On December 20, the IRS released some important clarifications to Section 332 of SECURE 2.0 in Notice 2024-02. These rules took effect on January 1, 2024. They allow employers to terminate a SIMPLE IRA at any time during a calendar by replacing the plan with a safe harbor 401(k) plan. Previously, employers could only terminate a SIMPLE IRA on December 31.
The SECURE 2.0 rules for terminating a SIMPLE IRA mid-year are generally straightforward. However, the replacement process requires some planning to meet legal requirements. Our 5-step checklist can make the job easy for employers.
All SIMPLE IRAs operate on a calendar basis. Further, a SIMPLE IRA must be the sole retirement plan maintained by an employer. Before January 1, 2024, employers had to maintain a SIMPLE IRA for the entire calendar year. Now, an employer can terminate a SIMPLE IRA at any time during the year by replacing the terminated plan with a safe harbor 401(k) plan. Employers can choose a traditional or QACA safe harbor plan for this purpose.
However, this replacement process is subject to special timing and contribution limit requirements. Some coordination is necessary to meet these requirements. Below are the steps we recommend for employers.
To terminate a SIMPLE IRA mid-year, an employer must start a safe harbor 401(k) plan “as of the day after the termination date” to meet SECURE 2.0 requirements. To best ensure this timing requirement is met, an employer’s 401(k) provider, SIMPLE IRA provider, and payroll company must be coordinated throughout the replacement process.
As such, employers should hire a 401(k) provider before they start the SIMPLE IRA termination process.
To terminate a SIMPLE IRA, employers must specify the termination date in a formal written action. Contributions to the SIMPLE IRA must stop as of the termination date.
Before an employer terminates their SIMPLE IRA, they should confirm the feasibility of the termination date with their 401(k) provider, SIMPLE IRA provider, and payroll company.
To properly notify employees about the plan replacement, employers must distribute two disclosure notices, one related to the SIMPLE IRA and the other related to the safe harbor 401(k) plan:
When a SIMPLE IRA is replaced mid-year by a safe harbor 401(k) plan, the elective deferrals made to the safe harbor plan by each employee cannot exceed a special weighted limit. This limit must equal:
The plan's safe harbor notice must disclose the weighted limit to employees.
Below is an example of the calculation for a hypothetical employee based on the following assumptions:
In this example, the employee can make elective deferrals to the safe harbor 401(k) plan up to $23,757.53.
Description |
Amount |
Formula |
Weighted average of SIMPLE IRA limit |
$4,861.64 |
= ($16,000 + $3,500 catchup) * (91/365) |
Weighted average of 401(k) limit |
$22,895.89 |
= ($23,000 + $7,500 catchup) * (274/365) |
Contributions made to the SIMPLE IRA |
($4,000.00) |
N/A |
Safe harbor deferral limit |
$23,757.53 |
= ($4,861.64 + $22,895.89) - $4,000.00 |
Most 401(k) providers require an employee census file from employers to complete a plan’s year-end nondiscrimination and limit testing. Employers should include SIMPLE IRA contributions on their census file for the replacement year so their 401(k) provider can confirm the contributions made to the two plans did not violate legal limits.
A SIMPLE IRA cannot match the benefits of a safe harbor 401(k) plan. The advantages of a safe harbor plan include higher contribution limits, more generous employer contribution options, and more flexible distribution. Employers can upgrade a SIMPLE IRA to a safe harbor plan sooner thanks to Section 332 of SECURE 2.0.
However, replacing a SIMPLE IRA with a safe harbor 401(k) plan requires some coordination to best ensure the timing and contribution limit requirements of SECURE 2.0 are met. A basic checklist can make the job easy for employers.