SECURE Act 2.0 Brings More Significant Changes to the Retirement Planning Landscape. Here’s What You Need to Know.
When the Setting Every Community Up for Retirement Enhancement (SECURE) Act was signed into law at the end of 2019, it brought about the biggest changes in retirement planning law since 2006. The act significantly altered age thresholds, required minimum distributions (RMD), and lifetime income options flowing from retirement accounts. Given the SECURE Act’s substantive impact on existing IRAs and other retirement accounts, countless Americans had to review their existing plans to avoid inadvertent and potentially catastrophic repercussions or the continuation of plans that no longer facilitated client objectives.
Here we go again.
On March 29, 2022, in an overwhelmingly bipartisan 414 to 5 vote, the U.S. House of Representatives passed the Securing a Strong Retirement Act of 2022 (often referred to as “SECURE 2.0”). This supplement to and expansion of the original SECURE Act is ultimately expected to pass the Senate in some form and will likely be signed into law by President Biden when it hits his desk.
As with its predecessor, SECURE Act 2.0, as passed by the House, contains significant changes that will impact virtually every American planning for retirement. Here are some of the act’s more significant alterations to the retirement savings and estate planning landscape.
Required Minimum Distributions
The original SECURE Act raised the age at which the owners of traditional (non-Roth) IRAs and employer-sponsored defined contribution plans had to start taking their required minimum distributions from 70 ½ to 72. SECURE Act 2.0 further increases the RMD starting age as follows:
- Age 73 starting in 2023 for individuals who turn 72 after Dec. 31, 2022, and age 73 before Jan. 1, 2030.
- Age 74 beginning in 2030 for individuals who turn 73 after Dec. 31, 2029, and age 74 before Jan. 1, 2033.
- Age 75 starting in 2033 for individuals who turn 74 after Dec. 31, 2032.
Additionally, the House version of SECURE Act 2.0 would reduce the penalty for failure to take RMDs from a qualified plan from 50% to 25% for tax years beginning after December 31, 2021.
Catch-Up Contributions
Since 2001, individuals age 50 and older have been allowed to make “catch-up contributions” to their 401(k)s and IRAs to encourage older workers to set aside more money for retirement. Currently, anyone age 50 or over can make additional catch-up contributions of $6,500 in 2021 and 2022.
Under SECURE Act 2.0, starting in 2024, participants at ages 62, 63, and 64 could contribute up to $10,000 (indexed for cost of living) as catch-up contributions. And beginning in 2023, all catch-up contributions (other than those made to SEPs or simple IRAs) must be made to Roth accounts.
Automatic Enrollment in New 401(k)s and 403(b) Plans
Under the House version of SECURE Act 2.0, employers would have to automatically enroll eligible new hires in newly established 401(k) and 403(b) plans at a rate of 3% with automatic annual increases of 1% up to at least 10% (but no more than 15%). Plans established before the enactment of SECURE 2.0 would be exempt from this rule, as would small businesses with ten or fewer employees and companies in business for less than three years.
Employer Matching Contributions on Student Loan Repayments
For plan years beginning after December 31, 2021, employers may amend their 401(k) and 403(b) plans to make matching contributions to employees based on their qualified student loan payments. This provision essentially codifies the existing IRS-approved practice of employers making matching contributions based on an employee’s student loan payments, even if the employee is not contributing to a retirement plan.
Retirement Savings Options for Part-Time Workers
The original SECURE Act provided that part-time employees who work at least 500 hours every year for three consecutive years were eligible to make salary deferrals into a 401(k) plan. For plan years beginning after December 31, 2022, SECURE 2.0 would reduce the eligibility requirement to 500 hours per year for only two years and amend ERISA to include both 401(k) and 403(b) plans.
Additional provisions in the current version of SECURE Act 2.0 include:
- Permitting plans to rely on an employee’s self-certification for hardship withdrawals.
- Establishing a “Retirement Savings Lost & Found Database” at the Department of Labor to help workers and retirees find accounts left at their former employers.
- Allowing 403(b) plans to invest in Collective Investment Trusts.
- Permitting employers to offer small financial incentives to encourage employee participation in 401(k) plans.
- Penalty-free plan withdrawals of up to $10,000 for victims of domestic abuse.
- Eliminating barriers to investing in lifetime income annuities.
As noted, the final contours of SECURE Act 2.0 are still subject to the Senate’s changes and the reconciliation process. But whatever the bill looks like when it goes to the president, it should once again spur older workers and retirees to meet with their estate planning attorneys and financial planners to discuss how the law will impact their existing plans and goals.