| EXECUTIVE SUMMARY |
WHEN
CLIENTS ARE DESPERATE FOR FUNDS because of unforeseen
circumstances, CPAs can help them tap retirement funds without
triggering the 10% early withdrawal penalty. Eight exemptions
to this penalty relate to life cycle events and present
tax-planning opportunities.
DISTRIBUTIONS TO A DISABLED TAXPAYER who has little
or no disability insurance may escape the 10% penalty. A
taxpayer with deductible medical expenses also may qualify for
an exemption.
A
TAXPAYER WHO RETIRES BEFORE AGE 591/2 is exempt from the 10% penalty if the
distribution is part of a series of substantially equal
periodic payments. An employee who quits his or her job,
however, must be at least age 55 to avoid the penalty.
IRA
DISTRIBUTIONS WILL NOT BE PENALIZED if the funds are
used to pay health insurance premiums for an unemployed
taxpayer and his or her family, qualified higher education
expenses for his or her family, or a first-time home
purchase.
A
DISTRIBUTION MADE UNDER a bona fide loan agreement
may escape the penalty.
CPAs
WITH CLIENTS WHO QUALIFY for more than one exemption
must determine the mix of exemptions that will meet their
financial needs.
|
| LEE G. KNIGHT, PhD,
is the Hylton Professor of Accountancy and director of the
accountancy program at the Calloway School of Business and
Accountancy, Wake Forest University, Winston-Salem, N.C. Her
e-mail address is knightlg@wfu.edu. RAY A.
KNIGHT, CPA/PFS, JD, is managing director of Capstone Planning
Alliance, LLC, in Winston-Salem. His e-mail address is
rayknight@capstoneplanning.net.
|
PAs
commonly advise clients not to touch their savings in IRAs and
employer-sponsored retirement plans before age 591/2 because of tax disincentives; in
addition to ordinary income taxes, IRC section 72(t) imposes a 10%
penalty on early withdrawals. But if clients desperately need funds
to handle unforeseen life cycle events, CPAs must abandon their
normal position and seek ways to minimize the related tax
disincentives. IRC section 72(t) provides for 16 exemptions from the
early withdrawal penalty (see exhibit 1), eight of which relate to
life cycle crises. This article discusses the applicability and
restrictions associated with these eight exemptions and provides
CPAs with guidance on how clients can qualify for them.
GENERAL
APPLICABILITY OF THE PENALTY The 10%
penalty is an income tax rather than an excise tax. It applies to
any early distribution includable in the recipient’s gross income
from a qualified retirement plan, defined in IRC section 4974(c) to
include
Section
401(a) qualified pension, profit-sharing or stock bonus
plans.
Section
403(a) annuity plans.
Section
403(b) tax-sheltered annuity contracts.
Section
408(a) individual retirement accounts (IRAs).
Section
408(b) individual retirement annuities.
Paying the
Penalty More than 70% of the individuals who received
lump-sum distributions from their retirement plans in 2001
spent them, subjecting them to the IRC section 72(t) 10% early
withdrawal penalty.
Source: Authors’ tabulations from
the “Survey of Income and Program Participation,” 2001 Panel,
Wave 7, U.S. Census Bureau, www.sipp.census.gov/sipp. |
An early distribution is one made before the
participant reaches age 591/2 . The penalty does
not apply to the portion of an early distribution that is a return
of basis, nor to any of the distributions identified in exhibit 1.
DISTRIBUTION
FOLLOWING A DISABILITY The 10%
penalty doesn’t apply to a distribution made to a disabled
participant. IRC section 72(m)(7) and related regulations define a
participant as disabled if he or she cannot engage in any
“substantial gainful activity” because of a medically determined
physical or mental impairment expected to result in death or to be
of long-continued or indefinite duration, and can furnish proof of
this condition in the form or manner required by the IRS.
| Exhibit 1: IRC Section 72(t) Penalty
Exemptions |
|
There are 16
exemptions including the 8 emergency-related ones discussed in
this article.
| IRC section 72(t) penalty
exemption |
Major restrictions
|
| Distribution due to the disability of a
participant. |
Participant must be disabled within the meaning
of IRC section 72(m)(7). |
| Distribution as part of a series of substantially
equal periodic payments. |
Payments must not occur less frequently than
annually.
Payments from plans other
than IRAs or individual retirement annuities must not
begin before employee separates from
service. |
| Distribution due to separation from service.
|
Does not apply if the separation from service
occurs before the year the participant turns 55.
Does not apply to IRA
distributions or to self-employed
individuals. |
| Distribution less than or equal to deductible
medical expenses. |
Does not apply to pre-1997 IRA
distributions. |
| Distribution to unemployed participant for health
insurance premiums. |
Applies only to IRA distributions.
Participant must have
received federal or state unemployment compensation for
12 consecutive weeks or have qualified under the
self-employment provision.
Limited to amount of health
insurance premiums paid. |
| Distribution for qualified higher education
expenses of the participant or spouse, or their children
or grandchildren. |
Applies only to IRA distributions.
Does not apply if participant
qualifies for another exemption. |
| Distribution for the first-time purchase of a
principal residence by the participant or spouse, or
their child or grandchild. |
Applies only to IRA distributions.
Distribution must be used
within 120 days to pay qualified acquisition
costs.
Lifetime limit of
$10,000.
Does not apply if participant
qualifies for another exemption. |
| Distribution subject to loan agreement. |
Loan agreement must be legally
enforceable.
Term of loan cannot exceed
five years unless distribution is used to acquire a
principal residence.
Participant must adhere to
specified repayment schedule and the amount of the loan
is limited. |
| Distribution made to a beneficiary or the estate
of a participant on or after the participant’s death.
|
Only applies to spousal beneficiary if spouse
elects to leave plan assets in participant’s name rather
than rolling them over into IRA established in spouse’s
own name. |
| Dividend distribution to ESOP participant.
|
Distribution must meet conditions for dividend
deductibility established in IRC section
402(e)(1)(A). |
| Distribution pursuant to federal tax levy on plan
under section 6631. |
Does not apply to pre-2000 distributions or
distributions used to pay federal income taxes in the
absence of a levy under IRC section 6631. |
| Distribution to alternate payee under a qualified
domestic relations order. |
Does not apply to IRA distributions. |
| Distribution to federal retiree electing lump sum
credit and reduced annuity. |
Does not apply to lump-sum distribution if
retiree makes the election and retires before the year
he or she reaches age 55.
Applies to reduced annuity
payment regardless of age retiree makes election and
retires. |
| Distribution rolled over into another qualified
retirement plan within 60 days of the distribution.
|
IRS can waive the 60-day rollover period if it
believes the participant missed the deadline because of
a “hardship” beyond his or her control. |
| Distribution to correct excess contributions.
|
Applies to 402(g), 401(k) and 401(m) plans and
IRAs. |
| Distribution upon conversion from traditional to
Roth IRA. |
Applies to entire distribution (including portion
of distribution includable in
income). | |
“Substantial gainful activity” refers to the
activity in which the participant normally engaged or a comparable
one before the disability. Treasury regulations section
1.72-17(A)(f)(2) provides examples of impairments that ordinarily
prevent people from engaging in a substantial gainful activity (see
exhibit 2). However, having one or
more of these impairments doesn’t always permit a finding that an
individual is disabled. The IRS evaluates the impairment based on
whether it in fact prevents the person from engaging in
substantial gainful activity.
| Exhibit 2: Impairments Preventing
Substantial Gainful Activity |
|
Loss of use of two limbs.
Progressive disease, such as diabetes, multiple sclerosis or
Buerger’s disease, that resulted in the physical loss or
atrophy of a limb.
Disease of the heart, lungs or blood vessels that resulted in
a major loss of heart or lung reserve (as evidenced by X-ray,
electrocardiogram or other objective findings) such that minor
exertion (for example, walking several blocks, minor chores
and using public transportation) produces breathlessness, pain
or fatigue.
Inoperable and progressive cancer.
Damage to the brain or a brain abnormality that resulted in
severe loss of judgment, intellect, orientation or
memory.
Mental disease (for example, psychosis or severe
psychoneurosis) requiring continued institutionalization or
constant supervision.
Loss or diminution of vision to the extent that the central
visual acuity in the better eye after correction is not better
than 20/200, or the widest diameter of the visual field of
vision subtends an angle not greater than 20
degrees.
Permanent and total loss of speech.
Total deafness uncorrectable with a hearing aid.
Source: Treasury
regulations section
1.72-17(A)(f)(2). |
An impairment is “of indefinite duration” if the
participant cannot reasonably be expected to recover in the
foreseeable future (Treasury regulations section 1.72-17A(f)(3)).
For example, participants who suffer bone fractures that prevent
them from working are not disabled if recovery is reasonably
expected in the foreseeable future. If a bone persistently fails to
knit, however, the IRS ordinarily will consider the individual
disabled.
Clients don’t normally expect or plan for a
disabling accident, and the few who purchase disability insurance
often do not have adequate funds to sustain them during the required
waiting period until disability payments begin. CPAs should counsel
clients of the availability of retirement funds for this
purpose.
|
How Would You
Advise This Client? CPAs often
find that clients qualify for more than one exemption, and the
real challenge is to determine the best mix. Consider the
plight of Jack Winston, who lost his job in Baltimore at the
age of 52. He found new employment in Chicago, starting in six
months. Jack has a daughter in college and no medical
insurance, and needs to purchase a new home. He has little
cash, but large balances in his 401(k) retirement plan and
several IRAs. Which, if any, section 72(t) exemptions would
you suggest to provide Jack the liquidity he needs?
The
Choices The disability
exemption clearly doesn’t apply. The equal payments exemption
isn’t suitable because Jack cannot stop the payments in six
months without creating a modification. And because Jack is
younger than 55, he does not qualify for the separation from
service exemption. The medical expense exemption will not
work.
That leaves four possibilities.
Jack will qualify for the health insurance premiums exemption
but not until he receives unemployment compensation for 12
consecutive weeks. If Jack does not own a home in Baltimore,
he might qualify for the first-time home purchase exemption.
However, if he owns a home in Baltimore, he cannot meet the
required two-year waiting period. The loan agreement exemption
may work if Jack is prepared to meet the formalities
associated with it. The qualified higher education expense
exemption may cover some of his daughter’s college costs, but
only if Jack does not qualify for one of the other
exemptions. |
DISTRIBUTION OF
SUBSTANTIALLY EQUAL PERIODIC PAYMENTS The 10% penalty does not apply to a distribution of plan
assets that is part of a series of substantially equal periodic
payments, paid not less frequently than annually, for the
recipient’s life (or life expectancy) or the joint lives (or joint
life expectancies) of the recipient and a designated beneficiary.
Distributions from a qualified plan other than an IRA or individual
retirement annuity qualify for this exception only if they begin
after the employee separates from the employer’s service (IRC
section 72(t)(3)(B)).
In notice 89-5, the IRS presents three methods of
calculating distributions from a defined contribution plan or an IRA
that will satisfy the substantially equal requirement.
Required minimum distribution
method (sanctioned under IRC section 401(c)(9)). In
calculating the annual payments, participants may use either their
own life expectancy or the joint life and last survivor expectancy
of the participant and a beneficiary. Revenue ruling 2002-62
modifies notice 89-5 to require participants to calculate these
payments annually, using the account balance and the appropriate
life expectancy table at the beginning of each year they receive
payments. This requirement produces unequal payments, but the IRS
treats them as a series of substantially equal payments provided the
participant does not change to another method of
calculation.
Fixed amortization method.
Participants determine the annual payment by
amortizing the account balance over their life expectancy or the
joint life and last survivor expectancy for the participant and a
designated beneficiary.
Participants must determine the life expectancies
for this purpose in accordance with regulations section
1.401(a)(9)-1. The interest rate cannot exceed a reasonable rate on
the date payments begin. Unlike the minimum distribution method, the
payments under the fixed amortization method are the same for all
years.
For example, let’s assume a 50-year-old participant
decides to withdraw an IRA balance of $100,000 in installments. His
life expectancy in table V of regulations section 1.401(a)(9)-1 is
33.1 years. In the year in which payments begin, 8% is a reasonable
interest rate. Amortizing $100,000 over 33.1 years at an 8% interest
rate yields a payment of $8,679.
Fixed annuitization method.
Participants determine their annual payment by
dividing the account balance by an annuity factor for the present
value of $1 per year (or per month if monthly payments are made),
assuming a reasonable interest rate at the time the payments begin
and a time period equal to their life expectancy at their age in the
first distribution year (using a reasonable mortality table).
As with the fixed amortization, the payments remain
the same for years subsequent to the first distribution year. Our
50-year-old participant with an account balance of $100,000 would
have substantially equal payments of $9,002 a year, assuming an 8%
interest rate ($100,000 4 11.109, the annuity factor for a $1 per
year annuity using the UP-1984 mortality table).
Note that the IRS did not intend to limit taxpayers
to these three methods presented in notice 89-25 (letter rulings
9008073 and 9615042). Any reasonable method of calculation satisfies
the requirements of IRC section 72(t)(2)(A)(iv) (letter ruling
8921098).
Guidelines for all methods.
Revenue ruling 2002-62 provides that the interest rate
used in calculating the annual payments cannot exceed 120% of the
federal midterm rate determined under IRC section 1274(d) for either
of the two months immediately preceding the month the payments
begin. The IRS places no lower limit on the interest rate, which can
work in favor of clients who want to minimize the amount they take
each year.
Revenue ruling 2002-62 also stipulates that
taxpayers must use the account balance as of the first valuation
date selected for this purpose. Any subsequent change in the balance
results in a modification of payments.
Any modification in payments before the participant
reaches age 591/2, or within five years of the date of
the first payment (even if the participant has reached age
591/2), other than because of the participant’s death or
disability, voids the periodic payment exception. In the year of
modification, any tax not paid because of the periodic payment
exception, plus interest for the deferral period, becomes payable.
For example, John Kelly, a 56-year-old participant
in a defined contribution plan, began receiving substantially equal
periodic payments in 2000 that he expected to continue for the rest
of his life. But in 2004, at age 60, Kelly elected to receive the
remaining benefits in a lump sum. Because this modification took
place within five years of the date of the first payment, he must
pay the 10% additional income tax plus interest on the payments
received before he reached age 591/2 (but not on the
payments received after age 591/2).
Kelly’s CPA could have suggested he avoid the
recapture tax by not taking the lump-sum payment until 2005. CPAs
with clients who want to receive payments from IRAs or qualified
plans before age 591/2, and do not qualify for one of the
other exceptions, should point out the perils of modifying
distribution payments and show clients how to structure their
payments to avoid the recapture tax.
A series of rulings shows the IRS does not consider
all changes in periodic payments as modifications that trigger the
recapture tax. Exhibit 3 summarizes some of these
rulings to give CPAs an idea of how difficult it is to advise
clients in this area without careful research. Many of the changes
the IRS lets escape the recapture tax differ little from those it
considers modifications, and thus, taxable.
| Exhibit 3: Not Regarded by IRS as
Modifications Subject to the Recapture
Tax |
| Source |
Circumstances surrounding
change in payment |
| Regulations section 1.408a-4, Q&A
12 |
Lump-sum distribution from IRA in converting to a
Roth IRA; the series of substantially equal payments
established for the original IRA continues on schedule
with the Roth IRA. |
| Revenue ruling 2002-62 |
Annual redetermination of the variables used to
calculate the equal payments under the required minimum
distribution method sanctioned in notice
89-25. |
| Revenue ruling 2002-62 |
One-time change from the fixed amortization
method or the fixed annuitization method to the required
minimum distribution method (all of which are IRS
sanctioned methods in notice 89-25); change made to
avoid premature depletion of retirement account assets
that have declined in value. |
| Revenue ruling 2002-62 |
Cessation of payments after exhausting the
balance in an IRA or qualified plan. |
| Letter ruling 8919052 |
Change from basing annual distribution amount on
the expected joint lives of the participant and his or
her spouse to basing it on the expected life of the
participant after the spouse’s death. |
| Letter ruling 891905 |
Change from payment schedule providing for an
uncertain number of installments of each annual payment
to a payment schedule requiring the distribution of each
annual payment in monthly installments. |
| Letter ruling 9514026 |
Change in monthly payment date from the last date
of the prior month to the first day of the month for
which the payment is to apply. |
| Letter ruling 9221052 |
Lump-sum rollover from a terminated qualified
plan to an IRA that distributes the same periodic amount
with the same frequency as the terminated qualified
plan. |
| Letter ruling 9221052 |
Lump-sum distribution from an IRA to make up for
periodic payments missed between the dates of
termination of a qualified plan and its rollover;
without lump-sum distribution, annual IRA payment would
not equal the annual payment from the terminated
qualified plan. |
| Letter ruling 9536031 |
Cost-of-living clause setting the current year
payment equal to 103% of the previous year’s payment
adopted before periodic payments begin. |
| Letter rulings 200052039 and 200050046 |
Some or all of participant’s account balance
transferred to spouse pursuant to divorce. |
| Letter ruling 200027060 |
Payment schedule for retirement funds received
pursuant to divorce not in conformity with former
spouse’s distribution plan. |
| Letter ruling 200309028 |
Payment amounts separately calculated for
multiple IRAs; no commingling of funds from various
IRAs. | |
DISTRIBUTION DUE TO
SEPARATION FROM SERVICE Early
distributions from a qualified plan are exempt from the 10% penalty
IRC section’s 72(t)(2)(A)(v) if the participant leaves the employer
maintaining the plan during or after the calendar year in which he
or she attains age 55. This exemption does not apply to
self-employed people or distributions from IRAs.
CPAs may find this exemption beneficial to clients
who quit their jobs to follow a spouse transferred temporarily or
permanently to a new location. They can tap their retirement funds
while they search for a new job. Be aware, however, that the IRS is
likely to scrutinize any short separation to determine whether it is
a bona fide indefinite separation from service.
DISTRIBUTION FOR
MEDICAL EXPENSES The early
withdrawal penalty does not apply when a qualified retirement plan
distribution is less than or equal to a participant’s deductible
medical expenses for the tax year of distribution (IRC sections
72(t)(2)(B) and (3)(A)). CPAs should discuss this option with any
clients facing large medical bills at a time when they have been
laid off from their jobs and cannot afford health
insurance.
Taxpayers may deduct any medical expenses in excess
of 7.5% of their adjusted gross income (AGI) under IRC section 213.
They do not have to itemize the deductions to qualify for this
exemption (IRC section 72(t)(2)(B)).
As an example, Matt Gear withdrew $6,500 from a
qualified retirement plan to help cover $8,000 in medical expenses
he incurred during 2004. Gear’s AGI for 2004 was $48,000. Under
section 213 he can deduct only $4,400 of his medical expenses (the
portion in excess of his medical expense deduction floor, 7.5% of
his $48,000 AGI, or $3,600. $8,000 – $3,600 = $4,400). Even if Gear
does not itemize deductions in 2004, $4,400 of the amount he
withdrew from his retirement plan will escape the section 72(t)
penalty, though he will have to pay the 10% penalty on the remaining
$2,100 ($6,500 – $4,400).
CPAs should advise clients who can push medical
procedures into a tax year that has a more favorable AGI to do so,
so that more of their withdrawal will escape the section 72(t)
penalty. CPAs also can help clients combine the medical expense
exemption with other exemptions so the penalty does not apply to any
of the withdrawal.
DISTRIBUTION FOR
HEALTH INSURANCE PREMIUMS Section
72(t)(2)(D) exempts IRA distributions for health insurance premiums
paid for unemployed account holders, their spouses and dependents
from the early withdrawal penalty if
The account holder receives federal or state
unemployment compensation for at least 12 consecutive
weeks.
The distribution occurs during the tax year the
holder receives the unemployment compensation or the following tax
year.
The exemption covers distributions only up to the
amount of premiums paid or distributions made until the account
holder is re-employed for at least 60 days.
CPAs should point out to clients that this exemption
doesn’t require them to actually use the money from the distribution
to pay the premiums. Also, self-employed clients qualify for this
exemption if self-employment is the only reason they do not qualify
for unemployment compensation.
DISTRIBUTIONS FOR
HIGHER EDUCATION EXPENSES The
penalty does not apply if IRA distributions are used to pay
qualified higher education expenses (QHEEs) of the account holder or
a spouse, child or grandchild at an eligible institution. If a
distribution qualifies for one of the section 72(t) exemptions
discussed above, however, the account holder cannot apply the higher
education expense exemption (section 72(t)(2)(E)).
As defined in section 529(e)(3), QHEEs include
tuition, fees, books, supplies and equipment required for enrollment
or attendance at an eligible educational institution. Almost all
accredited colleges, universities and vocational schools fit this
description. Students can pay with their earnings, a loan, a gift,
an inheritance or personal savings.
Expenses paid with a Pell Grant or other tax-free
educational assistance reduce the amount of the IRA distribution
escaping the 10% penalty. Thus, CPAs should determine the types of
educational assistance for postsecondary education that clients
already receive before advising them of the amount that can be
withdrawn without penalty.
For example, Susan Bennett’s QHEEs total $35,000 for
the 2004–2005 academic year. Her parents pay $30,000 of these costs
from a combination of earnings, loans, personal savings and savings
from a qualified state tuition program; Bennett pays the remaining
$5,000 from gifts, inheritances and her own earnings. Her father,
age 51, can withdraw $35,000 from his IRA without incurring the 10%
early withdrawal penalty.
In contrast, Don Mason’s QHEEs total $35,000. His
family uses a combination of a Pell Grant, a tax-free scholarship
and tax-free employer-provided tuition assistance to pay $30,000.
His father, age 51, can shield only $5,000 of the amount he
withdraws from his IRA from the penalty.
DISTRIBUTION FOR
FIRST-TIME HOME PURCHASE The 10%
penalty doesn’t apply to a “qualified first-time homebuyer
distribution” from an IRA (section 72(t)(2)(F)) if the distribution
is used within 120 days of its receipt to pay qualified acquisition
costs associated with the first-time purchase of a principal
residence. The homebuyer may be the IRA holder or spouse, child,
grandchild or ancestor (section 72(t)(8)(A)). The term principal
residence means the same as it does for calculating the
excludability of gain on sale under section 121 (section
72(t)(8)(ii)).
Section 72(t)(8)(C) defines qualified acquisition
costs to include the expenses of acquiring, constructing or
reconstructing a residence, as well as any usual or reasonable
settlement, financing or other closing payments.
CPAs should note that the term first-time
homebuyer is a misnomer in that it does not preclude previous
home ownership. Instead, it holds that the homebuyer (and spouse, if
married) cannot have had an ownership interest in a principal
residence during the two-year period ending on the date of
acquisition (section 72(t)(8)(D)(i)(I)).
A lifetime limit of $10,000 applies to the
first-time homebuyer exemption (section 72(t)(8)(B)). Buyers also
cannot use this exemption if the IRA distribution qualifies for one
of the other section 72(t) exemptions.
For example, Lisa and David Jones sold their
principal residence and moved into a rental home in 1999. In 2005
Lisa withdrew $10,000 from her IRA to use as a down payment on the
purchase of a new home. Lisa and David must include the withdrawal
in their gross income, but do not have to pay the
penalty.
CPAs should carefully counsel clients who plan to
use IRA money for a home acquisition about the time limits involved.
Clients must use the money within 120 days of the date of
withdrawal. If the purchase is delayed or canceled, clients must
roll the distribution into an IRA within the 120-day period to avoid
the penalty. And clients who sell one home must wait at least two
years before buying a new one to qualify.
| AICPA RESOURCES |
Book Adviser’s
Guide to Tax Planning Strategies for Retirement by
William R. Bischoff, CPA, 2005 (paperback, # 091017JA).
CPE Super Tax
Planning Strategies for Individual Clients’ Retirement
Accounts (# 731295JA).
For more information or to order, call the Institute at
888-777-7077 or go to http://www.cpa2biz.com/.
|
DISTRIBUTION
SUBJECT TO LOAN AGREEMENT IRC
section 72(p) excludes distributions made under a loan agreement
from the early withdrawal penalty if the loan agreement is legally
enforceable and imposes restrictions on the term, repayment and
amount of the loan. The agreement may be on paper, electronic or in
any other medium approved by the IRS. A signature is not required if
the pact is enforceable without signature under applicable law
(regulations section 1.72(p)-1, A-3(b)).
The term of the loan generally cannot exceed five
years, unless the loan is used to acquire a dwelling unit that will
be the participant’s principal residence within a reasonable period
of time. If it exceeds the term limits (either initially or later
because of nonpayment), the 10% penalty applies on the entire loan
(regulations section 1.72(p)-1, A-4).
The loan agreement must specify a repayment
schedule. The agreement may provide for a three-month grace period,
and section 414(u)(4) allows a participant to suspend payments
during military service. Otherwise, if participants fail to pay an
amount due, the IRS will treat the entire loan as a distribution
subject to the 10% penalty (regulations section 1.72(p)-1,
A-3(b)).
Section 72(p)(2)(A) stipulates that the amount of
the loan plus all other loans from the same employer generally
cannot exceed the lesser of $50,000 or half of the present value of
the employee’s nonforfeitable accrued benefit under his or her
retirement plans.
Coordinating section 72(t) exemptions requires a
little thought and creativity, but CPAs can maximize their value by
providing this financial lifeline to clients who are facing layoffs,
forced early retirements or other catastrophes.  |