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Home > Hiring Employees

Hiring Employees

Employee Pension/Retirement Plans

Retirement plans are savings plans that offer you tax advantages to set aside money for your and your employees' retirement.

SEP, SIMPLE and qualified plans offer you and your employees a tax favored way to save for retirement. You can deduct contributions you make to the plan for you and your employees. The contributions and earnings are generally tax free until you or your employees receive distributions from the plan in later years.

In general, individuals who are employed can also set up and contribute to individual retirement arrangements (IRAs).

All retirement plans have important tax, business and other implications for employers and employees. Therefore, you may want to discuss any retirement savings plan with a tax or financial advisor.

Visit the IRS web site for more information on retirement plans

Simplified Employee Pension (SEP)

A Simplified Employee Pension (SEP) is a written plan that allows you to make contributions toward your own and your employees' retirement without getting involved in a more complex qualified plan. Under a SEP, you make the contributions to an individual retirement arrangement (called a SEP-IRA) set up for each eligible employee. SEP-IRAs are owned and controlled by the employee, and you make contributions to the financial institution where the SEP-IRA is maintained. You generally do not have to file annual retirement plan information reports with the government.

Under a SEP, you must contribute a uniform percentage of pay to each eligible employee's SEP-IRA. You are not locked into making contributions every year. You can decide how much to put into a SEP each year - offering you some flexibility when business conditions vary. Employer contributions are limited to the lesser of 15 percent of an employee's annual salary or $25,500. (Note: this amount is indexed for inflation and will vary).

You can set up a SEP by completing an IRS model SEP using Form 5305-SEP. See the instructions to the form for exceptions. No IRS approval is required. Keep the original form. Follow its terms and instructions. Do not file it with the IRS. You must also set up a SEP-IRA for each eligible employee. SEP-IRAs can be set up with banks, insurance companies, or other qualified financial institutions. You send SEP contributions to the financial institution where the SEP-IRA is maintained.

You can set up a SEP for a year as late as the due date (including extensions of your income tax return for that year.

Contribution limits.
Deduction limits.
Reporting SEP Contributions of Form W-2.

Form 5305-SEP

SIMPLE Plan

A Savings Incentive Match Plan for Employees (SIMPLE) allows employees to contribute a percentage of their salary each pay check. Under a SIMPLE, employees can set aside up to $6,000 each year by payroll deduction. Employers can either match employee contributions dollar for dollar - up to 3 percent of an employee's wage - or make a fixed contribution of 2 percent of pay for all eligible employees instead of a matching contribution.

You can set up a SIMPLE only if you had 100 or fewer employees who earned $5,000 or more in compensation during the preceding year. You cannot sponsor a SIMPLE if you currently sponsor another plan.

You can use 5304-SIMPLE or Form 5305-SIMPLE to set up a SIMPLE. Each form is a model SIMPLE document. Which form you use depends on whether you select the financial institution or your employees select the financial institution that will receive the contributions. Use Form 5304-SIMPLE if you allow each plan participant to select the financial institution for receiving his or her SIMPLE contributions. Use Form 5305-SIMPLE if you require that all contributions under the SIMPLE be deposited initially at a designated financial institution.

A SIMPLE is adopted when you have completed all appropriate boxes and blanks on the form and you have signed it. No IRS approval is required. Keep the original form. Follow its terms and instructions. Do not file it with the IRS. You generally do not have to file annual retirement plan information reports with the government.

A SIMPLE IRA must be set up for each eligible employee. A SIMPLE IRA is the individual retirement account or annuity into which the SIMPLE contributions are deposited. Form 5305-S and Form 5305-SA are model trust and custodial account documents that the participant and the trustee (or custodian) can use to set up a SIMPLE IRA.

Definitions
Contribution Limits

Qualified Plans (Keogh Plans)
Qualified plans offer higher contribution limits and greater flexibility than SEPs and SIMPLEs. However, they are also more complex and difficult to operate. They generally involve an annual information reporting requirement. See Form 5500 and Form 5500-EZ. Although advance IRS approval is not required, you can apply for approval by paying a fee and requesting a determination letter. See Revenue Procedure 2001-6 and Form 5300 or Form 5307.

There are two basic kinds of qualified plans -- defined contribution plans and defined benefit plans -- and different rules apply to each. A defined contribution plan provides an individual account for each participant in the plan. It provides benefits to a participant largely based on the amount contributed to that participant's account. Benefits are also affected by any income, expenses, gains, losses, and forfeitures of other accounts that may be allocated to an account.

Profit-sharing plans and money purchase pension plans are types of defined contribution plans. A profit-sharing plan is a plan for sharing your business profits with your employees. Contributions to a money purchase pension plan are fixed and not based upon your business profits.

In a profit-sharing plan, the contribution formula can be flexible and you do not have to make contributions out of net profits to have a profit-sharing plan. A profit-sharing plan can also contain a cash or deferred arrangement - also known as a 401(k) plan - a plan that allows employees to contribute a percentage of their salary each pay check. You can contribute to your employee's 401(k) account by matching the amount of pay that your employees have deferred into the 401(k) plan, usually up to a percentage of the employee's pay.

Defined benefit plans promise a specified benefit at retirement, for example, $100 a month at retirement. The amount of the benefit is often based on a set percentage of pay multiplied by the number of years the employee worked for the employer offering the plan. Employer contributions must be sufficient to fund the promised benefit. Actuarial assumptions and computations are required to figure these contributions. Generally, you will need continuing professional help to have a defined benefit plan.

Most qualified plans follow a standard form of plan (a master or prototype plan) approved by the IRS. Master or prototype plans are made available by plan providers for adoption by employers (including self-employed individuals). Under a master plan, a single trust or custodial account is established, as part of the plan, for the joint use of all adopting employers. Under a prototype plan, a separate trust or custodial account is established for each employer. A master or prototype plan can generally be obtained from one of the following organizations: banks (including some savings and loan associations and federally insured credit unions), trade or professional organizations, insurance companies and mutual funds.

Kinds of Qualified Plans
Plan Approval
Deduction Limits

Individual Retirement Arrangements
An individual retirement account (IRA) is a personal savings plan that allows you set aside money for your retirement. Even if you do not want to adopt a retirement plan, you can allow your employees to save for retirement through payroll deduction, providing a simple and direct way for employees to contribute to an IRA. You do not have to set up IRAs for your employees or make contributions for them. There are various tax advantages to IRAs depending on the type of IRA and the circumstances. For more information on IRAs, see Publication 590.

Which Plan is Right for Your Business?

There are many factors to consider when deciding which plan best fits your business. When determining which plan is right for you, consult a financial advisor. Also, see Select a Retirement Plan web site for additional information.

Important References 

Publication 535                    Business Expenses
Form 5300
Form 5307
Form 5305-S
Form 5305-SA
Form 5304-SIMPLE
Form 5305-SIMPLE
Form 5500
Form 5500-EZ
Form 5305-SEP                   Simplified Employee Pension-Individual Retirement Accounts Contribution Agreement
Form 1040 Schedule C       Profit or Loss From Business
Form 1040 Schedule F       Profit or Loss From Farming
Form 1065                            U.S. Partnership Tax Return
Publication 560                    Retirement Plans for the Self-Employed
Publication 590                    Individual Retirement Arrangements