IRS Updates Self-Correction Program for Retirement Plans

The IRS has made important changes to the Employee Plans Compliance Resolution System (EPCRS), which allows employers that sponsor 401(k)-style defined contribution plans or defined benefit pension plans to self-correct plan operational errors.

Unless properly corrected, some errors may result not just in penalty fees but in the loss of a retirement plan’s favored tax status under the Internal Revenue Code.
On July 16, the IRS issued Revenue Procedure 2021-30, which supersedes the previous EPCRS guidance, Revenue Procedure 2019-19. Under this latest EPCRS upgrade, “like musical chairs, some ground is gained while some is taken away,” observed Christine P. Roberts, an employee benefits attorney with Mullen & Henzell in Santa Barbara, Calif.

Reviewing the Basics: EPCRSThree programs comprise the Employee Plans Compliance Resolution System, as explained by the IRS:• Self-Correction Program (SCP)—Permits a plan sponsor to correct certain plan failures without contacting the IRS or paying a fee. SCP is available to correct certain operational problems deemed “insignificant” at any time and certain problems with the plan document, such as the failure to keep it current to reflect changes in the law, if these errors are discovered and corrected in a timely manner. Plan sponsors may self-correct “significant” failures if these errors are identified and fixed within a set correction period (see below). There is no fee for the use of SCP.• Voluntary Correction Program (VCP)—Permits a plan sponsor to, any time before audit, pay a fee and receive IRS approval for correction of plan failures. Under VCP, the plan sponsor makes a submission to the IRS that identifies the mistakes, proposes corrections and changes to its administrative procedures to ensure that the mistakes don’t recur, and pays a user fee.• Audit Closing Agreement Program (Audit CAP)—Permits a plan sponsor to correct plan failures and negotiate a penalty fee with the IRS while the plan is under audit.

[Want to learn more about retirement benefits and plan compliance? Join us at the SHRM Annual Conference & Expo 2021, taking place Sept. 9-12 in Las Vegas and virtually.]

Key Changes

According to a summary of the 140-page regulation by the Ferenczy Benefits Law Center in Atlanta, major changes to EPCRS made by the new guidance include:

  • Lengthening the time for self-correcting significant operational failures and document failures.
  • Modifying the overpayment rules, particularly for defined benefit pension plans.
  • Increasing the “de minimis” overpayment amount, for which no action needs to be taken, to $250 from $100.
  • Reinstituting the safe harbor correction methods for failure to automatically enroll participants in 401(k) features, permitting timely corrections to avoid any employer cost for the missed deferral opportunities if the problem is discovered and remediated within 9 1/2 months after the end of the affected plan year.
  • Making it easier to correct an operational error by amending the plan to match the plan’s actual administrative procedures.

Most of the changes took effect as of July 16, while some will take effect Jan. 1, 2022.

Significant EPCRS changes are highlighted below.

Anonymous Corrections Eliminated after 2021

The guidance eliminates an anonymous VCP procedure, whereby a submission could be made without revealing the identity of the plan and its sponsor pending agreement on the correction terms.

“The IRS opined at times that it was unhappy with a procedure that caused perhaps more work than a regular VCP but sometimes ended up with no proper correction,” the Ferenczy attorneys noted. “In lieu of the fully anonymous procedure, the IRS will institute a free pre-submission anonymous conference process that is intended to give some assurances to employers and practitioners as to what is likely acceptable under VCP.”

Following the presubmission conference, if the plan sponsor submits a VCP request, it can no longer be anonymous.

According to Randall Tracht and Claire Bouffard, attorneys in the Pittsburgh office of Morgan Lewis, “It is not yet entirely clear how well the anonymous VCP presubmission process may work—for example, will the IRS exercise its discretion not to schedule a conference for a requesting plan sponsor? Will the IRS provide useful oral feedback as part of the conferences?”

Because of these uncertainties, they noted, “plan sponsors that have been considering an anonymous VCP may wish to file soon, before the opportunity is no longer available.”

Self-Correction Period Expanded

In the past, the correction window for using SCP ended on the last day of the second plan year following the plan year during which the plan failure occurred. “The EPCRS upgrade adds a whole additional year to the correction period,” Roberts blogged. “Now, self-correction of significant failures may be made by the end of the third plan year following the plan year in which the failure occurred. Thus, a plan sponsor with a calendar plan year and a significant operational error occurring in 2018 will have until the end of 2021 to correct the error.”

Pension Plan Overpayments

The guidance provides new methods for correcting defined benefit plan overpayments to beneficiaries.

According to actuarial consulting firm Cheiron, “The new correction principles are beneficial to plan sponsors because they reduce the need to seek repayment from participants or beneficiaries who received overpayments, and in some cases, do not require the plan sponsor, participants, or beneficiaries to reimburse the plan for overpayments to participants.”

The new methods may not be used if the overpayments are associated with a failure to satisfy statutory limits, are made to a disqualified person, or are made to an owner-employee, and in other specified cases.

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