Following months of speculation, SECURE Act 2.0 was passed by Congress on Friday, December 23, 2022, as part of the federal government’s massive $1.7 trillion year-end spending bill. Much like its 2019 predecessor, SECURE Act 2.0 is a comprehensive package of retirement reforms (350 pages) containing numerous changes affecting both IRAs and employer-sponsored retirement plans including the following.
- Roth contributions for SEP and SIMPLE IRA arrangements
- Federal matching contributions for qualified savers (IRA and employer-sponsored plans)
- Significantly increased employer funding opportunities under SIMPLE IRA arrangements
- Increased catch-up contributions under SIMPLE IRAs and 401(k) plans
- New “Starter 401(k)” plan option
- New statutory authority for “Automatic Portability Transactions”
- New penalty exceptions for early distributions
- Transition to age 75 for staring required minimum distributions
- Expanded beneficiary distributions options for special needs trusts
- Significant increase in small plan start-up tax credit
- New options for rolling from 529 plans to Roth IRAs
- Increased limits for Qualified Longevity Annuity Contracts (QLACs)
- Reduction in the 50% excess accumulation penalty
- Exemption from RMD requirements for designated Roth contributions (401(k) plans, etc.)
- Special tax rules for “Qualified Disaster Recovery Distributions”
- Option to designate certain employer matching/nonelective contributions as designated Roth contributions
- Mandatory Roth treatment of catch-up contributions for certain high-income plan participant
- Increased limits for Qualified Longevity Annuity Contracts (QLACs)
- Reduction in the 50% excess accumulation penalty
- Exemption from RMD requirements for designated Roth contributions (401(k) plans, etc.)
- Special tax rules for “Qualified Disaster Recovery Distributions”
- Option to designated certain employer matching/nonelective contributions as designated Roth contributions
- Mandatory Roth treatment of catch-up contributions for certain high-income plan participants
- While some provisions of the Act have a delayed effective date, others will become effective immediately upon enactment.