Executive Bonus Plans
Transcription
Executive Bonus Plans
Executive Bonus Plans in brief Executive Bonus Plan An Executive Bonus Plan is an employee fringe benefit plan that allows an employer to provide valuable life insurance for selected employees in a manner that is tax-deductible for the employer. Advantages to Employee: •Provides valuable life insurance protection. •Provides tax deferred cash value that is available for emergencies, retirement or other accumulation goals. •Minimizes the cost of life insurance. Advantages to Employer: •Simple to install. •May limit participation to key employees and select executives. •Costs are tax-deductible. •Promotes employee retention and recruiting. Straight Bonus – How it Works $ Premiums Employer Northwestern Mutual Life Insur Executive •Employee owns and names the beneficiary of a policy insuring his or her life, or the life of a third party. •Employer pays the policy premium directly to Northwestern Mutual. As an alternative, employer could bonus cash to the employee and have the employee pay the premium to Northwestern Mutual. •Employee is income taxed on the amount of the premium payment, and pays the tax with out-of-pocket funds. The employee could take withdrawals from the policy (e.g., take dividends in cash) to pay the tax on the premium. •The plan can restrict employee’s access to cash value by providing that, for a certain time period (e.g., 5 years), the employee cannot withdraw cash or take a loan from the policy without the employer’s consent (a “restricted § 162 bonus plan”). Double Bonus (Gross-up) – How it Works $ Premiums Employer Northwestern Mutual $ Additional bonus to pay tax Life Insur Executive •The employer pays the policy premium, and also pays additional compensation to the employee so that the employee has funds to pay the tax on the premium amount. The additional compensation to pay the tax on the premium amount also constitutes additional taxable income. •To estimate the total compensation the employer must pay to cover the premium amount plus the employee’s additional taxes (so that the employee has no out-of-pocket cost), use this formula: amount of premium 1 - employee’s tax rate = total compensation •For example, if the premium is $10,000, and the employee is taxed at a 30% rate: 10,000 1 - 0.30 = 10,000 0.70 = $14,286 total compensation Federal Tax and ERISA Consequences To the Employer •The employer can deduct the bonus/premium amount so long as the amount of compensation is reasonable. Internal Revenue Code (IRC) § 162. To the Employee •The employee is income taxed on the bonus/premium amount. IRC § 61. •Cash values generally grow tax-deferred until distributions exceed the cumulative premiums. IRC § 72 and Cohen v. Comm’r, 39 TC 1055 (1963). •Amounts borrowed from the policy generally are not treated as distributions unless the policy lapses or is surrendered. IRC § 72. •If the policy is a Modified Endowment Contract (MEC), however, policy distributions and loans are treated as distributions, and are taxed as first coming from any taxable gain (with potential 10% penalty), and then as a tax-free return of premiums. IRC §§ 72 and 7702A. Other Tax Consequences •The cash bonus or premium amount is considered wages subject to Social Security (FICA) and Federal Unemployment Tax (FUTA). •The death proceeds are generally not income taxed. IRC § 101. ERISA Consequences •A life insurance bonus plan is generally a welfare benefit plan under ERISA. •There should be a written plan, named fiduciary, funding policy, administrative procedures, and claims procedure. •In restricted § 162 bonus plans, the restriction should terminate well before retirement to avoid classification as a pension plan under ERISA. This publication is not intended as legal or tax advice; nonetheless, Treasury Regulations might require the following statements. This information was compiled by the Advanced Financial Security Planning Division of The Northwestern Mutual Life Insurance Company. It is intended solely for the information and education of Northwestern Mutual Financial Network, its customers, and their own legal or tax advisers. It must not be used as a basis for legal or tax advice, and is not intended to be used and cannot be used to avoid any penalties that my be imposed on a taxpayer. Northwestern Mutual and its Financial Representatives do not give legal or tax advice. Taxpayers should seek advice regarding their particular circumstances from an independent legal, accounting, or tax adviser. Tax and other planning developments after the original date of publication may affect these discussions. To comply with Circular 230 Copyright © 2009 by The Northwestern Mutual Life Insurance Company, Milwaukee, WI www.northwesternmutual.com 22-3898 (0497) (REV 0609)