
section 327(a) of the SECURE 2.0 Act,
provides that, if the designated
beneficiary of an employee who dies
before the employee’s required
beginning date is the employee’s
surviving spouse, then the spouse may
elect to: (1) be treated as if the surviving
spouse were the employee for purposes
of the regulations referred to in section
401(a)(9)(B)(iii)(II) of the Code
(providing for annual payments over the
beneficiary’s life or life expectancy), (2)
delay commencement of required
minimum distributions until the year
the employee would have attained the
applicable age (as defined in section
401(a)(9)(C)(v)), and (3) be treated as the
employee in the event the surviving
spouse dies before distributions to the
spouse begin.3
Under the 2024 final regulations, if:
(1) the employee dies before the
employee’s required beginning date; (2)
the employee’s surviving spouse is the
sole beneficiary of the employee; and (3)
2 If
the employee is a participant in a defined
benefit plan, the election is between receiving the
beneficiary’s interest under a 5-year rule or as
annuity payments over the beneficiary’s lifetime.
3 Section 401(a)(9)(B)(iv)(II) and (III) correspond
to section 401(a)(9)(B)(iv)(I) and (II) before the
changes made by section 327(a) of the SECURE 2.0
Act.
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that spouse is subject to the life
expectancy rule, then the treatment
described in section 401(a)(9)(B)(iv)(II)
and (III) will apply automatically (that
is, a separate election is not required).
See § 1.401(a)(9)–3(d) and (e) of the
2024 final regulations.
Section 327(b) of the SECURE 2.0 Act
instructs the Secretary to modify the
regulations applicable to defined
contribution plans under section
401(a)(9) of the Code so that an election
under section 401(a)(9)(B)(iv) by the
surviving spouse will extend the
distribution period in the case of an
employee’s death after the required
beginning date. In accordance with this
instruction, § 1.401(a)(9)–5(g)(3)(i) of the
2024 final regulations provides that a
defined contribution plan may permit a
surviving spouse who is the sole
beneficiary of the employee to elect to
be treated as the employee for purposes
of determining the required minimum
distribution for a calendar year. The
2024 final regulations reserve
§ 1.401(a)(9)–5(g)(3)(ii) for rules relating
to this election, and these proposed
regulations would fill in that reserved
paragraph.
Proposed § 1.401(a)(9)–5(g)(3)(ii)
provides a series of rules that would
apply with respect to the spousal
election described in § 1.401(a)(9)–
5(g)(3)(i) of the 2024 final regulations.
Under the proposed regulations, if the
employee dies before the required
beginning date and the sole beneficiary
of the employee is the surviving spouse
who is subject to the life expectancy
rule, then the spouse would
automatically be treated as making the
election described in section
401(a)(9)(B)(iv). As a result, the
proposed regulations provide that
section 401(a)(9)(B)(iv)(I) (under which
the spouse is treated as the employee for
purposes of section 401(a)(9)(B)(iii)(II))
would apply automatically in this case
(in addition to the automatic application
of sections 401(a)(9)(B)(iv)(II) and (III)).
If the employee dies on or after the
required beginning date, then the
corresponding election under section
327(b) of the SECURE 2.0 Act does not
apply automatically. However, these
proposed regulations would provide
that this corresponding election may be
the default election under the terms of
a plan (so that the surviving spouse
need not take any action to have this
election apply).
If the election under § 1.401(a)(9)–
5(g)(3)(i) is in effect for a surviving
spouse, then, regardless of whether the
employee died before, on, or after the
required beginning date, the proposed
regulations provide that the applicable
denominator used for determining the
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required minimum distribution for each
distribution calendar year up to and
including the calendar year that
includes the surviving spouse’s date of
death would be determined using the
Uniform Lifetime Table (rather than the
Single Life Table) for the surviving
spouse’s age as of the surviving spouse’s
birthday in the distribution calendar
year.4 In accordance with § 1.401(a)(9)–
5(d)(1)(i) of the 2024 final regulations,
the required minimum distribution for
the calendar year of the surviving
spouse’s death must be made to a
beneficiary of the surviving spouse to
the extent it has not already been
distributed to the surviving spouse.
These proposed regulations provide
that, if the election described in
§ 1.401(a)(9)–5(g)(3)(i) is in effect for the
surviving spouse and the spouse dies on
or after the date on which distributions
are considered to have begun to the
spouse under the rules of § 1.401(a)(9)–
3(e)(3) of the 2024 final regulations (that
is, the end of the calendar year in which
the employee would have reached the
applicable age), then annual
distributions to the spouse’s beneficiary
would have to continue. Those
distributions would be determined
using the spouse’s remaining life
expectancy for the spouse’s age as of the
spouse’s birthday in the calendar year of
the spouse’s death from the Single Life
Table, reduced by one for each
subsequent calendar year. In addition,
the proposed regulations add a
conforming sentence to § 1.401(a)(9)–
4(e)(8), providing that the spouse’s
beneficiary would not be an eligible
designated beneficiary in this situation.
As a result, a final distribution of the
employee’s interest would have to be
made by the end of the calendar year
that includes the tenth anniversary of
the spouse’s death.
Under the proposed regulations, the
spousal election described in
§ 1.401(a)(9)–5(g)(3)(i) would be
available only if the first year for which
annual required minimum distributions
to the surviving spouse must be made is
2024 or later. For example, if an
employee who died in 2017 and before
the employee’s required beginning date
would have reached the applicable age
in 2024 or later, then the first year for
which an annual required minimum
distribution is due would be 2024 or
4 However, if the employee dies on or after the
employee’s required beginning date and the
employee’s remaining life expectancy is greater
than the applicable denominator determined under
the Uniform Lifetime Table for the surviving
spouse’s age (which would occur only if the
surviving spouse was more than ten years older
than the employee), then that greater life
expectancy is used as the applicable denominator.
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later, and the spousal election could
apply. However, if the employee would
have reached the applicable age in 2022,
then the first year for which an annual
required minimum distribution is due to
the spouse was 2022, and the spousal
election would not be available.
Similarly, if the employee died in 2021
and after the employee’s required
beginning date, then the spouse must
begin receiving annual required
minimum distributions (based on the
spouse’s remaining life expectancy) in
2022, and the spousal election would
not be available.
Although an election under section
401(a)(9)(B)(iv) of the Code results in
the spouse being treated as the
employee for purposes of the
regulations referred to in section
401(a)(9)(B)(iii)(II) (that is, § 1.401(a)(9)–
5), that treatment does not extend to
other purposes.5 For example, the
spouse would not be subject to the 10
percent additional tax under section
72(t)(2)(A)(ii) even if the spouse takes a
distribution before attaining age 591⁄2.
Similarly, the date by which the
surviving spouse must commence
distributions is determined by reference
to the employee’s attainment of the
applicable age (rather than by reference
to the spouse’s attainment of the
applicable age 6). In addition, for
purposes of determining the account
balance under a plan while the
surviving spouse is taking distributions,
§ 1.401(a)(9)–5(b)(3) of the 2024 final
regulations (which excludes amounts
held in a designated Roth account from
the employee’s account balance during
the employee’s lifetime) does not apply.
Thus, all amounts held in a designated
Roth account and any other account
under the plan are included for
purposes of determining the required
minimum distribution due under the
plan for the calendar year.
These proposed regulations also
provide an updated Uniform Lifetime
Table that provides the applicable
denominator for individuals ages 10
5 However, if the spouse dies before distributions
have begun, then in accordance with section
401(a)(9)(B)(iv)(III), the spouse is treated as the
employee for purposes of determining the
beneficiary designated under the plan. In addition,
if the spouse executes a spousal rollover to the
spouse’s own IRA in accordance with section
402(c)(9) after having made the election described
in section 401(a)(9)(B)(iv), then the spouse will not
be treated as a beneficiary with respect to any
amounts in that IRA.
6 The election under section 401(a)(9)(B)(iv) does
not affect the ability of the employee’s surviving
spouse to make a rollover to the spouse’s own IRA
or to treat an IRA as the surviving spouse’s own
IRA. In either of these cases, the date by which
distributions from that IRA must commence would
be determined by reference to the surviving
spouse’s attainment of the applicable age.
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through 120+. This table was originally
published in Notice 2022–6, 2022–5 IRB
460, relating to the determination of
whether a series of payments is
considered a series of substantially
equal periodic payments.
Section 1.402(c)–2(j)(4) of the 2024
final regulations sets forth a special rule
under which a portion of a distribution
to certain surviving spouses (that is, the
portion of the distribution that
represents a catch-up of missed
hypothetical required minimum
distributions) is treated as a required
minimum distribution that is not
eligible for rollover. Section 1.402(c)–
2(j)(4)(iii), which provides rules for the
calculation of the hypothetical required
minimum distributions, includes the
assumption that the election in
§ 1.401(a)(9)–5(g)(3)(i) was in effect for
the spouse. The 2024 final regulations
reserve § 1.402(c)–2(j)(4)(vii) for an
example of the calculation of the
hypothetical required minimum
distributions, and proposed § 1.402(c)–
2(j)(4)(vii) would fill in the reserved
paragraph with an example of the
calculation of the hypothetical required
minimum distributions over multiple
years, which reflects the use of the
Uniform Lifetime Table.
The proposed regulations do not
include any changes to the defined
benefit rules of § 1.401(a)(9)–6 to reflect
the amendment to section
401(a)(9)(B)(iv) made by section 327 of
the SECURE 2.0 Act. Comments are
requested on whether there are
circumstances under which that
provision would affect the required
minimum distribution rules applicable
to defined benefit plans.
G. Divorce After Purchase of Qualifying
Longevity Annuity Contract
Section 202(a)(3) of the SECURE 2.0
Act instructs the Secretary of the
Treasury (or that person’s delegate) to
amend § 1.401(a)(9)–6 to provide that, in
the case of a qualifying longevity
annuity contract (QLAC) which was
purchased with joint and survivor
annuity benefits for an individual and
the individual’s spouse, a divorce
occurring after the original purchase
and before the date that the annuity
payments commence under the contract
will not affect the permissibility of the
joint and survivor benefits if certain
conditions related to an associated
qualified domestic relations order
(QDRO) described in section 414(p) of
the Code are met. Section 202(a)(3) of
the SECURE 2.0 Act also provides that
if the arrangement is not subject to
section 414(p) of the Code or section
206(d) of the Employee Retirement
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Income Security Act of 1974,7 a divorce
or separation instrument may be
substituted for a QDRO. The 2024 final
regulations reserve § 1.401(a)(9)–
6(q)(3)(vii)(B) for rules related to this
divorce or separation instrument
alternative, and these proposed
regulations would fill in the reserved
paragraph.
Under proposed § 1.401(a)(9)–
6(q)(3)(vii)(B), the divorce or separation
instrument alternative would be
available only if the plan is not subject
to both section 414(p) of the Code and
section 206(d) of ERISA (for example, a
governmental plan described in section
414(d) of the Code). In accordance with
section 202(b) of the SECURE 2.0 Act,
these proposed regulations would
provide that, for purposes of this
alternative, a divorce or separation
instrument is: (1) a decree of divorce or
separate maintenance or a written
instrument incident to such a decree; (2)
a written separation agreement; or (3)
any other decree requiring an individual
to make payments for the support or
maintenance of the individual’s former
spouse.
H. Outright Distribution to Trust
Beneficiary
The 2024 final regulations provide
rules for the separate application of
section 401(a)(9) of the Code with
respect to multiple beneficiaries of a
see-through trust (within the meaning of
§ 1.401(a)(9)–4(f)(1)). Specifically,
§ 1.401(a)(9)–8(a) of the 2024 final
regulations permits separate application
of section 401(a)(9) with respect to each
of the beneficiaries’ separate interests if
the terms of a see-through trust meet
certain requirements. One of those
requirements is that the trust must
provide that it is to be divided
immediately upon the death of the
employee, with the separate interests to
be held in separate see-through trusts.
Proposed § 1.401(a)(9)–8(a)(1)(iii)(B)
sets forth an exception to that
requirement in the case of an outright
distribution to a trust beneficiary, as
described in proposed § 1.401(a)(9)–
8(a)(1)(iii)(D). Under the proposed
regulations, the rules under
§ 1.401(a)(9)–8(a)(1)(iii)(C) of the 2024
final regulations (prohibiting discretion
in the allocation of post-death
distributions attributable to the
employee’s interest in the plan) would
be extended to apply when that outright
distribution exception is used.
Under proposed § 1.401(a)(9)–
8(a)(1)(iii)(D), the separate interests of
7 The Employee Retirement Income Security Act
of 1974, Public Law 93–406, 88 Stat. 829, as
amended, is referred to in this preamble as
‘‘ERISA.’’
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the beneficiaries held in a see-through
trust would not fail to be eligible for the
exception in proposed § 1.401(a)(9)–
8(a)(1)(iii)(B) merely because, upon
termination of that trust, a beneficiary’s
separate interest in the trust is to be
held directly by that beneficiary rather
than being held by a separate seethrough trust. Thus, for example, if a
trust which is a named beneficiary
provides that each of three children
have equal interests in the portion of the
trust attributable to the employee’s
interest in the plan, and the trust
provides that it is to be immediately
divided upon the death of the employee,
then section 401(a)(9) is permitted to be
applied separately with respect to the
separate interests of the three children,
even if the separate interest of one of the
children is held by a sub-trust while the
separate interests of the other children
are held directly by those children.
Applicability Dates
The amendments to §§ 1.401(a)(9)–4,
1.401(a)(9)–5, 1.401(a)(9)–6, 1.401(a)(9)–
8, 1.401(a)(9)–9, and 1.408–8 are
proposed to apply for purposes of
determining required minimum
distributions for calendar years
beginning on or after January 1, 2025.
The amendments to § 1.402(c)–2 are
proposed to apply for distributions on
or after January 1, 2025. Thus, these
amendments would have the same
applicability dates as the corresponding
provisions in the 2024 final regulations.
Special Analyses
I. Regulatory Planning and Review
Pursuant to the Memorandum of
Agreement, Review of Treasury
Regulations under Executive Order
12866 (June 9, 2023), tax regulatory
actions issued by the IRS are not subject
to the requirements of section 6 of
Executive Order 12866, as amended.
Therefore, a regulatory impact
assessment is not required.
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II. Paperwork Reduction Act
The Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995
(44 U.S.C. 3501–3520) generally
requires that a Federal agency obtain the
approval of the Office of Management
and Budget (OMB) before collecting
information from the public, whether
such collection of information is
mandatory, voluntary, or required to
obtain or retain a benefit. An agency
may not conduct or sponsor, and a
person is not required to respond to, a
collection of information unless the
collection of information displays a
valid control number.
These proposed regulations include
third-party disclosures and
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recordkeeping requirements, in sections
1.401(a)(9)–5(a)(5)(iv) and 1.401(a)(9)–
5(g)(3)(ii), that are required to determine
the required minimum distribution for a
calendar year for certain defined
contribution plan participants and
beneficiaries. These collections of
information would generally be used by
the IRS for tax compliance purposes and
plan administrators to facilitate
compliance with the required minimum
distribution requirements under section
401(a)(9) of the Code. The likely
respondents to these collections are
employees participating in retirement
plans and their beneficiaries.
The 2024 final regulations include
guidance relating to the application of
section 401(a)(9) in a situation in which
an employee’s interest in a defined
contribution plan is partially annuitized
by using a portion of the employee’s
account to purchase an annuity
contract. Specifically, section
1.401(a)(9)–5(a)(5)(iv) of the final
regulations provides that, in lieu of
satisfying section 401(a)(9) separately
with respect to an annuity contract
purchased with a portion of an
employee’s defined contribution plan
account and the remaining account
balance, a plan may permit an employee
to elect to satisfy section 401(a)(9) for
the annuity contract and the remaining
account balance in the aggregate by
adding the fair market value of the
contract to the remaining account
balance and treating payments under
the annuity contract as distributions
from the individual account. Section
1.401(a)(9)–5(a)(5)(v) of the proposed
regulations provides rules of operation
with respect to this aggregation option—
specifically, the method and date for
valuation of the annuity contract. Under
these rules of operation, annuity
contract issuers are expected to provide
the annuity valuations as a third-party
disclosure. In addition, the amount of
payments made under the annuity
contract and the underlying value of the
annuity contract is expected to be
reported to the employer as a third-party
disclosure. The associated burden is as
follows:
Estimated number of respondents:
19,620.
Estimated average annual burden per
respondent: 0.5 hours (30 minutes).
Estimated frequency of responses:
Once.
Estimated total annual reporting
burden: 9,810 hours.
Section 1.401(a)(9)–5(g)(3)(i) of the
2024 final regulations 8 provides that a
plan may permit a surviving spouse
who is the sole beneficiary of an
employee to elect to be treated as the
employee for purposes of determining
the required minimum distribution from
a defined contribution plan for a
calendar year. Section 1.401(a)(9)–
5(g)(3)(ii) of these proposed regulations
supplements that provision by
providing a series of rules that would
apply with respect to the spousal
election described in the preceding
sentence. Under these proposed
regulations, if the employee dies before
the employee’s required beginning date
and the sole beneficiary of the employee
is the surviving spouse who is subject
to the life expectancy rule, then the
spouse would automatically be treated
as making the election. If the employee
dies on or after the required beginning
date, then the election would not apply
automatically. However, the proposed
regulations provide that the election
may be the default under the terms of
a plan (so that the surviving spouse
need not take any action to have the
election apply). This election is
expected to be made as a third-party
disclosure between the surviving spouse
and the plan administrator, who will
keep records of the election. The
associated burden is as follows:
Estimated number of respondents:
156,960.
Estimated average annual burden per
respondent: 0.17 hours (10 minutes).
Estimated frequency of responses:
Once.
Estimated total annual reporting
burden: 26,683 hours.
The collections of information
contained in this notice of proposed
rulemaking have been submitted to the
Office of Management and Budget for
review in accordance with the
Paperwork Reduction Act. Commenters
are strongly encouraged to submit
public comments electronically. Written
comments and recommendations for the
proposed information collection should
be sent to www.reginfo.gov/public/do/
PRAMain, with copies to the Internal
Revenue Service. Find this particular
information collection by selecting
‘‘Currently under Review—Open for
Public Comments’’ and using the search
function. Submit electronic submissions
for the proposed information collection
to the IRS via email at pra.comments@
irs.gov (indicate REG–103529–23 on the
Subject line). Comments on the
collection of information should be
received by September 17, 2024.
Comments are specifically requested
8 These proposed regulations are being published
simultaneously with the 2024 final regulations, and
address various provisions that were reserved in
those regulations. The collection requirements in
the 2024 final regulations are approved under OMB
control number 1545–1573.
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concerning: whether the proposed
collection of information is necessary
for the proper performance of the
functions of the IRS, including whether
the information will have practical
utility; the accuracy of the estimated
burden associated with the proposed
collection of information; how the
quality, utility, and clarity of the
information to be collected may be
enhanced; how the burden of complying
with the proposed collection of
information may be minimized,
including through the application of
automated collection techniques or
other forms of information technology;
and estimates of capital or start-up costs
and costs of operation, maintenance,
and purchase of services to provide
information.
IV. Unfunded Mandates Reform Act
III. Regulatory Flexibility Act
Executive Order 13132 (Federalism)
prohibits an agency from publishing any
rule that has federalism implications if
the rule either imposes substantial,
direct compliance costs on State and
local governments, and is not required
by statute, or preempts State law, unless
the agency meets the consultation and
funding requirements of section 6 of the
Executive order. The proposed
regulations do not propose rules that
would have federalism implications,
impose substantial direct compliance
costs on State and local governments, or
preempt State law within the meaning
of the Executive order.
Pursuant to the Regulatory Flexibility
Act (5 U.S.C. chapter 6), it is hereby
certified that these proposed regulations
will not have a significant economic
impact on a substantial number of small
entities. These proposed regulations
would affect individuals and
businesses, some of which may be small
entities. The rule affects administrators
of, and participants in, certain plans;
owners of individual retirement
accounts and annuities; employees for
whom amounts are contributed to
section 403(b) annuity contracts,
custodial accounts, or retirement
income accounts; and beneficiaries of
those plans, contracts, accounts, and
annuities. These proposed regulations
do not impose new compliance burdens
and are not expected to result in
economically meaningful changes in
behavior relative to the existing
regulations. It is expected that most
plans will provide the spousal election
under § 1.401(a)(9)–5(g)(3) as a default
election under the plan and that
surviving spouses will rarely opt out of
the default (because of the tax benefit of
the default election). Therefore, the
economic impact of the rule is not
expected to be significant.
Notwithstanding this certification that
the proposed regulations would not
have a significant economic impact on
a substantial number of small entities,
the Treasury Department and the IRS
invite comments on the impacts these
proposed regulations may have on small
entities. Pursuant to section 7805(f) of
the Code, these proposed regulations
will be submitted to the Chief Counsel
for Advocacy of the Small Business
Administration for comment on their
impact on small businesses.
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Section 202 of the Unfunded
Mandates Reform Act of 1995 requires
that agencies assess anticipated costs
and benefits and take certain other
actions before issuing a final rule that
includes any Federal mandate that may
result in expenditures in any one year
by a State, local, or tribal government,
in the aggregate, or by the private sector,
of $100 million in 1995 dollars, updated
annually for inflation. The proposed
regulations do not propose any rule that
would include any Federal mandate that
may result in expenditures by State,
local, or tribal governments, or by the
private sector, in excess of that
threshold.
V. Executive Order 13132: Federalism
Comments and Public Hearing
Before these proposed amendments to
the regulations are adopted as final
regulations, consideration will be given
to comments regarding the notice of
proposed rulemaking that are submitted
timely to the IRS as prescribed in the
preamble under the ADDRESSES section.
The Treasury Department and the IRS
request comments on all aspects of the
proposed regulation. All comments will
be made available at
www.regulations.gov. Once submitted to
the Federal eRulemaking Portal,
comments cannot be edited or
withdrawn.
A public hearing has been scheduled
for September 25, 2024, beginning at
10:00 a.m. ET in the Auditorium of the
Internal Revenue Building, 1111
Constitution Avenue NW, Washington,
DC. Due to building security
procedures, visitors must enter at the
Constitution Avenue entrance. In
addition, all visitors must present photo
identification to enter the building.
Because of access restrictions, visitors
will not be admitted beyond the
immediate entrance area more than 30
minutes before the hearing starts.
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Participants may alternatively attend the
public hearing by telephone.
The rules of 26 CFR 601.601(a)(3)
apply to the hearing. Persons who wish
to present oral comments must submit
an outline of the topics to be addressed
and the time to be devoted to each topic
by September 17, 2024. A period of 10
minutes will be allocated to each person
for making comments. An agenda
showing the scheduling of the speakers
will be prepared after the deadline for
receiving outlines has passed. Copies of
the agenda will be available free of
charge at the hearing. If no outline of the
topics to be discussed at the hearing is
received by September 17, 2024, the
public hearing will be cancelled. If the
public hearing is cancelled, a notice of
cancellation of the public hearing will
be published in the Federal Register.
Individuals who want to testify in
person at the public hearing must send
an email to publichearings@irs.gov to
have your name added to the building
access list. The subject line of the email
must contain the regulation number
REG–103529–23 and the language
TESTIFY In Person. For example, the
subject line may say: Request to
TESTIFY In Person at Hearing for REG–
103529–23.
Individuals who want to testify by
telephone at the public hearing must
send an email to publichearings@irs.gov
to receive the telephone number and
access code for the hearing. The subject
line of the email must contain the
regulation number REG–103529–23 and
the language TESTIFY Telephonically.
For example, the subject line may say:
Request to TESTIFY Telephonically at
Hearing for REG–103529–23.
Individuals who want to attend the
public hearing in person without
testifying must also send an email to
publichearings@irs.gov to have your
name added to the building access list.
The subject line of the email must
contain the regulation number REG–
103529–23 and the language ATTEND
In Person. For example, the subject line
may say: Request to ATTEND Hearing In
Person for REG–103529–23. Requests to
attend the public hearing must be
received by 5:00 p.m. ET on September
23, 2024.
Individuals who want to attend the
public hearing by telephone without
testifying must also send an email to
publichearings@irs.gov to receive the
telephone number and access code for
the hearing. The subject line of the
email must contain the regulation
number REG–103529–23 and the
language ATTEND Hearing
Telephonically. For example, the
subject line may say: Request to
ATTEND Hearing Telephonically for
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REG–103529–23. Requests to attend the
public hearing must be received by 5:00
p.m. ET on September 23, 2024.
Hearings will be made accessible to
people with disabilities. To request
special assistance during the hearing,
please contact the Publications and
Regulations Branch of the Office of
Associate Chief Counsel (Procedure and
Administration) by sending an email to
publichearings@irs.gov (preferred) or by
telephone at (202) 317–6901 (not a tollfree number) by September 20, 2024.
(v) Employees born in 1959. In the
case of an employee born in 1959, the
applicable age is age 73.
*
*
*
*
*
■ Par. 3. Section 1.401(a)(9)–4, as
revised in a final rule published
elsewhere in this issue of the Federal
Register, effective September 17, 2024,
is amended by adding a sentence to the
end of paragraph (e)(8) to read as
follows:
Statement of Availability of IRS
Documents
*
IRS Revenue Procedures, Revenue
Rulings notices, and other guidance
cited in this document are published in
the Internal Revenue Bulletin (or
Cumulative Bulletin) and are available
from the Superintendent of Documents,
U.S. Government Publishing Office,
Washington, DC 20402, or by visiting
the IRS website at https://www.irs.gov.
Drafting Information
The principal authors of these
proposed regulations are Jessica S.
Weinberger and Brandon M. Ford, of the
Office of the Associate Chief Counsel
(Employee Benefits, Exempt
Organizations, and Employment Taxes).
However, other personnel from the
Treasury Department and the IRS
participated in the development of the
proposed regulations.
List of Subjects in 26 CFR Part 1
Income taxes, Reporting and
recordkeeping requirements.
Proposed Amendments to the
Regulations
Accordingly, the Treasury Department
and the IRS propose to amend 26 CFR
part 1 as follows:
PART 1—INCOME TAXES
Paragraph 1. The authority citation
for part 1 continues to read, in part, as
follows:
■
Authority: 26 U.S.C. 7805 * * *
*
*
*
*
*
Par. 2. Section 1.401(a)(9)–2, as
revised in a final rule published
elsewhere in this issue of the Federal
Register, effective September 17, 2024,
is amended by adding paragraph
(b)(2)(v) to read as follows:
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■
§ 1.401(a)(9)–2 Distributions commencing
during an employee’s lifetime.
*
*
*
(b) * * *
(2) * * *
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*
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Jkt 262001
§ 1.401(a)(9)–4 Determination of the
designated beneficiary.
*
*
*
*
(e) * * *
(8) * * * However, if the surviving
spouse dies after benefits are considered
to have commenced under § 1.401(a)(9)–
3(e)(3), then the beneficiary of the
spouse is not an eligible designated
beneficiary.
*
*
*
*
*
■ Par. 4. Section 1.401(a)(9)–5, as
revised in a final rule published
elsewhere in this issue of the Federal
Register, effective September 17, 2024,
is amended by:
■ a. Revising paragraph (a)(5)(iv)(A);
■ b. Revising paragraph (a)(5)(v); and
■ c. Adding paragraphs (g)(2)(iii) and
(iv), and (g)(3)(ii).
The revision and additions read as
follows:
§ 1.401(a)(9)–5 Required minimum
distributions from defined contribution
plans.
(a) * * *
(5) * * *
(iv) * * *
(A) Adding the fair market value of
the contract (determined in accordance
with paragraph (a)(5)(v) of this section)
to the remaining account balance
determined under paragraph (b) of this
section; and
*
*
*
*
*
(v) Rules of operation for aggregation
option. For purposes of applying the
optional aggregation rule described in
paragraph (a)(5)(iv) of this section, the
fair market value of the annuity contract
is determined as of December 31 of the
calendar year preceding the distribution
calendar year. Beginning with the
determination used for the 2026
distribution calendar year, the
applicable method set forth in § 1.408A–
4, Q&A–14(b)(2) must be used for this
purpose.
*
*
*
*
*
(g) * * *
(2) * * *
(iii) Distributions from designated
Roth accounts. For distribution calendar
years up to and including the calendar
year that includes the employee’s date
of death, distributions from a designated
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Roth account (as described in section
402A(b)(2)) are not taken into account
for purposes of determining whether
this section is satisfied.
(iv) Corrective distributions that give
rise to reduction or waiver of section
4974 excise tax. A corrective
distribution described in section 4974(e)
or § 54.4974–1(g)(3)(iii) is not taken into
account for purposes of determining
whether this section is satisfied for the
calendar year in which the distribution
is made. Thus, for the year in which the
corrective distribution is made, the
required minimum distribution for that
year must be made in addition to the
corrective distribution.
(3) * * *
(ii) Rules relating to election—(A)
Employee dies before required
beginning date. If the employee dies
before the employee’s required
beginning date, § 1.401(a)(9)–3(c)(4)
applies to the designated beneficiary
(under which life expectancy payments
will be made to the employee’s
designated beneficiary), and the
designated beneficiary is the employee’s
surviving spouse who is eligible to make
the election described in paragraph
(g)(3)(i) of this section, then the spouse
is treated as having made that election.
(B) Employee dies on or after required
beginning date. If the employee dies on
or after the employee’s required
beginning date, the spouse is not
automatically treated as having made
the election described in paragraph
(g)(3)(i) of this section. However, that
election may be a default election under
the terms of the plan.
(C) Use of Uniform Lifetime Table. If
the election described in paragraph
(g)(3)(i) of this section applies with
respect to a surviving spouse, then the
applicable denominator for each
distribution calendar year beginning
with the calendar year following the
year of the employee’s death and up to
and including the calendar year that
includes the surviving spouse’s date of
death is determined using the Uniform
Lifetime Table in § 1.401(a)(9)–9(c) for
the surviving spouse’s age as of the
surviving spouse’s birthday in the
distribution calendar year. However, if
the employee died on or after the
required beginning date, then the
applicable denominator for a
distribution calendar year is the greater
of the applicable denominator
determined under the preceding
sentence and the employee’s remaining
life expectancy.
(D) Distribution after spouse’s death.
If the election described in paragraph
(g)(3)(i) of this section applies with
respect to an employee who dies on or
after the required beginning date (or
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whose surviving spouse dies after
distributions are considered to have
begun to the spouse as determined
under § 1.401(a)(9)–3(e)(3)), then—
(1) For calendar years following the
calendar year that includes the
surviving spouse’s date of death, the
applicable denominator used for
determining the required minimum
distribution for each distribution
calendar year is determined under the
rules of paragraph (d)(3)(iv) of this
section, and
(2) A final distribution of the
employee’s entire interest must be made
by the end of the calendar year that
includes the tenth anniversary of the
surviving spouse’s death.
(E) Applicability dates for spousal
election. The spousal election described
in paragraph (g)(3)(i) of this section
applies only if the first year for which
annual required minimum distributions
to the surviving spouse must be made is
2024 or later. Thus, the election
described in paragraph (g)(3)(ii)(A) of
this section (relating to employees who
die before the required beginning date)
applies only if the calendar year in
which life expectancy payments must
begin under § 1.401(a)(9)–3(d) is 2024 or
later. Similarly, the election described
in paragraph (g)(3)(ii)(B) of this section
(relating to an employee who dies on or
after the required beginning date)
applies only if the first year for which
the surviving spouse must take annual
required minimum distributions under
paragraph (d) of this section is 2024 or
later (that is, if the employee died in
2023 or later).
■ Par. 5. Section 1.401(a)(9)–6, as
revised in a final rule published
elsewhere in this issue of the Federal
Register, effective September 17, 2024,
is amended by adding paragraph
(q)(3)(vii)(B) to read as follows:
§ 1.401(a)(9)–6 Required minimum
distributions for defined benefit plans and
annuity contracts.
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*
*
*
*
*
(q) * * *
(3) * * *
(vii) * * *
(B) QDRO not required for certain
plans. If the rules of section 414(p) and
section 206(d)(3) of ERISA do not apply
to a plan (for example, a governmental
plan described in section 414(d) of the
Code), then a divorce or separation
instrument that satisfies the
requirements of paragraph (q)(3)(vii)(C)
of this section may be used in lieu of a
qualified domestic relations order. For
this purpose, a divorce or separation
instrument is—
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(1) A decree of divorce or separate
maintenance or a written instrument
incident to such a decree;
(2) A written separation agreement; or
(3) A decree (not described in
paragraph (q)(3)(vii)(B)(1) of this
section) requiring an individual to make
payments for the support or
maintenance of the individual’s former
spouse.
*
*
*
*
*
■ Par. 6. Section 1.401(a)(9)–8, as
revised in a final rule published
elsewhere in this issue of the Federal
Register, effective September 17, 2024,
is amended by:
■ a. Revising the second sentence of
paragraph (a)(1)(iii)(B);
■ b. Revising the first sentence of
paragraph (a)(1)(iii)(C); and
■ c. Adding paragraph (a)(1)(iii)(D).
The revisions and addition read as
follows:
§ 1.401(a)(9)–8
Special rules.
(a) * * *
(1) * * *
(iii) * * *
(B) * * * Except as provided in
paragraph (a)(1)(iii)(D) of this section,
the preceding sentence applies only if
the separate interests are held by
separate see-through trusts (in which
case the rules of §§ 1.401(a)(9)–4(f) and
1.401(a)(9)–5 will apply separately to
each separate trust).
(C) * * * For purposes of paragraph
(a)(1)(iii)(B) of this section, a trust is
immediately divided upon the death of
the employee only if, as of the date of
death, the trust is terminated and there
is no discretion as to the extent to which
the separate trusts (or the beneficiaries
described in paragraph (a)(1)(iii)(D) of
this section) will be entitled to receive
post-death distributions attributable to
the employee’s interest in the plan.
* * *
(D) Outright distribution to trust
beneficiary. The separate interests of the
beneficiaries in a see-through trust will
not fail to be eligible for the exception
under paragraph (a)(1)(iii)(B) of this
section merely because, upon
termination of the trust, a beneficiary’s
separate interest in the trust is to be
held directly by that beneficiary rather
than being held by a separate seethrough trust.
*
*
*
*
*
■ Par. 7. In § 1.401(a)(9)–9, revise and
republish the table set forth in
paragraph (c) to read as follows:
§ 1.401(a)(9)–9 Life expectancy and
Uniform Lifetime tables.
*
PO 00000
*
*
(c) * * *
Frm 00016
*
Fmt 4702
*
Sfmt 4702
58651
TABLE 2 TO PARAGRAPH (c)
Age of employee
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
26
27
28
29
30
31
32
33
34
35
36
37
38
39
40
41
42
43
44
45
46
47
48
49
50
51
52
53
54
55
56
57
58
59
60
61
62
63
64
65
66
67
68
69
70
71
72
73
74
75
76
77
78
79
80
..................................
..................................
..................................
..................................
..................................
..................................
..................................
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..................................
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E:\FR\FM\19JYP1.SGM
19JYP1
Applicable
denominator
88.2
87.2
86.2
85.2
84.2
83.2
82.2
81.2
80.2
79.2
78.2
77.2
76.2
75.2
74.2
73.3
72.3
71.3
70.3
69.3
68.3
67.3
66.3
65.3
64.3
63.3
62.3
61.3
60.3
59.4
58.4
57.4
56.4
55.4
54.4
53.4
52.4
51.5
50.5
49.5
48.5
47.5
46.5
45.6
44.6
43.6
42.6
41.6
40.7
39.7
38.7
37.7
36.8
35.8
34.9
33.9
33.0
32.0
31.1
30.1
29.2
28.3
27.4
26.5
25.5
24.6
23.7
22.9
22.0
21.1
20.2
58652
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 139 / Friday, July 19, 2024 / Proposed Rules
TABLE 2 TO PARAGRAPH (c)—
Continued
Age of employee
Applicable
denominator
81 ..................................
82 ..................................
83 ..................................
84 ..................................
85 ..................................
86 ..................................
87 ..................................
88 ..................................
89 ..................................
90 ..................................
91 ..................................
92 ..................................
93 ..................................
94 ..................................
95 ..................................
96 ..................................
97 ..................................
98 ..................................
99 ..................................
100 ................................
101 ................................
102 ................................
103 ................................
104 ................................
105 ................................
106 ................................
107 ................................
108 ................................
109 ................................
110 ................................
111 ................................
112 ................................
113 ................................
114 ................................
115 ................................
116 ................................
117 ................................
118 ................................
119 ................................
120 + ............................
19.4
18.5
17.7
16.8
16.0
15.2
14.4
13.7
12.9
12.2
11.5
10.8
10.1
9.5
8.9
8.4
7.8
7.3
6.8
6.4
6.0
5.6
5.2
4.9
4.6
4.3
4.1
3.9
3.7
3.5
3.4
3.3
3.1
3.0
2.9
2.8
2.7
2.5
2.3
2.0
*
*
*
*
*
Par. 8. Section 1.402(c)–2, as revised
in a final rule published elsewhere in
this issue of the Federal Register,
effective September 17, 2024, is
amended by:
■ a. In the first sentence of paragraph
(f)(1), removing ‘‘paragraphs (f)(2) and
(3)’’ and adding in its place ‘‘paragraphs
(f)(2) through (4)’’;
■ b. Redesignating paragraph (f)(3) as
(f)(4) and adding new paragraph (f)(3);
and
■ c. Adding paragraph (j)(4)(vii).
The addition and revision read as
follows:
ddrumheller on DSK120RN23PROD with PROPOSALS1
■
§ 1.402(c)–2
Eligible rollover distributions.
*
*
*
*
*
(f) * * *
(3) Distributions from designated Roth
accounts. If a distribution is not taken
into account for purposes of section
401(a)(9) under the rule in § 1.401(a)(9)–
5(g)(2)(iii), then it is not treated as a
distribution that is a required minimum
VerDate Sep<11>2014
16:39 Jul 18, 2024
Jkt 262001
distribution for purposes of this
paragraph (f).
*
*
*
*
*
(j) * * *
(4) * * *
(vii) Example. (A) Facts. Employee A
is a participant in Plan X, sponsored by
Employer M. A, who was born in 1957,
died in 2024 (the calendar year A would
have reached age 67 and accordingly
before A’s required beginning date),
having named A’s surviving spouse, B,
who was born in 1958, as the sole
beneficiary. The applicable age for both
A and B is 73. In accordance with the
terms of Plan X, B is subject to the 10year rule. B takes a $1,000 distribution
in 2031 (the calendar year in which B
reaches age 73). B takes no further
distributions until taking a distribution
of A’s remaining interest in Plan X in
2033 (the ninth calendar year following
the year of A’s death, when B is age 75
and A would have reached age 76). The
account balance as of December 31,
2032, was $100,000, and the
distribution of the remaining interest to
B equals $103,000. B would like to roll
over the distribution to B’s own IRA to
the extent the distribution does not
constitute a required minimum
distribution.
(B) Catch-up of required minimum
distributions required. Because the
distribution is made in a calendar year
after B attained the applicable age and
B intends to roll over the distribution to
B’s own IRA, this paragraph (j)(4)
applies to determine the portion of the
distribution that is treated as a required
minimum distribution. The first
applicable year (determined in
accordance with paragraph (j)(4)(iv) of
this section) is 2031 (the calendar year
in which B reached age 73 and the
seventh year after the year of A’s death).
Pursuant to paragraph (j)(4)(ii) of this
section, the portion of the $103,000
distributed in 2033 that is not an
eligible rollover distribution because it
is treated as a required minimum
distribution under section 401(a)(9), is
the excess, if any, of the sum of the
hypothetical required minimum
distributions, determined in accordance
with paragraph (j)(4)(iii) of this section
for each calendar year beginning with
the first applicable year and ending in
the year of distribution over the sum of
the actual distributions made in each
calendar year beginning with the first
applicable year and ending in the year
before the year of the distribution.
(C) Calculation of hypothetical
required minimum distribution.
Pursuant to paragraph (j)(4)(iii) of this
section, the hypothetical required
minimum distribution for 2031 (the year
PO 00000
Frm 00017
Fmt 4702
Sfmt 4702
in which B reaches age 73) is $3,773.58
($100,000.00/26.5). For 2032 (the year in
which B reaches age 74), the adjusted
account balance is calculated by
reducing the $100,000.00 account
balance by the excess of the
hypothetical required minimum
distribution for the first applicable year
over the actual distributions made to the
surviving spouse in that calendar year,
which is $2,773.58
($3,773.58¥$1,000.00). In this case, for
the second determination year, the
adjusted account balance is $97,226.42
($100,000.00¥$2,773.58) and the
hypothetical required minimum
distribution for 2032 is $3,812.80
($97,226.42/25.5). For 2033 (the year in
which B reaches age 75), the adjusted
account balance is calculated by
reducing the $100,000.00 account
balance by the excess of the sum of the
hypothetical required minimum
distributions for determination years
preceding 2033 of $7,586.38 ($3,773.58
+ $3,812.80) over the actual
distributions made to the surviving
spouse during those calendar years
($1,000.00), which is $6,586.38
($7,586.38¥$1,000.00). Thus, the
adjusted account balance for 2033 is
$93,413.62 ($100,000.00¥$6,586.38)
and the hypothetical required minimum
distribution for 2033 is $3,797.30
($93,413.62/24.6). The portion of the
$103,000 distribution of the employee’s
remaining interest that is treated as a
required minimum distribution, and
thus not an eligible rollover
distribution, is the excess of the sum of
the hypothetical required minimum
distributions for each determination
year in the catch-up period, which is
$11,383.68 ($3,773.58 + $3,812.80 +
$3,797.30), over the actual distributions
made during the calendar years
preceding 2033 ($1,000.00), which is
$10,383.68 ($11,383.68¥$1,000.00).
Accordingly, the portion of the $103,000
distribution that is treated as a required
minimum distribution is $10,383.68.
(D) Calculation of eligible rollover
distribution. Pursuant to paragraph
(j)(4)(vi) of this section, the plan
administrator may assume that, for
purposes of section 402(f)(2)(A), a
portion of the $103,000 distribution
equal to $10,383.68 is not an eligible
rollover distribution. However, B could
choose to roll over the entire $103,000
distribution to an IRA, provided the IRA
is established as a beneficiary IRA, and
not as B’s own IRA. In that case, in
accordance with § 1.408–8(d)(2)(i), the
IRA would be subject to the 10-year rule
that applied to the spouse under the
plan (so that a distribution of the
E:\FR\FM\19JYP1.SGM
19JYP1
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 139 / Friday, July 19, 2024 / Proposed Rules
employee’s entire interest would be
required by 2034).
*
*
*
*
*
■ Par. 9. Section 1.408–8, as revised in
a final rule published elsewhere in this
issue of the Federal Register, effective
September 17, 2024, is amended as
follows:
■ a. Redesignate paragraph (g)(2)(vii) as
paragraph (g)(2)(viii); and
■ b. Add new paragraph (g)(2)(vii).
The addition reads as follows:
§ 1.408–8 Distribution requirements for
individual retirement plans.
*
*
*
*
*
(g) * * *
(2) * * *
(vii) Corrective distributions that give
rise to a reduction or waiver of the
section 4974 excise tax, as described in
§ 1.401(a)(9)–5(g)(2)(iv).
*
*
*
*
*
Douglas W. O’Donnell,
Deputy Commissioner.
[FR Doc. 2024–14543 Filed 7–18–24; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4830–01–P
DEPARTMENT OF THE TREASURY
Office of Investment Security
31 CFR Part 802
[Docket ID TREAS–DO–2024–0010]
RIN 1505–AC88
Definition of Military Installation and
the List of Military Installations in
Regulations Pertaining to Certain
Transactions by Foreign Persons
Involving Real Estate in the United
States
Office of Investment Security,
Department of the Treasury.
ACTION: Proposed rule.
AGENCY:
This proposed rule would
amend the regulations that implement
the provisions relating to real estate
transactions in section 721 of the
Defense Production Act of 1950, as
amended. Specifically, the proposed
rule would amend the regulations by
adding, moving, and removing certain
military installations on the appendix at
parts 1 and 2, and making
corresponding revisions to the
definition of the term ‘‘military
installation.’’ The proposed rule would
also make technical amendments to
update the name or location information
for certain military installations already
listed on the appendix.
DATES: Written comments must be
received by August 19, 2024.
ddrumheller on DSK120RN23PROD with PROPOSALS1
SUMMARY:
VerDate Sep<11>2014
16:39 Jul 18, 2024
Jkt 262001
Written comments may be
submitted through one of two methods:
• Electronic Submission: Comments
may be submitted electronically through
the Federal government eRulemaking
portal at https://www.regulations.gov.
Electronic submission of comments
allows the commenter maximum time to
prepare and submit a comment, ensures
timely receipt, and enables the Treasury
Department to make the comments
available to the public.
• Mail: Send to U.S. Department of
the Treasury, Attention: Meena R.
Sharma, Director, Office of Investment
Security Policy and International
Relations, 1500 Pennsylvania Avenue
NW, Washington, DC 20220.
The Department of the Treasury
encourages comments to be submitted
via https://www.regulations.gov. Please
submit comments only and include your
name and company name (if any) and
cite ‘‘Amendments to the Definition of
Military Installation and the List of
Military Installations in Regulations
Pertaining to Certain Transactions by
Foreign Persons Involving Real Estate in
the United States’’ in all
correspondence. All comments
submitted, including attachments and
other supporting material, in response
to this proposed rule will be made
public, including any personally
identifiable or confidential business
information that is included in a
comment. Therefore, commenters
should submit only information that
they wish to make publicly available.
Commenters who wish to remain
anonymous should not include
identifying information in their
comments.
ADDRESSES:
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Meena R. Sharma, Director, Office of
Investment Security Policy and
International Relations, at U.S.
Department of the Treasury, 1500
Pennsylvania Avenue NW, Washington,
DC 20220; telephone: (202) 622–3425;
email: CFIUS.Regulations@treasury.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
I. Background
The regulations at part 802 to title 31
of the Code of Federal Regulations (part
802) implement the provisions in
section 721 of the Defense Production
Act of 1950, as amended (Section 721)
and establish the process and
procedures of the Committee on Foreign
Investment in the United States (CFIUS
or the Committee) with respect to
reviewing transactions involving the
purchase or lease by, or concession to,
a foreign person of certain real estate in
the United States.
PO 00000
Frm 00018
Fmt 4702
Sfmt 4702
58653
Section 721 authorizes the president
or his designee (i.e., CFIUS) to review
certain real estate transactions by
foreign persons where the real estate at
issue is located in the United States and
(a) is located within, or will function as
part of, an air or maritime port; or (b)
is in close proximity to a United States
military installation or another facility
or property of the United States
Government that is sensitive for reasons
relating to national security; could
reasonably provide the foreign person
the ability to collect intelligence on
activities being conducted at such an
installation, facility, or property; or
could otherwise expose national
security activities at such an
installation, facility, or property to the
risk of foreign surveillance.
The current regulations at part 802
identify a subset of military installations
around which certain real estate
transactions are covered under CFIUS’s
jurisdiction. The specific military
installations are listed in appendix A by
name and location (or township/range),
and section 802.227 sets forth the
category descriptions of the military
installations identified in appendix A.
The locations listed in appendix A are
intended to aid in the identification of
the relevant installations only and do
not represent specific boundaries of the
installations for purposes of
determining whether a transaction is a
covered real estate transaction.
The preamble to the final rule
establishing part 802 (see 85 FR 3158)
noted that the military installations
listed in the appendix were identified
by the U.S. Department of Defense
(Department of Defense) based upon an
evaluation of national security
considerations, and that the Department
of Defense will continue on an ongoing
basis to assess its military installations
and the geographic scope established
under the rules to ensure appropriate
application in light of national security
considerations. In 2023, as a result of
the assessment of military installations
by the Department of Defense at that
time, amendments made to the
regulations added eight military
installations to appendix A and updated
the names of five military installations
(see 88 FR 57348, published August 23,
2023). Since then, the Department of
Defense has completed a comprehensive
assessment of its military installations
through coordination across all military
services, considering factors such as the
operations, assets, missions, and
training at each installation and
appropriateness for coverage under
Section 721. While the Department of
Defense continuously evaluates its
military installations to ensure
E:\FR\FM\19JYP1.SGM
19JYP1
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 89, Number 139 (Friday, July 19, 2024)]
[Proposed Rules]
[Pages 58644-58653]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2024-14543]
=======================================================================
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
DEPARTMENT OF THE TREASURY
Internal Revenue Service
26 CFR Part 1
[REG-103529-23]
RIN 1545-BQ66
Required Minimum Distributions+
AGENCY: Internal Revenue Service (IRS), Treasury.
ACTION: Notice of proposed rulemaking and notice of public hearing.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: This document sets forth proposed regulations that would
provide guidance relating to required minimum distributions from
qualified plans; section 403(b) annuity contracts, custodial accounts,
and retirement income accounts; individual retirement accounts and
annuities; and eligible deferred compensation plans under section 457.
These proposed regulations would affect administrators of, and
participants in, those plans; owners of individual retirement accounts
and annuities; employees for whom amounts are contributed to section
403(b) annuity contracts, custodial accounts, or retirement income
accounts; and beneficiaries of those plans, contracts, accounts, and
annuities. This document also provides notice of a public hearing.
DATES: Written or electronic comments must be received by September 17,
2024. A public hearing on this proposed regulation has been scheduled
for September 25, 2024, at 10:00 a.m. ET. Requests to speak and
outlines of topics to be discussed at the public hearing must be
received by September 17, 2024. If no outlines are received by
September 17, 2024, the public hearing will be cancelled.
ADDRESSES: Commenters are strongly encouraged to submit public comments
electronically via the Federal eRulemaking Portal at
www.regulations.gov (indicate IRS and REG-103529-23) by following the
online instructions for submitting comments. Once submitted to the
Federal eRulemaking Portal, comments cannot be edited or withdrawn. The
Department of the Treasury (Treasury Department) and the IRS will
publish for public availability any comment submitted electronically or
on paper to its public docket on www.regulations.gov. Send paper
submissions to: CC:PA:01:PR (REG-103529-23), Room 5203, Internal
Revenue Service, P.O. Box 7604, Ben Franklin Station, Washington, DC
20044.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Concerning the proposed regulations,
call Brandon M. Ford or Jessica S. Weinberger at (202) 317-6700;
concerning submission of comments, the hearing, and the access code to
attend the hearing by telephone, call Vivian Hayes at (202) 317-6901
(not toll-free numbers) or email [email protected] (preferred).
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Background
This document sets forth proposed amendments to the Income Tax
Regulations (26 CFR part 1) under section 401(a)(9) of the Internal
Revenue Code of 1986 (Code). Section 401(a)(9) sets forth required
minimum distribution rules for plans qualified under section 401(a).
These rules are incorporated by reference in section 408(a)(6) and
(b)(3) for individual retirement accounts and individual retirement
annuities (collectively, IRAs); section 403(b)(10) for annuity
contracts, custodial accounts, and retirement income accounts described
in section 403(b) (section 403(b) plans); and section 457(d)(2) for
eligible deferred compensation plans. The determination of the required
minimum distribution is also relevant for purposes of the related
excise tax under section 4974 and the definition of eligible rollover
distribution in section 402(c).
The Rules and Regulations section of this issue of the Federal
Register includes final regulations that amend the Income Tax
Regulations and Excise Tax Regulations (26 CFR parts 1 and 54) relating
to sections 401(a)(9), 402(c), 403(b), 408, 457, and 4974 (T.D. 10001).
The background section in the preamble to those final regulations (2024
final regulations) describes those provisions.
Explanation of Provisions
A. Overview
These proposed regulations would address various provisions that
were reserved in the 2024 final regulations. These proposed regulations
address sections 107, 202, 204, 302, 325, and 327 of the SECURE 2.0 Act
of 2022 (SECURE 2.0 Act), enacted on December 29, 2022, as Division T
of the Consolidated Appropriations Act, 2023, Public Law 117-328, 136
Stat. 4459 (2022), and certain other issues.
B. Determination of Applicable Age for Employees Born in 1959
The 2024 final regulations include rules for determining an
employee's applicable age, as defined in section 401(a)(9)(C)(v), which
is a component of the determination of the employee's
[[Page 58645]]
required beginning date. Under those rules, which reflect the amendment
to section 401(a)(9)(C) made by section 107 of the SECURE 2.0 Act, an
employee's applicable age varies based on the employee's date of birth.
However, as noted in the preamble to the 2024 final regulations,
employees who were born in 1959 are described in section
401(a)(9)(C)(v)(I) of the Code (which provides that the applicable age
for those employees is age 73) as well as section 401(a)(9)(C)(v)(II)
(which provides that the applicable age for those employees is age 75).
The 2024 final regulations reserve Sec. 1.401(a)(9)-2(b)(2)(v) for
the determination of the applicable age for employees born in 1959, and
these proposed regulations would fill in the reserved paragraph. Under
the proposed regulations, the applicable age for an employee who was
born in 1959 would be age 73.
C. Purchase of Annuity Contract With Portion of Employee's Individual
Account--Rules of Operation for Aggregation Option
The 2024 final regulations include guidance issued pursuant to
section 204 of the SECURE 2.0 Act (relating to the application of
section 401(a)(9) of the Code in a situation in which an employee's
interest in a defined contribution plan is partially annuitized by
using a portion of the employee's individual account to purchase an
annuity contract). Specifically, Sec. 1.401(a)(9)-5(a)(5)(iv) provides
that, in lieu of satisfying section 401(a)(9) separately with respect
to an annuity contract purchased with a portion of the employee's
account and the remaining account balance, a plan may permit an
employee to elect to satisfy section 401(a)(9) for the annuity contract
and that account balance in the aggregate by adding the fair market
value of the contract to the remaining account balance and treating
payments under the annuity contract as distributions from the
employee's individual account. However, the 2024 final regulations
reserve Sec. 1.401(a)(9)-5(a)(5)(v) for rules of operation with
respect to this aggregation option, and these proposed regulations
would fill in the reserved paragraph.
Under proposed Sec. 1.401(a)(9)-5(a)(5)(v), the fair market value
of the annuity contract would be determined as of December 31 of the
calendar year preceding the distribution calendar year. In addition,
beginning with the determination used for the 2026 distribution
calendar year, the determination would have to be made using the
applicable method set forth in Sec. 1.408A-4, Q&A-14(b)(2).\1\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ Section 1.408A-4, Q&A-14(b)(2) sets forth rules for
determining the fair market value of a traditional IRA that is an
individual retirement annuity if that IRA is converted to a Roth
IRA.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
D. Distributions From Designated Roth Accounts
Section 325 of the SECURE 2.0 Act added a new paragraph (5) to
section 402A(d) of the Code, which provides that the provisions of
section 401(a)(9)(A) (requiring that minimum distributions be paid
during an employee's lifetime) and the incidental death benefit
requirements of section 401(a) do not apply to any designated Roth
account. The 2024 final regulations include limited guidance relating
to the application of that new paragraph.
Specifically, in the case of an employee for whom only a portion of
the employee's account under a defined contribution plan is held in a
designated Roth account described in section 402A(b)(2), Sec.
1.401(a)(9)-5(b)(3) of the 2024 final regulations provides that, for
distribution calendar years up to and including the calendar year that
includes the employee's date of death, amounts held in that designated
Roth account are not taken into account for purposes of determining the
account balance that is used to calculate the required minimum
distribution. However, the 2024 final regulations reserve Sec.
1.401(a)(9)-5(g)(2)(iii) for rules regarding how distributions from a
designated Roth account are treated for purposes of section 401(a)(9),
and these proposed regulations fill in the reserved paragraph.
Under proposed Sec. 1.401(a)(9)-5(g)(2)(iii), a distribution from
a designated Roth account made in a calendar year for which the
employee is required to take a minimum distribution under the plan
would not count towards satisfying that requirement. Consistent with
this rule, the proposed regulations would provide that such a
distribution is not treated as a required minimum distribution for
purposes of Sec. 1.402(c)-2(f). Thus, the distribution could be rolled
over to a Roth IRA if it otherwise meets the requirements to be an
eligible rollover distribution.
E. Corrective Distributions Giving Rise to Reduction or Waiver of the
Section 4974 Excise Tax
The 2024 final regulations include guidance relating to the
application of section 4974(e) (as added to the Code by section 302(b)
of the SECURE 2.0 Act). Specifically, Sec. 54.4974-1(a)(2) provides
that, in the case of a taxpayer who doesn't receive the full required
minimum distribution under any qualified retirement plan (as defined in
section 4974(c) of the Code) or any eligible deferred compensation plan
(as defined in section 457(b)) for a calendar year, the excise tax
under section 4974 is reduced from 25 percent of the shortfall to 10
percent if, by the last day of the correction window, the taxpayer: (1)
receives a corrective distribution from the applicable plan in the
amount of the shortfall; and (2) submits a return reflecting that
reduced tax.
In addition, the 2024 final regulations provide for an automatic
waiver of the section 4974 excise tax associated with a failure by a
beneficiary of an individual to take a required minimum distribution in
the calendar year in which the individual died if that individual had
not already satisfied the minimum distribution requirement for that
year provided that the failure is corrected within a specified period
(generally by the end of the following calendar year). Specifically,
Sec. 54.4974-1(g)(3)(iii) provides for an automatic waiver of the
excise tax under section 4974 if, by the tax filing deadline (including
extensions thereof) for the taxable year of the beneficiary that begins
with or within the calendar year of the individual's death (or, if
later, the last day of the calendar year following that calendar year),
the beneficiary takes a corrective distribution in the amount needed to
satisfy the minimum distribution requirement for the calendar year of
the death of the individual.
The 2024 final regulations reserve Sec. 1.401(a)(9)-5(g)(2)(iv)
for the treatment of corrective distributions that give rise to a
reduction or waiver of the section 4974 excise tax, and these proposed
regulations would fill in that reserved paragraph. Under proposed Sec.
1.401(a)(9)-5(g)(2)(iv), a corrective distribution described in section
4974(e) or Sec. 54.4974-1(g)(3)(iii) would not be taken into account
for purposes of determining whether Sec. 1.401(a)(9)-5 is satisfied
for the calendar year in which the corrective distribution is made.
Thus, under the proposed regulations, if a missed required minimum
distribution is corrected by a distribution made in a subsequent
calendar year, the required minimum distribution for that subsequent
year must be made in addition to the corrective distribution.
Furthermore, under Sec. 1.402(c)-2(f)(1) of the 2024 final
regulations, the corrective distribution is treated as a required
minimum distribution and thus is not eligible for rollover.
These proposed regulations would make a conforming change to Sec.
1.408-
[[Page 58646]]
8(g)(2) under which these corrective distributions would not be taken
into account for purposes of determining whether Sec. 1.408-8 of the
2024 final regulations is satisfied for the calendar year in which the
corrective distribution is made. In addition, because Sec. 1.408-
8(b)(3) of the 2024 final regulations provides that the determination
of whether a distribution from an IRA is a required minimum
distribution (and thus not eligible for rollover pursuant to section
408(d)(3)(E)) is made in the same manner as provided in Sec. 1.402(c)-
2(f) and (j), the treatment under Sec. 1.402(c)-2(f)(1) of the
corrective distribution as a required minimum distribution (and thus
not eligible for rollover) would also apply for purposes of section
408(d)(3)(E).
F. Spousal Election Under Section 327 of the SECURE 2.0 Act
The 2024 final regulations permit a defined contribution plan to
provide that, if an employee participating in the plan dies before the
required beginning date, then an eligible designated beneficiary of the
employee (including the employee's surviving spouse) may elect to
receive the beneficiary's interest under the plan under the 10-year
rule or as annual payments over a period not extending beyond the
beneficiary's life expectancy.\2\ Section 401(a)(9)(B)(iv)(I) through
(III) of the Code, as amended by section 327(a) of the SECURE 2.0 Act,
provides that, if the designated beneficiary of an employee who dies
before the employee's required beginning date is the employee's
surviving spouse, then the spouse may elect to: (1) be treated as if
the surviving spouse were the employee for purposes of the regulations
referred to in section 401(a)(9)(B)(iii)(II) of the Code (providing for
annual payments over the beneficiary's life or life expectancy), (2)
delay commencement of required minimum distributions until the year the
employee would have attained the applicable age (as defined in section
401(a)(9)(C)(v)), and (3) be treated as the employee in the event the
surviving spouse dies before distributions to the spouse begin.\3\
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\2\ If the employee is a participant in a defined benefit plan,
the election is between receiving the beneficiary's interest under a
5-year rule or as annuity payments over the beneficiary's lifetime.
\3\ Section 401(a)(9)(B)(iv)(II) and (III) correspond to section
401(a)(9)(B)(iv)(I) and (II) before the changes made by section
327(a) of the SECURE 2.0 Act.
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Under the 2024 final regulations, if: (1) the employee dies before
the employee's required beginning date; (2) the employee's surviving
spouse is the sole beneficiary of the employee; and (3) that spouse is
subject to the life expectancy rule, then the treatment described in
section 401(a)(9)(B)(iv)(II) and (III) will apply automatically (that
is, a separate election is not required). See Sec. 1.401(a)(9)-3(d)
and (e) of the 2024 final regulations.
Section 327(b) of the SECURE 2.0 Act instructs the Secretary to
modify the regulations applicable to defined contribution plans under
section 401(a)(9) of the Code so that an election under section
401(a)(9)(B)(iv) by the surviving spouse will extend the distribution
period in the case of an employee's death after the required beginning
date. In accordance with this instruction, Sec. 1.401(a)(9)-5(g)(3)(i)
of the 2024 final regulations provides that a defined contribution plan
may permit a surviving spouse who is the sole beneficiary of the
employee to elect to be treated as the employee for purposes of
determining the required minimum distribution for a calendar year. The
2024 final regulations reserve Sec. 1.401(a)(9)-5(g)(3)(ii) for rules
relating to this election, and these proposed regulations would fill in
that reserved paragraph.
Proposed Sec. 1.401(a)(9)-5(g)(3)(ii) provides a series of rules
that would apply with respect to the spousal election described in
Sec. 1.401(a)(9)-5(g)(3)(i) of the 2024 final regulations. Under the
proposed regulations, if the employee dies before the required
beginning date and the sole beneficiary of the employee is the
surviving spouse who is subject to the life expectancy rule, then the
spouse would automatically be treated as making the election described
in section 401(a)(9)(B)(iv). As a result, the proposed regulations
provide that section 401(a)(9)(B)(iv)(I) (under which the spouse is
treated as the employee for purposes of section 401(a)(9)(B)(iii)(II))
would apply automatically in this case (in addition to the automatic
application of sections 401(a)(9)(B)(iv)(II) and (III)). If the
employee dies on or after the required beginning date, then the
corresponding election under section 327(b) of the SECURE 2.0 Act does
not apply automatically. However, these proposed regulations would
provide that this corresponding election may be the default election
under the terms of a plan (so that the surviving spouse need not take
any action to have this election apply).
If the election under Sec. 1.401(a)(9)-5(g)(3)(i) is in effect for
a surviving spouse, then, regardless of whether the employee died
before, on, or after the required beginning date, the proposed
regulations provide that the applicable denominator used for
determining the required minimum distribution for each distribution
calendar year up to and including the calendar year that includes the
surviving spouse's date of death would be determined using the Uniform
Lifetime Table (rather than the Single Life Table) for the surviving
spouse's age as of the surviving spouse's birthday in the distribution
calendar year.\4\ In accordance with Sec. 1.401(a)(9)-5(d)(1)(i) of
the 2024 final regulations, the required minimum distribution for the
calendar year of the surviving spouse's death must be made to a
beneficiary of the surviving spouse to the extent it has not already
been distributed to the surviving spouse.
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\4\ However, if the employee dies on or after the employee's
required beginning date and the employee's remaining life expectancy
is greater than the applicable denominator determined under the
Uniform Lifetime Table for the surviving spouse's age (which would
occur only if the surviving spouse was more than ten years older
than the employee), then that greater life expectancy is used as the
applicable denominator.
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These proposed regulations provide that, if the election described
in Sec. 1.401(a)(9)-5(g)(3)(i) is in effect for the surviving spouse
and the spouse dies on or after the date on which distributions are
considered to have begun to the spouse under the rules of Sec.
1.401(a)(9)-3(e)(3) of the 2024 final regulations (that is, the end of
the calendar year in which the employee would have reached the
applicable age), then annual distributions to the spouse's beneficiary
would have to continue. Those distributions would be determined using
the spouse's remaining life expectancy for the spouse's age as of the
spouse's birthday in the calendar year of the spouse's death from the
Single Life Table, reduced by one for each subsequent calendar year. In
addition, the proposed regulations add a conforming sentence to Sec.
1.401(a)(9)-4(e)(8), providing that the spouse's beneficiary would not
be an eligible designated beneficiary in this situation. As a result, a
final distribution of the employee's interest would have to be made by
the end of the calendar year that includes the tenth anniversary of the
spouse's death.
Under the proposed regulations, the spousal election described in
Sec. 1.401(a)(9)-5(g)(3)(i) would be available only if the first year
for which annual required minimum distributions to the surviving spouse
must be made is 2024 or later. For example, if an employee who died in
2017 and before the employee's required beginning date would have
reached the applicable age in 2024 or later, then the first year for
which an annual required minimum distribution is due would be 2024 or
[[Page 58647]]
later, and the spousal election could apply. However, if the employee
would have reached the applicable age in 2022, then the first year for
which an annual required minimum distribution is due to the spouse was
2022, and the spousal election would not be available. Similarly, if
the employee died in 2021 and after the employee's required beginning
date, then the spouse must begin receiving annual required minimum
distributions (based on the spouse's remaining life expectancy) in
2022, and the spousal election would not be available.
Although an election under section 401(a)(9)(B)(iv) of the Code
results in the spouse being treated as the employee for purposes of the
regulations referred to in section 401(a)(9)(B)(iii)(II) (that is,
Sec. 1.401(a)(9)-5), that treatment does not extend to other
purposes.\5\ For example, the spouse would not be subject to the 10
percent additional tax under section 72(t)(2)(A)(ii) even if the spouse
takes a distribution before attaining age 59\1/2\. Similarly, the date
by which the surviving spouse must commence distributions is determined
by reference to the employee's attainment of the applicable age (rather
than by reference to the spouse's attainment of the applicable age
\6\). In addition, for purposes of determining the account balance
under a plan while the surviving spouse is taking distributions, Sec.
1.401(a)(9)-5(b)(3) of the 2024 final regulations (which excludes
amounts held in a designated Roth account from the employee's account
balance during the employee's lifetime) does not apply. Thus, all
amounts held in a designated Roth account and any other account under
the plan are included for purposes of determining the required minimum
distribution due under the plan for the calendar year.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\5\ However, if the spouse dies before distributions have begun,
then in accordance with section 401(a)(9)(B)(iv)(III), the spouse is
treated as the employee for purposes of determining the beneficiary
designated under the plan. In addition, if the spouse executes a
spousal rollover to the spouse's own IRA in accordance with section
402(c)(9) after having made the election described in section
401(a)(9)(B)(iv), then the spouse will not be treated as a
beneficiary with respect to any amounts in that IRA.
\6\ The election under section 401(a)(9)(B)(iv) does not affect
the ability of the employee's surviving spouse to make a rollover to
the spouse's own IRA or to treat an IRA as the surviving spouse's
own IRA. In either of these cases, the date by which distributions
from that IRA must commence would be determined by reference to the
surviving spouse's attainment of the applicable age.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
These proposed regulations also provide an updated Uniform Lifetime
Table that provides the applicable denominator for individuals ages 10
through 120+. This table was originally published in Notice 2022-6,
2022-5 IRB 460, relating to the determination of whether a series of
payments is considered a series of substantially equal periodic
payments.
Section 1.402(c)-2(j)(4) of the 2024 final regulations sets forth a
special rule under which a portion of a distribution to certain
surviving spouses (that is, the portion of the distribution that
represents a catch-up of missed hypothetical required minimum
distributions) is treated as a required minimum distribution that is
not eligible for rollover. Section 1.402(c)-2(j)(4)(iii), which
provides rules for the calculation of the hypothetical required minimum
distributions, includes the assumption that the election in Sec.
1.401(a)(9)-5(g)(3)(i) was in effect for the spouse. The 2024 final
regulations reserve Sec. 1.402(c)-2(j)(4)(vii) for an example of the
calculation of the hypothetical required minimum distributions, and
proposed Sec. 1.402(c)-2(j)(4)(vii) would fill in the reserved
paragraph with an example of the calculation of the hypothetical
required minimum distributions over multiple years, which reflects the
use of the Uniform Lifetime Table.
The proposed regulations do not include any changes to the defined
benefit rules of Sec. 1.401(a)(9)-6 to reflect the amendment to
section 401(a)(9)(B)(iv) made by section 327 of the SECURE 2.0 Act.
Comments are requested on whether there are circumstances under which
that provision would affect the required minimum distribution rules
applicable to defined benefit plans.
G. Divorce After Purchase of Qualifying Longevity Annuity Contract
Section 202(a)(3) of the SECURE 2.0 Act instructs the Secretary of
the Treasury (or that person's delegate) to amend Sec. 1.401(a)(9)-6
to provide that, in the case of a qualifying longevity annuity contract
(QLAC) which was purchased with joint and survivor annuity benefits for
an individual and the individual's spouse, a divorce occurring after
the original purchase and before the date that the annuity payments
commence under the contract will not affect the permissibility of the
joint and survivor benefits if certain conditions related to an
associated qualified domestic relations order (QDRO) described in
section 414(p) of the Code are met. Section 202(a)(3) of the SECURE 2.0
Act also provides that if the arrangement is not subject to section
414(p) of the Code or section 206(d) of the Employee Retirement Income
Security Act of 1974,\7\ a divorce or separation instrument may be
substituted for a QDRO. The 2024 final regulations reserve Sec.
1.401(a)(9)-6(q)(3)(vii)(B) for rules related to this divorce or
separation instrument alternative, and these proposed regulations would
fill in the reserved paragraph.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\7\ The Employee Retirement Income Security Act of 1974, Public
Law 93-406, 88 Stat. 829, as amended, is referred to in this
preamble as ``ERISA.''
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Under proposed Sec. 1.401(a)(9)-6(q)(3)(vii)(B), the divorce or
separation instrument alternative would be available only if the plan
is not subject to both section 414(p) of the Code and section 206(d) of
ERISA (for example, a governmental plan described in section 414(d) of
the Code). In accordance with section 202(b) of the SECURE 2.0 Act,
these proposed regulations would provide that, for purposes of this
alternative, a divorce or separation instrument is: (1) a decree of
divorce or separate maintenance or a written instrument incident to
such a decree; (2) a written separation agreement; or (3) any other
decree requiring an individual to make payments for the support or
maintenance of the individual's former spouse.
H. Outright Distribution to Trust Beneficiary
The 2024 final regulations provide rules for the separate
application of section 401(a)(9) of the Code with respect to multiple
beneficiaries of a see-through trust (within the meaning of Sec.
1.401(a)(9)-4(f)(1)). Specifically, Sec. 1.401(a)(9)-8(a) of the 2024
final regulations permits separate application of section 401(a)(9)
with respect to each of the beneficiaries' separate interests if the
terms of a see-through trust meet certain requirements. One of those
requirements is that the trust must provide that it is to be divided
immediately upon the death of the employee, with the separate interests
to be held in separate see-through trusts.
Proposed Sec. 1.401(a)(9)-8(a)(1)(iii)(B) sets forth an exception
to that requirement in the case of an outright distribution to a trust
beneficiary, as described in proposed Sec. 1.401(a)(9)-
8(a)(1)(iii)(D). Under the proposed regulations, the rules under Sec.
1.401(a)(9)-8(a)(1)(iii)(C) of the 2024 final regulations (prohibiting
discretion in the allocation of post-death distributions attributable
to the employee's interest in the plan) would be extended to apply when
that outright distribution exception is used.
Under proposed Sec. 1.401(a)(9)-8(a)(1)(iii)(D), the separate
interests of
[[Page 58648]]
the beneficiaries held in a see-through trust would not fail to be
eligible for the exception in proposed Sec. 1.401(a)(9)-
8(a)(1)(iii)(B) merely because, upon termination of that trust, a
beneficiary's separate interest in the trust is to be held directly by
that beneficiary rather than being held by a separate see-through
trust. Thus, for example, if a trust which is a named beneficiary
provides that each of three children have equal interests in the
portion of the trust attributable to the employee's interest in the
plan, and the trust provides that it is to be immediately divided upon
the death of the employee, then section 401(a)(9) is permitted to be
applied separately with respect to the separate interests of the three
children, even if the separate interest of one of the children is held
by a sub-trust while the separate interests of the other children are
held directly by those children.
Applicability Dates
The amendments to Sec. Sec. 1.401(a)(9)-4, 1.401(a)(9)-5,
1.401(a)(9)-6, 1.401(a)(9)-8, 1.401(a)(9)-9, and 1.408-8 are proposed
to apply for purposes of determining required minimum distributions for
calendar years beginning on or after January 1, 2025. The amendments to
Sec. 1.402(c)-2 are proposed to apply for distributions on or after
January 1, 2025. Thus, these amendments would have the same
applicability dates as the corresponding provisions in the 2024 final
regulations.
Special Analyses
I. Regulatory Planning and Review
Pursuant to the Memorandum of Agreement, Review of Treasury
Regulations under Executive Order 12866 (June 9, 2023), tax regulatory
actions issued by the IRS are not subject to the requirements of
section 6 of Executive Order 12866, as amended. Therefore, a regulatory
impact assessment is not required.
II. Paperwork Reduction Act
The Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995 (44 U.S.C. 3501-3520) generally
requires that a Federal agency obtain the approval of the Office of
Management and Budget (OMB) before collecting information from the
public, whether such collection of information is mandatory, voluntary,
or required to obtain or retain a benefit. An agency may not conduct or
sponsor, and a person is not required to respond to, a collection of
information unless the collection of information displays a valid
control number.
These proposed regulations include third-party disclosures and
recordkeeping requirements, in sections 1.401(a)(9)-5(a)(5)(iv) and
1.401(a)(9)-5(g)(3)(ii), that are required to determine the required
minimum distribution for a calendar year for certain defined
contribution plan participants and beneficiaries. These collections of
information would generally be used by the IRS for tax compliance
purposes and plan administrators to facilitate compliance with the
required minimum distribution requirements under section 401(a)(9) of
the Code. The likely respondents to these collections are employees
participating in retirement plans and their beneficiaries.
The 2024 final regulations include guidance relating to the
application of section 401(a)(9) in a situation in which an employee's
interest in a defined contribution plan is partially annuitized by
using a portion of the employee's account to purchase an annuity
contract. Specifically, section 1.401(a)(9)-5(a)(5)(iv) of the final
regulations provides that, in lieu of satisfying section 401(a)(9)
separately with respect to an annuity contract purchased with a portion
of an employee's defined contribution plan account and the remaining
account balance, a plan may permit an employee to elect to satisfy
section 401(a)(9) for the annuity contract and the remaining account
balance in the aggregate by adding the fair market value of the
contract to the remaining account balance and treating payments under
the annuity contract as distributions from the individual account.
Section 1.401(a)(9)-5(a)(5)(v) of the proposed regulations provides
rules of operation with respect to this aggregation option--
specifically, the method and date for valuation of the annuity
contract. Under these rules of operation, annuity contract issuers are
expected to provide the annuity valuations as a third-party disclosure.
In addition, the amount of payments made under the annuity contract and
the underlying value of the annuity contract is expected to be reported
to the employer as a third-party disclosure. The associated burden is
as follows:
Estimated number of respondents: 19,620.
Estimated average annual burden per respondent: 0.5 hours (30
minutes).
Estimated frequency of responses: Once.
Estimated total annual reporting burden: 9,810 hours.
Section 1.401(a)(9)-5(g)(3)(i) of the 2024 final regulations \8\
provides that a plan may permit a surviving spouse who is the sole
beneficiary of an employee to elect to be treated as the employee for
purposes of determining the required minimum distribution from a
defined contribution plan for a calendar year. Section 1.401(a)(9)-
5(g)(3)(ii) of these proposed regulations supplements that provision by
providing a series of rules that would apply with respect to the
spousal election described in the preceding sentence. Under these
proposed regulations, if the employee dies before the employee's
required beginning date and the sole beneficiary of the employee is the
surviving spouse who is subject to the life expectancy rule, then the
spouse would automatically be treated as making the election. If the
employee dies on or after the required beginning date, then the
election would not apply automatically. However, the proposed
regulations provide that the election may be the default under the
terms of a plan (so that the surviving spouse need not take any action
to have the election apply). This election is expected to be made as a
third-party disclosure between the surviving spouse and the plan
administrator, who will keep records of the election. The associated
burden is as follows:
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\8\ These proposed regulations are being published
simultaneously with the 2024 final regulations, and address various
provisions that were reserved in those regulations. The collection
requirements in the 2024 final regulations are approved under OMB
control number 1545-1573.
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Estimated number of respondents: 156,960.
Estimated average annual burden per respondent: 0.17 hours (10
minutes).
Estimated frequency of responses: Once.
Estimated total annual reporting burden: 26,683 hours.
The collections of information contained in this notice of proposed
rulemaking have been submitted to the Office of Management and Budget
for review in accordance with the Paperwork Reduction Act. Commenters
are strongly encouraged to submit public comments electronically.
Written comments and recommendations for the proposed information
collection should be sent to www.reginfo.gov/public/do/PRAMain, with
copies to the Internal Revenue Service. Find this particular
information collection by selecting ``Currently under Review--Open for
Public Comments'' and using the search function. Submit electronic
submissions for the proposed information collection to the IRS via
email at [email protected] (indicate REG-103529-23 on the Subject
line). Comments on the collection of information should be received by
September 17, 2024. Comments are specifically requested
[[Page 58649]]
concerning: whether the proposed collection of information is necessary
for the proper performance of the functions of the IRS, including
whether the information will have practical utility; the accuracy of
the estimated burden associated with the proposed collection of
information; how the quality, utility, and clarity of the information
to be collected may be enhanced; how the burden of complying with the
proposed collection of information may be minimized, including through
the application of automated collection techniques or other forms of
information technology; and estimates of capital or start-up costs and
costs of operation, maintenance, and purchase of services to provide
information.
III. Regulatory Flexibility Act
Pursuant to the Regulatory Flexibility Act (5 U.S.C. chapter 6), it
is hereby certified that these proposed regulations will not have a
significant economic impact on a substantial number of small entities.
These proposed regulations would affect individuals and businesses,
some of which may be small entities. The rule affects administrators
of, and participants in, certain plans; owners of individual retirement
accounts and annuities; employees for whom amounts are contributed to
section 403(b) annuity contracts, custodial accounts, or retirement
income accounts; and beneficiaries of those plans, contracts, accounts,
and annuities. These proposed regulations do not impose new compliance
burdens and are not expected to result in economically meaningful
changes in behavior relative to the existing regulations. It is
expected that most plans will provide the spousal election under Sec.
1.401(a)(9)-5(g)(3) as a default election under the plan and that
surviving spouses will rarely opt out of the default (because of the
tax benefit of the default election). Therefore, the economic impact of
the rule is not expected to be significant.
Notwithstanding this certification that the proposed regulations
would not have a significant economic impact on a substantial number of
small entities, the Treasury Department and the IRS invite comments on
the impacts these proposed regulations may have on small entities.
Pursuant to section 7805(f) of the Code, these proposed regulations
will be submitted to the Chief Counsel for Advocacy of the Small
Business Administration for comment on their impact on small
businesses.
IV. Unfunded Mandates Reform Act
Section 202 of the Unfunded Mandates Reform Act of 1995 requires
that agencies assess anticipated costs and benefits and take certain
other actions before issuing a final rule that includes any Federal
mandate that may result in expenditures in any one year by a State,
local, or tribal government, in the aggregate, or by the private
sector, of $100 million in 1995 dollars, updated annually for
inflation. The proposed regulations do not propose any rule that would
include any Federal mandate that may result in expenditures by State,
local, or tribal governments, or by the private sector, in excess of
that threshold.
V. Executive Order 13132: Federalism
Executive Order 13132 (Federalism) prohibits an agency from
publishing any rule that has federalism implications if the rule either
imposes substantial, direct compliance costs on State and local
governments, and is not required by statute, or preempts State law,
unless the agency meets the consultation and funding requirements of
section 6 of the Executive order. The proposed regulations do not
propose rules that would have federalism implications, impose
substantial direct compliance costs on State and local governments, or
preempt State law within the meaning of the Executive order.
Comments and Public Hearing
Before these proposed amendments to the regulations are adopted as
final regulations, consideration will be given to comments regarding
the notice of proposed rulemaking that are submitted timely to the IRS
as prescribed in the preamble under the ADDRESSES section. The Treasury
Department and the IRS request comments on all aspects of the proposed
regulation. All comments will be made available at www.regulations.gov.
Once submitted to the Federal eRulemaking Portal, comments cannot be
edited or withdrawn.
A public hearing has been scheduled for September 25, 2024,
beginning at 10:00 a.m. ET in the Auditorium of the Internal Revenue
Building, 1111 Constitution Avenue NW, Washington, DC. Due to building
security procedures, visitors must enter at the Constitution Avenue
entrance. In addition, all visitors must present photo identification
to enter the building. Because of access restrictions, visitors will
not be admitted beyond the immediate entrance area more than 30 minutes
before the hearing starts. Participants may alternatively attend the
public hearing by telephone.
The rules of 26 CFR 601.601(a)(3) apply to the hearing. Persons who
wish to present oral comments must submit an outline of the topics to
be addressed and the time to be devoted to each topic by September 17,
2024. A period of 10 minutes will be allocated to each person for
making comments. An agenda showing the scheduling of the speakers will
be prepared after the deadline for receiving outlines has passed.
Copies of the agenda will be available free of charge at the hearing.
If no outline of the topics to be discussed at the hearing is received
by September 17, 2024, the public hearing will be cancelled. If the
public hearing is cancelled, a notice of cancellation of the public
hearing will be published in the Federal Register.
Individuals who want to testify in person at the public hearing
must send an email to [email protected] to have your name added to
the building access list. The subject line of the email must contain
the regulation number REG-103529-23 and the language TESTIFY In Person.
For example, the subject line may say: Request to TESTIFY In Person at
Hearing for REG-103529-23.
Individuals who want to testify by telephone at the public hearing
must send an email to [email protected] to receive the telephone
number and access code for the hearing. The subject line of the email
must contain the regulation number REG-103529-23 and the language
TESTIFY Telephonically. For example, the subject line may say: Request
to TESTIFY Telephonically at Hearing for REG-103529-23.
Individuals who want to attend the public hearing in person without
testifying must also send an email to [email protected] to have
your name added to the building access list. The subject line of the
email must contain the regulation number REG-103529-23 and the language
ATTEND In Person. For example, the subject line may say: Request to
ATTEND Hearing In Person for REG-103529-23. Requests to attend the
public hearing must be received by 5:00 p.m. ET on September 23, 2024.
Individuals who want to attend the public hearing by telephone
without testifying must also send an email to [email protected] to
receive the telephone number and access code for the hearing. The
subject line of the email must contain the regulation number REG-
103529-23 and the language ATTEND Hearing Telephonically. For example,
the subject line may say: Request to ATTEND Hearing Telephonically for
[[Page 58650]]
REG-103529-23. Requests to attend the public hearing must be received
by 5:00 p.m. ET on September 23, 2024.
Hearings will be made accessible to people with disabilities. To
request special assistance during the hearing, please contact the
Publications and Regulations Branch of the Office of Associate Chief
Counsel (Procedure and Administration) by sending an email to
[email protected] (preferred) or by telephone at (202) 317-6901
(not a toll-free number) by September 20, 2024.
Statement of Availability of IRS Documents
IRS Revenue Procedures, Revenue Rulings notices, and other guidance
cited in this document are published in the Internal Revenue Bulletin
(or Cumulative Bulletin) and are available from the Superintendent of
Documents, U.S. Government Publishing Office, Washington, DC 20402, or
by visiting the IRS website at https://www.irs.gov.
Drafting Information
The principal authors of these proposed regulations are Jessica S.
Weinberger and Brandon M. Ford, of the Office of the Associate Chief
Counsel (Employee Benefits, Exempt Organizations, and Employment
Taxes). However, other personnel from the Treasury Department and the
IRS participated in the development of the proposed regulations.
List of Subjects in 26 CFR Part 1
Income taxes, Reporting and recordkeeping requirements.
Proposed Amendments to the Regulations
Accordingly, the Treasury Department and the IRS propose to amend
26 CFR part 1 as follows:
PART 1--INCOME TAXES
0
Paragraph 1. The authority citation for part 1 continues to read, in
part, as follows:
Authority: 26 U.S.C. 7805 * * *
* * * * *
0
Par. 2. Section 1.401(a)(9)-2, as revised in a final rule published
elsewhere in this issue of the Federal Register, effective September
17, 2024, is amended by adding paragraph (b)(2)(v) to read as follows:
Sec. 1.401(a)(9)-2 Distributions commencing during an employee's
lifetime.
* * * * *
(b) * * *
(2) * * *
(v) Employees born in 1959. In the case of an employee born in
1959, the applicable age is age 73.
* * * * *
0
Par. 3. Section 1.401(a)(9)-4, as revised in a final rule published
elsewhere in this issue of the Federal Register, effective September
17, 2024, is amended by adding a sentence to the end of paragraph
(e)(8) to read as follows:
Sec. 1.401(a)(9)-4 Determination of the designated beneficiary.
* * * * *
(e) * * *
(8) * * * However, if the surviving spouse dies after benefits are
considered to have commenced under Sec. 1.401(a)(9)-3(e)(3), then the
beneficiary of the spouse is not an eligible designated beneficiary.
* * * * *
0
Par. 4. Section 1.401(a)(9)-5, as revised in a final rule published
elsewhere in this issue of the Federal Register, effective September
17, 2024, is amended by:
0
a. Revising paragraph (a)(5)(iv)(A);
0
b. Revising paragraph (a)(5)(v); and
0
c. Adding paragraphs (g)(2)(iii) and (iv), and (g)(3)(ii).
The revision and additions read as follows:
Sec. 1.401(a)(9)-5 Required minimum distributions from defined
contribution plans.
(a) * * *
(5) * * *
(iv) * * *
(A) Adding the fair market value of the contract (determined in
accordance with paragraph (a)(5)(v) of this section) to the remaining
account balance determined under paragraph (b) of this section; and
* * * * *
(v) Rules of operation for aggregation option. For purposes of
applying the optional aggregation rule described in paragraph
(a)(5)(iv) of this section, the fair market value of the annuity
contract is determined as of December 31 of the calendar year preceding
the distribution calendar year. Beginning with the determination used
for the 2026 distribution calendar year, the applicable method set
forth in Sec. 1.408A-4, Q&A-14(b)(2) must be used for this purpose.
* * * * *
(g) * * *
(2) * * *
(iii) Distributions from designated Roth accounts. For distribution
calendar years up to and including the calendar year that includes the
employee's date of death, distributions from a designated Roth account
(as described in section 402A(b)(2)) are not taken into account for
purposes of determining whether this section is satisfied.
(iv) Corrective distributions that give rise to reduction or waiver
of section 4974 excise tax. A corrective distribution described in
section 4974(e) or Sec. 54.4974-1(g)(3)(iii) is not taken into account
for purposes of determining whether this section is satisfied for the
calendar year in which the distribution is made. Thus, for the year in
which the corrective distribution is made, the required minimum
distribution for that year must be made in addition to the corrective
distribution.
(3) * * *
(ii) Rules relating to election--(A) Employee dies before required
beginning date. If the employee dies before the employee's required
beginning date, Sec. 1.401(a)(9)-3(c)(4) applies to the designated
beneficiary (under which life expectancy payments will be made to the
employee's designated beneficiary), and the designated beneficiary is
the employee's surviving spouse who is eligible to make the election
described in paragraph (g)(3)(i) of this section, then the spouse is
treated as having made that election.
(B) Employee dies on or after required beginning date. If the
employee dies on or after the employee's required beginning date, the
spouse is not automatically treated as having made the election
described in paragraph (g)(3)(i) of this section. However, that
election may be a default election under the terms of the plan.
(C) Use of Uniform Lifetime Table. If the election described in
paragraph (g)(3)(i) of this section applies with respect to a surviving
spouse, then the applicable denominator for each distribution calendar
year beginning with the calendar year following the year of the
employee's death and up to and including the calendar year that
includes the surviving spouse's date of death is determined using the
Uniform Lifetime Table in Sec. 1.401(a)(9)-9(c) for the surviving
spouse's age as of the surviving spouse's birthday in the distribution
calendar year. However, if the employee died on or after the required
beginning date, then the applicable denominator for a distribution
calendar year is the greater of the applicable denominator determined
under the preceding sentence and the employee's remaining life
expectancy.
(D) Distribution after spouse's death. If the election described in
paragraph (g)(3)(i) of this section applies with respect to an employee
who dies on or after the required beginning date (or
[[Page 58651]]
whose surviving spouse dies after distributions are considered to have
begun to the spouse as determined under Sec. 1.401(a)(9)-3(e)(3)),
then--
(1) For calendar years following the calendar year that includes
the surviving spouse's date of death, the applicable denominator used
for determining the required minimum distribution for each distribution
calendar year is determined under the rules of paragraph (d)(3)(iv) of
this section, and
(2) A final distribution of the employee's entire interest must be
made by the end of the calendar year that includes the tenth
anniversary of the surviving spouse's death.
(E) Applicability dates for spousal election. The spousal election
described in paragraph (g)(3)(i) of this section applies only if the
first year for which annual required minimum distributions to the
surviving spouse must be made is 2024 or later. Thus, the election
described in paragraph (g)(3)(ii)(A) of this section (relating to
employees who die before the required beginning date) applies only if
the calendar year in which life expectancy payments must begin under
Sec. 1.401(a)(9)-3(d) is 2024 or later. Similarly, the election
described in paragraph (g)(3)(ii)(B) of this section (relating to an
employee who dies on or after the required beginning date) applies only
if the first year for which the surviving spouse must take annual
required minimum distributions under paragraph (d) of this section is
2024 or later (that is, if the employee died in 2023 or later).
0
Par. 5. Section 1.401(a)(9)-6, as revised in a final rule published
elsewhere in this issue of the Federal Register, effective September
17, 2024, is amended by adding paragraph (q)(3)(vii)(B) to read as
follows:
Sec. 1.401(a)(9)-6 Required minimum distributions for defined benefit
plans and annuity contracts.
* * * * *
(q) * * *
(3) * * *
(vii) * * *
(B) QDRO not required for certain plans. If the rules of section
414(p) and section 206(d)(3) of ERISA do not apply to a plan (for
example, a governmental plan described in section 414(d) of the Code),
then a divorce or separation instrument that satisfies the requirements
of paragraph (q)(3)(vii)(C) of this section may be used in lieu of a
qualified domestic relations order. For this purpose, a divorce or
separation instrument is--
(1) A decree of divorce or separate maintenance or a written
instrument incident to such a decree;
(2) A written separation agreement; or
(3) A decree (not described in paragraph (q)(3)(vii)(B)(1) of this
section) requiring an individual to make payments for the support or
maintenance of the individual's former spouse.
* * * * *
0
Par. 6. Section 1.401(a)(9)-8, as revised in a final rule published
elsewhere in this issue of the Federal Register, effective September
17, 2024, is amended by:
0
a. Revising the second sentence of paragraph (a)(1)(iii)(B);
0
b. Revising the first sentence of paragraph (a)(1)(iii)(C); and
0
c. Adding paragraph (a)(1)(iii)(D).
The revisions and addition read as follows:
Sec. 1.401(a)(9)-8 Special rules.
(a) * * *
(1) * * *
(iii) * * *
(B) * * * Except as provided in paragraph (a)(1)(iii)(D) of this
section, the preceding sentence applies only if the separate interests
are held by separate see-through trusts (in which case the rules of
Sec. Sec. 1.401(a)(9)-4(f) and 1.401(a)(9)-5 will apply separately to
each separate trust).
(C) * * * For purposes of paragraph (a)(1)(iii)(B) of this section,
a trust is immediately divided upon the death of the employee only if,
as of the date of death, the trust is terminated and there is no
discretion as to the extent to which the separate trusts (or the
beneficiaries described in paragraph (a)(1)(iii)(D) of this section)
will be entitled to receive post-death distributions attributable to
the employee's interest in the plan. * * *
(D) Outright distribution to trust beneficiary. The separate
interests of the beneficiaries in a see-through trust will not fail to
be eligible for the exception under paragraph (a)(1)(iii)(B) of this
section merely because, upon termination of the trust, a beneficiary's
separate interest in the trust is to be held directly by that
beneficiary rather than being held by a separate see-through trust.
* * * * *
0
Par. 7. In Sec. 1.401(a)(9)-9, revise and republish the table set
forth in paragraph (c) to read as follows:
Sec. 1.401(a)(9)-9 Life expectancy and Uniform Lifetime tables.
* * * * *
(c) * * *
Table 2 to Paragraph (c)
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Applicable
Age of employee denominator
------------------------------------------------------------------------
10.................................................. 88.2
11.................................................. 87.2
12.................................................. 86.2
13.................................................. 85.2
14.................................................. 84.2
15.................................................. 83.2
16.................................................. 82.2
17.................................................. 81.2
18.................................................. 80.2
19.................................................. 79.2
20.................................................. 78.2
21.................................................. 77.2
22.................................................. 76.2
23.................................................. 75.2
24.................................................. 74.2
25.................................................. 73.3
26.................................................. 72.3
27.................................................. 71.3
28.................................................. 70.3
29.................................................. 69.3
30.................................................. 68.3
31.................................................. 67.3
32.................................................. 66.3
33.................................................. 65.3
34.................................................. 64.3
35.................................................. 63.3
36.................................................. 62.3
37.................................................. 61.3
38.................................................. 60.3
39.................................................. 59.4
40.................................................. 58.4
41.................................................. 57.4
42.................................................. 56.4
43.................................................. 55.4
44.................................................. 54.4
45.................................................. 53.4
46.................................................. 52.4
47.................................................. 51.5
48.................................................. 50.5
49.................................................. 49.5
50.................................................. 48.5
51.................................................. 47.5
52.................................................. 46.5
53.................................................. 45.6
54.................................................. 44.6
55.................................................. 43.6
56.................................................. 42.6
57.................................................. 41.6
58.................................................. 40.7
59.................................................. 39.7
60.................................................. 38.7
61.................................................. 37.7
62.................................................. 36.8
63.................................................. 35.8
64.................................................. 34.9
65.................................................. 33.9
66.................................................. 33.0
67.................................................. 32.0
68.................................................. 31.1
69.................................................. 30.1
70.................................................. 29.2
71.................................................. 28.3
72.................................................. 27.4
73.................................................. 26.5
74.................................................. 25.5
75.................................................. 24.6
76.................................................. 23.7
77.................................................. 22.9
78.................................................. 22.0
79.................................................. 21.1
80.................................................. 20.2
[[Page 58652]]
81.................................................. 19.4
82.................................................. 18.5
83.................................................. 17.7
84.................................................. 16.8
85.................................................. 16.0
86.................................................. 15.2
87.................................................. 14.4
88.................................................. 13.7
89.................................................. 12.9
90.................................................. 12.2
91.................................................. 11.5
92.................................................. 10.8
93.................................................. 10.1
94.................................................. 9.5
95.................................................. 8.9
96.................................................. 8.4
97.................................................. 7.8
98.................................................. 7.3
99.................................................. 6.8
100................................................. 6.4
101................................................. 6.0
102................................................. 5.6
103................................................. 5.2
104................................................. 4.9
105................................................. 4.6
106................................................. 4.3
107................................................. 4.1
108................................................. 3.9
109................................................. 3.7
110................................................. 3.5
111................................................. 3.4
112................................................. 3.3
113................................................. 3.1
114................................................. 3.0
115................................................. 2.9
116................................................. 2.8
117................................................. 2.7
118................................................. 2.5
119................................................. 2.3
120 +............................................... 2.0
------------------------------------------------------------------------
* * * * *
0
Par. 8. Section 1.402(c)-2, as revised in a final rule published
elsewhere in this issue of the Federal Register, effective September
17, 2024, is amended by:
0
a. In the first sentence of paragraph (f)(1), removing ``paragraphs
(f)(2) and (3)'' and adding in its place ``paragraphs (f)(2) through
(4)'';
0
b. Redesignating paragraph (f)(3) as (f)(4) and adding new paragraph
(f)(3); and
0
c. Adding paragraph (j)(4)(vii).
The addition and revision read as follows:
Sec. 1.402(c)-2 Eligible rollover distributions.
* * * * *
(f) * * *
(3) Distributions from designated Roth accounts. If a distribution
is not taken into account for purposes of section 401(a)(9) under the
rule in Sec. 1.401(a)(9)-5(g)(2)(iii), then it is not treated as a
distribution that is a required minimum distribution for purposes of
this paragraph (f).
* * * * *
(j) * * *
(4) * * *
(vii) Example. (A) Facts. Employee A is a participant in Plan X,
sponsored by Employer M. A, who was born in 1957, died in 2024 (the
calendar year A would have reached age 67 and accordingly before A's
required beginning date), having named A's surviving spouse, B, who was
born in 1958, as the sole beneficiary. The applicable age for both A
and B is 73. In accordance with the terms of Plan X, B is subject to
the 10-year rule. B takes a $1,000 distribution in 2031 (the calendar
year in which B reaches age 73). B takes no further distributions until
taking a distribution of A's remaining interest in Plan X in 2033 (the
ninth calendar year following the year of A's death, when B is age 75
and A would have reached age 76). The account balance as of December
31, 2032, was $100,000, and the distribution of the remaining interest
to B equals $103,000. B would like to roll over the distribution to B's
own IRA to the extent the distribution does not constitute a required
minimum distribution.
(B) Catch-up of required minimum distributions required. Because
the distribution is made in a calendar year after B attained the
applicable age and B intends to roll over the distribution to B's own
IRA, this paragraph (j)(4) applies to determine the portion of the
distribution that is treated as a required minimum distribution. The
first applicable year (determined in accordance with paragraph
(j)(4)(iv) of this section) is 2031 (the calendar year in which B
reached age 73 and the seventh year after the year of A's death).
Pursuant to paragraph (j)(4)(ii) of this section, the portion of the
$103,000 distributed in 2033 that is not an eligible rollover
distribution because it is treated as a required minimum distribution
under section 401(a)(9), is the excess, if any, of the sum of the
hypothetical required minimum distributions, determined in accordance
with paragraph (j)(4)(iii) of this section for each calendar year
beginning with the first applicable year and ending in the year of
distribution over the sum of the actual distributions made in each
calendar year beginning with the first applicable year and ending in
the year before the year of the distribution.
(C) Calculation of hypothetical required minimum distribution.
Pursuant to paragraph (j)(4)(iii) of this section, the hypothetical
required minimum distribution for 2031 (the year in which B reaches age
73) is $3,773.58 ($100,000.00/26.5). For 2032 (the year in which B
reaches age 74), the adjusted account balance is calculated by reducing
the $100,000.00 account balance by the excess of the hypothetical
required minimum distribution for the first applicable year over the
actual distributions made to the surviving spouse in that calendar
year, which is $2,773.58 ($3,773.58-$1,000.00). In this case, for the
second determination year, the adjusted account balance is $97,226.42
($100,000.00-$2,773.58) and the hypothetical required minimum
distribution for 2032 is $3,812.80 ($97,226.42/25.5). For 2033 (the
year in which B reaches age 75), the adjusted account balance is
calculated by reducing the $100,000.00 account balance by the excess of
the sum of the hypothetical required minimum distributions for
determination years preceding 2033 of $7,586.38 ($3,773.58 + $3,812.80)
over the actual distributions made to the surviving spouse during those
calendar years ($1,000.00), which is $6,586.38 ($7,586.38-$1,000.00).
Thus, the adjusted account balance for 2033 is $93,413.62 ($100,000.00-
$6,586.38) and the hypothetical required minimum distribution for 2033
is $3,797.30 ($93,413.62/24.6). The portion of the $103,000
distribution of the employee's remaining interest that is treated as a
required minimum distribution, and thus not an eligible rollover
distribution, is the excess of the sum of the hypothetical required
minimum distributions for each determination year in the catch-up
period, which is $11,383.68 ($3,773.58 + $3,812.80 + $3,797.30), over
the actual distributions made during the calendar years preceding 2033
($1,000.00), which is $10,383.68 ($11,383.68-$1,000.00). Accordingly,
the portion of the $103,000 distribution that is treated as a required
minimum distribution is $10,383.68.
(D) Calculation of eligible rollover distribution. Pursuant to
paragraph (j)(4)(vi) of this section, the plan administrator may assume
that, for purposes of section 402(f)(2)(A), a portion of the $103,000
distribution equal to $10,383.68 is not an eligible rollover
distribution. However, B could choose to roll over the entire $103,000
distribution to an IRA, provided the IRA is established as a
beneficiary IRA, and not as B's own IRA. In that case, in accordance
with Sec. 1.408-8(d)(2)(i), the IRA would be subject to the 10-year
rule that applied to the spouse under the plan (so that a distribution
of the
[[Page 58653]]
employee's entire interest would be required by 2034).
* * * * *
0
Par. 9. Section 1.408-8, as revised in a final rule published elsewhere
in this issue of the Federal Register, effective September 17, 2024, is
amended as follows:
0
a. Redesignate paragraph (g)(2)(vii) as paragraph (g)(2)(viii); and
0
b. Add new paragraph (g)(2)(vii).
The addition reads as follows:
Sec. 1.408-8 Distribution requirements for individual retirement
plans.
* * * * *
(g) * * *
(2) * * *
(vii) Corrective distributions that give rise to a reduction or
waiver of the section 4974 excise tax, as described in Sec.
1.401(a)(9)-5(g)(2)(iv).
* * * * *
Douglas W. O'Donnell,
Deputy Commissioner.
[FR Doc. 2024-14543 Filed 7-18-24; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4830-01-P