An employee comes to you after taking out a loan against her 401(k). She explains that it has been several months and no repayments are being taken out of her pay. What needs to be done? What should you do to ensure proper loan procedures are being followed? How do you find and fix any other loan administration errors that may have already occurred?
Start by reviewing and following the loan rules outlined in the plan document and any loan policies or procedures established for the plan. In addition, a participant loan must meet the following rules under the Internal Revenue Code and ERISA or the loan will be treated as a taxable distribution or a violation of ERISA:
Note: A plan may suspend loan payments for more than one year for an employee performing military service. In this case, the employee must repay the loan within 5 years from the date of the loan, plus the period of military service. |
Click here for more information regarding plan loans.
Review the outstanding loans, loan agreements, and loan repayments to:
~Determine whether there are written loan agreements for all outstanding loans.
~Review the terms of each loan agreement to ensure that the loan meets the following rules:
~Ensure that loan payments are timely made per the loan terms.
Corrective action:
It’s important that plans have a system in place to ensure that the terms of a participant loan and its repayments follow the law so the loan isn’t treated as a taxable distribution or a violation of ERISA. Generally, once a loan violates a rule, it becomes a taxable distribution, unless the plan administrator can correct the violation:
~The plan administrator may allow for a “cure period” that would allow a participant to make up for a missed payment. The cure period can’t go beyond the end of the quarter following the quarter in which the missed payment was due.
~If the loan violated the plan document terms or the legal requirements for loans, the plan sponsor has two choices. It may be able:
-the employer’s action caused the violation of the loan rules, and
-correction is completed within the maximum time for the loan, usually 5 years.
~If the loan error violates ERISA, proof of payment and a copy of the VCP Compliance Statement must be filed with the DOL through the Voluntary Fiduciary Correction Program (VFCP).
Loan that exceeds the dollar limit: The participant must repay the excess loan amount and, if needed, amortize the remaining principal balance as of the repayment date over the original loan’s remaining period. The corrective payment for the excess loan amount depends on the:
Three alternative methods that may be used to determine the allocation of prior repayments toward the excess loan amount and the corrective payment required to repay the excess loan amount are:
Loan that exceeds the maximum loan period: The outstanding amount of the loan is reamortized over the maximum remaining period allowed by law (generally 5 years, unless a longer term is provided under the plan for a loan to purchase the participant’s main home) from the original loan date.
Loan that’s in default (after the passage of the “cure period”) because of the failure to make timely payments: The participant must either:
Corrective action (through examples):
AZCorp 401(k) Plan maintains a participant loan program. The plan has 50 participants, three of whom had participant loans. At the end of 2012, AZCorp conducted a year-end review of its loan program and found the issues below. The errors were corrected on February 1, 2013, and AZCorp filed a VCP application with the IRS and a VFCP application with the DOL.
Bob – Loan amount in excess of the $50,000 limit – Bob received a plan loan on May 1, 2012. The loan was for $60,000 over a 5-year term, amortized monthly using a reasonable interest rate. Bob timely made the required payments. The loan amount is less than 50% of Bob’s vested account balance. However, the loan amount exceeds the maximum limit of $50,000.
Bob’s Correction – AZCorp corrected this mistake by requiring a corrective repayment to the plan because of the $10,000 loan excess, according to Method 3, above. Since Bob has already repaid some of the loan, these repaid amounts may be considered in determining the amount of the required corrective repayment. AZCorp applied Bob’s prior repayments on a pro-rata basis between the $10,000 loan excess and the $50,000 maximum loan amount. Therefore, Bob’s corrective repayment equaled the balance remaining on the $10,000 loan excess as of February 1, 2013, the date of correction.
Terri – Loan term in excess of the 5-year limit – Terri received a loan of $10,000, dated April 1, 2012, to be paid back over a six-year period. Payments are timely and the interest rate is reasonable. The loan term exceeds the maximum 5-year repayment period.
Terri’s Correction – AZCorp is correcting this mistake by reamortizing the loan balance over the maximum remaining period (5 years) from the original loan date. On February 1, 2013, AZCorp reamortized the loan balance for Terri so that it will be fully repaid by April 1, 2017 (5 years from the date of the original loan).
Dean – Loan payments not made – Dean borrowed $10,000, dated March 1, 2012, over a 5-year period. Because of a payroll error, AZCorp failed to withhold the required loan repayments from Dean’s pay since August 1, 2012. The loan amount is less than 50% of Dean’s vested account balance and the interest rate is reasonable.
Dean’s Correction – The loan went into default as of December 31, 2012, on the expiration of the plan’s stated cure period. AZCorp determined it was at fault because it failed to collect loan repayments. AZCorp corrected the mistake by requiring Dean to make a lump sum repayment equal to the additional interest accrued on the loan and by reamortizing the outstanding balance over the payroll periods remaining in the 5-year loan period.
Click here for a detailed description of the following qualified plan correction programs available under the IRS Employee Plans Compliance Resolution System (EPCRS):
Self-Correction Program (SCP):
The types of plan loan errors described above can’t be corrected under SCP. AZCorp must correct under VCP.
Voluntary Correction Program (VCP):
AZCorp may file a VCP submission to correct the loan errors described above. The fee for the VCP submission is generally based on the number of plan participants. However, EPCRS provides for a 50% fee reduction when the loan failure is the only failure of the submission and no more than one quarter of the participants are affected by participant loan errors. For the corrective actions described above, because no more than one quarter of AZCorp’s 50 employees were affected by the mistake, the VCP fee is $500 ($1,000 x 50%).
Audit Closing Agreement Program (Audit CAP):
If the loan errors described above were discovered by the IRS during audit, the corrective actions under Audit CAP would still be the same. However, Employer AZCorp and the IRS would enter into a closing agreement outlining the corrective action and negotiate a sanction based on the maximum payment amount.
Note: EPCRS has special correction guidance for employers who permit plan loans to employees under a plan that does not provide for plan loans. |
Click here for information regarding the Department of Labor (DOL) Voluntary Fiduciary Correction Program (VFCP) which can be used to address the fiduciary issues related to any loan error that violates ERISA. To complete a VFCP application, the plan sponsor must provide proof of payment and a copy of the VCP compliance statement issued by the IRS regarding the loan error correction.
Develop loan procedures and forms, including:
401(k) Plan Fix-It Guide
401(k) Plan Overview
EPCRS Overview
401(k) Plan Fix-It Guide (pdf)
401(k) Plan Checklist
Additional Resources