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1
Definitions You Need To Know
Certain terms used in this publication are defined below. The same term used in another
publication may have a slightly different meaning.
Annual additions. Annual additions are the total of all your contributions in a
year, employee contributions (not including rollovers), and forfeitures allocated to a
participant's account.
Annual benefits. Annual benefits are the benefits to be paid yearly in the form
of a straight life annuity (with no extra benefits) under a plan to which employees do not
contribute and under which no rollover contributions are made.
Business. A business is an activity in which a profit motive is present and
economic activity is involved. Service as a newspaper carrier under age 18 is not a
business, but service as a newspaper dealer is. Service as a sharecropper under an
owner-tenant arrangement is a business. Service as a public official is not.
Common-law employee. A common-law employee is any individual who, under common
law, would have the status of an employee. A leased employee can also be a common-law
employee.
A common-law employee is a person who performs services for an employer who has the
right to control and direct the results of the work and the way in which it is done. For
example, the employer:
- Provides the employee's tools, materials, and workplace, and
- Can fire the employee.
Common-law employees are not self-employed and cannot set up retirement plans for
income from their work, even if that income is self-employment income for social security
tax purposes. For example, common-law employees who are ministers, members of religious
orders, full-time insurance salespeople, and U.S. citizens employed in the United States
by foreign governments cannot set up retirement plans for their earnings from those
employments, even though their earnings are treated as self-employment income.
However, a common-law employee can be self-employed as well. For example, an attorney
can be a corporate common-law employee during regular working hours and also practice law
in the evening as a self-employed person. In another example, a minister employed by a
congregation for a salary is a common-law employee even though the salary is treated as
self-employment income for social security tax purposes. However, fees reported on
Schedule C (Form 1040), Profit or Loss From Business, for performing marriages,
baptisms, and other personal services are self-employment earnings for qualified plan
purposes
Compensation. Compensation for plan allocations is the pay a participant
received from you for personal services for a year. You can generally define compensation
as including all the following payments.
- Wages and salaries.
- Fees for professional services.
- Other amounts received (cash or noncash) for personal services actually rendered by an
employee, including, but not limited to, the following items.
- Commissions and tips.
- Fringe benefits.
- Bonuses.
For a self-employed individual, compensation means the earned income, discussed later,
of that individual.
Compensation also includes amounts deferred in the following employee benefit plans,
unless you choose not to include any amount contributed under a salary reduction agreement
that is not included in the gross income of the employee. These amounts are elective
deferrals.
- Qualified cash or deferred arrangement (section 401(k) plan).
- Salary reduction agreement to contribute to a tax-sheltered annuity (section 403(b)
plan), a SIMPLE IRA plan, or a SARSEP.
- Section 457 nonqualified deferred compensation plan.
- Section 125 cafeteria plan.
The limit on elective deferrals is discussed in chapter 2 under Salary Reduction
Simplified Employee Pension (SARSEP) and in chapter 4.
Other options. In figuring the compensation of a participant, you can
treat any of the following amounts as the employee's compensation.
- The employee's wages as defined for income tax withholding purposes.
- The employee's wages you report in box 1 of Form W-2, Wage and Tax Statement.
- The employee's social security wages (including elective deferrals).
Compensation generally cannot include either of the following items.
- Reimbursements or other expense allowances (unless paid under a nonaccountable plan).
- Deferred compensation (either amounts going in or amounts coming out) other than certain
elective deferrals unless you choose not to include those elective deferrals in
compensation.
Contribution. A contribution is an amount you pay into a plan for all those
participating in the plan, including self-employed individuals. Limits apply to how much,
under the contribution formula of the plan, can be contributed each year for a
participant.
Deduction. A deduction is the plan contributions you can subtract from gross
income on your federal income tax return. Limits apply to the amount deductible.
Earned income. Earned income is net earnings from self-employment, discussed
later, from a business in which your services materially helped to produce the income.
You can also have earned income from property your personal efforts helped create, such
as royalties from your books or inventions. Earned income includes net earnings from
selling or otherwise disposing of the property, but it does not include capital gains. It
includes income from licensing the use of property other than goodwill.
If you have more than one business, but only one has a retirement plan, only the earned
income from that business is considered for that plan.
Employer. An employer is generally any person for whom an individual performs or
did perform any service, of whatever nature, as an employee. A sole proprietor is treated
as his or her own employer for retirement plan purposes. However, a partner is not an
employer for retirement plan purposes. The partnership is treated as the employer of each
partner.
Highly compensated employee. A highly compensated employee is an individual who:
- Owned more than 5% of the capital or profits in your business at any time during the
year or the preceding year, or
- For the preceding year, received compensation from you of more than $85,000 and, if you
so choose, was in the top 20% of employees when ranked by compensation.
Leased employee. A leased employee who is not your common-law employee must
generally be treated as your employee for retirement plan purposes if he or she does all
the following.
- Provides services to you under an agreement between you and a leasing organization.
- Has performed services for you (or for you and related persons) substantially full time
for at least 1 year.
- Performs services under your primary direction or control.
Exception. A leased employee is not treated as your employee if all the
following conditions are met.
- Leased employees are not more than 20% of your non-highly compensated work force.
- The employee is covered by the leasing organization under its qualified pension plan.
- The leasing organization's plan is a money purchase pension plan that has all the
following provisions.
- Immediate participation.
- Full and immediate vesting.
- A nonintegrated employer contribution rate of at least 10% of compensation for each
participant.
However, if the leased employee is your common-law employee, that employee will be your
employee for all purposes, regardless of any pension plan of the leasing organization.
Net earnings from self-employment. For SEP and qualified plans, net earnings
from self-employment is your gross income from your trade or business (provided your
personal services are a material income-producing factor) minus allowable business
deductions. Allowable deductions include contributions to SEP and qualified plans for
common-law employees and the deduction allowed for one-half of your self-employment tax.
Net earnings from self-employment do not include items excluded from gross income (or
their related deductions) other than foreign earned income and foreign housing cost
amounts.
For the deduction limits, earned income is net earnings for personal services actually
rendered to the business. You take into account the income tax deduction for one-half of
self-employment tax and the deduction for contributions to the plan made on your behalf
when figuring net earnings.
Net earnings include a partner's distributive share of partnership income or loss
(other than separately stated items, such as capital gains and losses). It does not
include income passed through to shareholders of S corporations. Guaranteed payments to
limited partners are net earnings from self-employment if they are paid for services to or
for the partnership. Distributions of other income or loss to limited partners are not net
earnings from self-employment.
For SIMPLE plans, net earnings from self-employment is the amount on line 4 of Short
Schedule SE (Form 1040), Self-Employment Tax, before subtracting any contributions
made to the SIMPLE IRA plan for yourself.
Participant. A participant is an eligible employee who is covered by your
retirement plan. See the discussions of the different types of plans for the definition of
an employee eligible to participate in each type of plan.
Partner. A partner is an individual who shares ownership of an unincorporated
trade or business with one or more persons. For retirement plans, a partner is treated as
an employee of the partnership.
Self-employed individual. An individual in business for himself or herself is
self-employed. Sole proprietors and partners are self-employed. Self-employment can
include part-time work.
Not everyone who has net earnings from self-employment for social security tax purposes
is self-employed for qualified plan purposes. See Common-law employee, earlier.
Also see Net earnings from self-employment.
In addition, certain fishermen may be considered self-employed for setting up a
qualified plan. See Publication 595, Tax Highlights for
Commercial Fishermen, for the special rules used to determine whether fishermen are
self-employed.
Sole proprietor. A sole proprietor is an individual who owns an unincorporated
business by himself or herself. For retirement plans, a sole proprietor is treated as both
an employer and an employee. |