Tuesday, May 30, 2017

What is a Section 79 Plan?

INTRODUCTION
What is a Section 79 Plan?
A Section 79 Plan is offered under Section 79 of the Internal Revenue Code. A group-term life insurance plan which otherwise qualifies under Section 79 of the Internal Revenue Code may provide term life insurance and Permanent Benefits. Premiums paid by an employer for life insurance on behalf of an employee are deductible by the employer (provided the employer is not directly or indirectly a beneficiary of the policy), and such amounts generally constitute additional compensation to the employee which must be reported.
Under Code Section 79, a corporation can provide up to $50,000 of group-term life insurance for an employee on a tax deductible basis with no increase in the employee’s gross income. Any amount of group-term life insurance in excess of $50,000 is taxable to the employee and must be reported by the employer on the employee’s W-2 as “other compensation” as described under Code Section 6052. Any life insurance, which has a cash value, will also result in additional taxable income and must be reportedby the employer on the employee’s W-2.
Coverage must be provided under a formula based on factors such as age, years of service, compensation, or position. The amount of insurance provided an employee under such a schedule must, however, be computed under a formula which precludes individual selection.
Important: *Owner Participation
In accordance with the Internal Revenue Code, Section 79 Plan states that only “employees” may participate. The term “employees” does not include self-employed individuals or 2% shareholders of an S Corporation, LLC taxed as a Partnership or a Partnership. The Internal Revenue Service rules governing owner participation in your Section 79 Plan are as follows:
Type of Business Participation Rules
C Corporation/LLC taxed as a C Corporation: Owners, who are employees, who meet the eligibility requirements of the Plan may participate
S Corporation/Partnerships/LLP: Any employee who owns more than 2% of the stock or possesses more than 2% of the total combined voting power of all the stock cannot participate.**
Sole Proprietor: A sole proprietor cannot participate.
** Remember that, for purposes of determining ownership, the stock ownership/attribution rules provide that an individual is considered as owning the stock owned, directly or indirectly, by his or her spouse (other than a spouse who is legally separated from the individual under decree of divorce or separate maintenance), children, grandchildren, and parents.
DISCRIMINATION
Corporations with 10 or more employees
Must cover at least 10 employees
Group must be comprised of 85% non-key employees or cover 70% of all full time
employees
Death benefit must be based on a formula that precludes individual selection and on
something related to employment (years of service, income, job description, location,
etc.)
The penalty for being a discriminatory plan is the loss of the exclusion from income of
the cost for the first $50,000 of term insurance for key employees
Corporations with fewer than 10 employees
Coverage must be offered to all full time employees with 6 months or more of service
Coverage must be provided as a multiple of income or a flat death benefit amount, or
coverage brackets in which there is no more than 2 ½ times between coverage brackets
and 10x between top to bottom
Underwriting must be based on a non-medical questionnaire only
A note about Controlled Groups and Affiliated Service Groups
Two or more employers must be included under one Section 79 Plan if they are members of a
“controlled group” or an “affiliated service group,” as defined in the Internal Revenue Code and
related regulations. A simplified description of a controlled group of corporations is as follows:
A “parent-subsidiary” controlled group exists where there are one or more chains of subsidiary
corporations connected through ownership with a common parent and (a) 80% or more (by value
or voting power) of each corporation is owned (both directly and through option rights) by one or
more of the other corporations; and (b) the common parent owns (both directly and through
option rights) at least 80% (by value or voting power) of at least one of the other corporations. A
“brother-sister” controlled group exists where five or fewer persons own stock possessing; (a)
80% or more (by value or voting power) of each corporation; and (b) more than 50% (by value
or voting power) of each corporation when taking into account each stockholder’s interest only
to the extent that he has identical interests in each corporation. (A stockholder’s interest is only
considered for purposes of the 80% test if he owns at least some interest in each corporation in
the group.) Controlled groups and affiliated service groups can also exist among other types of
businesses, such as partnerships and sole proprietorships, in which case the determination is
made on the basis of other types of ownership interests

No comments:

Post a Comment