A section 401(k) plan is an employee retirement plan into which an
employee can elect to contribute a portion of his or her wages before
taxes each year. These deferred wages are not subject to income tax
withholding at the time of deferral, nor are they deductible on your
Form 1040 since they were not included in taxable wages on your Form
W-2. However, they are included as wages subject to social security,
Medicare, and federal unemployment taxes.
The amount that an employee may elect to defer is limited. During
1996 an employee cannot elect to defer more than $9,500 per year for
all cash or deferred arrangements in which the employee participates.
This yearly limitation is indexed for inflation and generally cannot
exceed the lesser of 25 percent of compensation or $30,000 when added
to other employer contributions for the participant. Generally, all
plans maintained by an employer must be considered to determine if
contribution limits are exceeded. The employer may specify a lower
maximum deferral percentage in the plan.
Distributions before age 59½ may be subject to an early distribution
penalty of 10%. For more information on this, refer to Publication
575, Pension and Annuity Income (Including Simplified General Rule),
or Publication 560, Retirement Plans for the Self-Employed.
Many plans allow employees to make a hardship withdrawal because of
immediate and heavy financial needs. Hardship distributions are
limited to the amount of the employee's elective deferral only, and
do not include any income deferrals earned on the deferred amounts.
Distributions from a 401(k) plan qualify for optional lump- sum
treatment and rollover treatment as long as they meet the respective
requirements. For more information, refer to [Topic 412], Lump-Sum
Distributions, [Topic 413], Rollovers from Retirement Plans and
[Topic 555], 5- or 10- Year Tax Options for Lump-Sum Distributions.
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