Read this if you are a plan sponsor of employee benefit plans.
This article is the tenth in a series to help employee benefit plan fiduciaries better understand their responsibilities and manage the risks of non-compliance with Employee Retirement Income Security Act (ERISA) requirements. You can read the previous articles here.
ERISA bonding requirements
Generally, every fiduciary of a plan and every person who handles funds or other property of the plan must be bonded. ERISA's bonding requirements are intended to protect employee benefit plans from risk of loss due to fraud or dishonesty on the part of persons who handle plan funds or other property. ERISA refers to persons who handle funds or other property of an employee benefit plan as plan officials. A plan official must be bonded for at least 10% of the amount of funds he or she handles, subject to a minimum bond amount of $1,000 per plan with respect to which the plan official has handling functions. In most instances, the maximum bond amount that can be required under ERISA with respect to any one plan official is $500,000 per plan. If the plan holds employer securities, the maximum required bond amount increases to $1,000,000. The bond must be fixed or estimated at the beginning of the plan's reporting year; that is, as soon after the date when such year begins as the necessary information from the preceding reporting year can practicably be ascertained. The amount of the bond must be based on the highest amount of funds handled by the person in the preceding plan year. Bonds must be placed with a surety or reinsurer that is named on the Department of the Treasury's Listing of Approved Sureties, Department Circular 570.
The US Department of Labor Field Assistance Bulletin No. 2008-04 provides answers to a number of questions that have been raised concerning the bonding rules.
Compliance testing
The Internal Revenue Code requires retirement plans to undergo certain non-discrimination and compliance testing on an annual basis to ensure contributions or benefits do not discriminate in favor of highly compensated employees and contributions are not in excess of amounts prescribed by the Internal Revenue Service (IRS).
The tests the plan should perform varies based on the plan’s provisions. However, some of the more common tests for defined contribution plans are:
Actual Deferral Percentage (ADP) Test: This test ensures employee salary deferrals made to the plan do not disproportionately benefit highly compensated employees (HCEs). If this test is failed, the most common correction method is distributing excess contributions to HCEs in the amount necessary to make the test pass. Corrections should be made no later than two-and-a-half months following the close of the plan year to avoid a 10% excise tax. The final deadline is 12 months following the close of the plan year.
Actual Contribution Percentage (ACP) Test: This test ensures the matching and voluntary employer contributions made to the plan do not disproportionately benefit HCEs. If this test is failed, the most common correction method is removing excess contributions from HCE’s accounts in the amount necessary to make the test pass. These excess contributions do not leave the plan. Rather, they are transferred into the forfeiture account of the plan, typically to be used to pay plan expenses or fund future employer contributions. Corrections should be made no later than two-and-a-half months following the close of the plan year to avoid a 10% excise tax. The final deadline is 12 months following the close of the plan year.
416 Top Heavy Test: This test ensures key employees do not represent a disproportionate percentage of plan assets. If this test is failed, the most common correction method is to allocate a 3% top heavy minimum contribution to non-key participants (any participant that is not a key employee). Other employer contributions can be used to offset the 3% contribution. Corrections should be made no later than 12 months following the close of the plan year in which the plan is top heavy.
The ADP, ACP, and Top Heavy Tests can be forgone if the plan qualifies for safe harbor status. Also, 403(b) plans are not required to perform the ADP nor the top-heavy test.
410(b) Minimum Coverage Test: This test ensures each contribution made to the plan benefits a sufficient percentage of non-HCEs. This test is performed for each different contribution type offered within the plan. If this test is failed, the most common correction method is to retroactively amend the plan to benefit more non-HCEs until the test passes. Corrections should be made no later than nine-and-a-half months following the close of the plan year in which the failure occurred.
402(g) Elective Deferral Limit: Participants are limited in the amount of elective deferrals they may contribute to qualified plans and thus exclude from taxable income each calendar year. If a participant contributes in excess of this limit, the most common correction method is to distribute the excess contribution amount. In 2021, the 402(g) Elective Deferral Limit is $19,500. Corrections should be made no later than April 15th following the close of the calendar year during which the excess deferral was made.
415(c) Annual Addition Limit: Participants are also limited in the amount of total contributions that can be credited to their account each limitation year (usually the plan year). If a participant receives total contributions in excess of this limit, the most common correction method is to first distribute elective contributions in excess of the limit. If an excess still remains, employer contributions should then be transferred to the plan’s forfeiture account. In 2021, the 415(c) Annual Addition Limit is $58,000. Corrections should be made no later than nine-and-a-half months following the close of the limitation year in which the failure occurred.
ERISA bonding requirements and compliance testing, although not necessarily related, are two of the compliance matters we, as auditors, commonly look at during our audits. For ERISA bonding requirements, we review to make sure the plan had adequate coverage and the bond is with an approved surety. For compliance testing, we look to make sure the testing has been performed and failed tests, if any, have been appropriately and timely resolved. Plan fiduciaries are not alone in addressing these matters—insurance carriers can help guide plan management in finding a fidelity bond appropriate for their plan and third-party administrators will typically perform compliance testing on behalf of the plan and guide plan management through any necessary corrections. However, it is still important for plan fiduciaries to be aware of the overall purpose of the bonding requirements and the compliance tests and be familiar with the correction methods and deadlines.
If you would like more information, or have specific questions about your specific situation, please contact our Employee Benefits Audit team.