[Code of Federal Regulations]
[Title 26, Volume 2]
[Revised as of April 1, 2004]
From the U.S. Government Printing Office via GPO Access
[CITE: 26CFR1.127-2]

[Page 541-544]
 
                       TITLE 26--INTERNAL REVENUE
 
    CHAPTER I--INTERNAL REVENUE SERVICE, DEPARTMENT OF THE TREASURY 
                               (CONTINUED)
 
PART 1_INCOME TAXES--Table of Contents
 
Sec. 1.127-2  Qualified educational assistance program.

    (a) In general. A qualified educational assistance program is a plan 
established and maintained by an employer under which the employer 
provides educational assistance to employees. To be a qualified program, 
the requirements described in paragraphs (b) through (g) of this section 
must be satisfied. It is not required that a program be funded or that 
the employer apply to the Internal Revenue Service for a determination 
that the plan is a qualified program. However, under Sec. 601.201 
(relating to rulings and determination letters), an employer may request 
that the Service determine whether a plan is a qualified program.
    (b) Separate written plan. The program must be a separate written 
plan of the employer. This requirement means that the terms of the 
program must be set forth in a separate document or documents providing 
only educational

[[Page 542]]

assistance within the meaning of paragraph (c) of this section. The 
requirement for a separate plan does not, however, preclude an 
educational assistance program from being part of a more comprehensive 
employer plan that provides a choice of nontaxable benefits to 
employees.
    (c) Educational assistance--(1) In general. The benefits provided 
under the program must consist solely of educational assistance. The 
term ``educational assistance'' means--
    (i) The employer's payment of expenses incurred by or on behalf of 
an employee for education, or
    (ii) The employer's provision of education to an employee.
    (2) Alternative benefits. Benefits will not be considered to consist 
solely of educational assistance if the program, in form or in actual 
operation, provides employees with a choice between educational 
assistance and other remuneration includible in the employee's gross 
income.
    (3) Certain benefits not considered educational assistance. The term 
``educational assistance'' does not include the employer's payment for, 
or provision of--
    (i) Tools or supplies (other than textbooks) that the employee may 
retain after completing a course of instruction,
    (ii) Meals, lodging, or transportation, or
    (iii) Education involving sports, games, or hobbies, unless such 
education involves the business of the employer or is required as part 
of a degree program. The phrase ``sports, games, or hobbies'' does not 
include education that instructs employees how to maintain and improve 
health so long as such education does not involve the use of athletic 
facilities or equipment and is not recreational in nature.
    (4) Education defined. As used in section 127, Sec. 1.127-1, and 
this section, the term ``education'' includes any form of instruction or 
training that improves or develops the capabilities of an individual. 
Education paid for or provided under a qualified program may be 
furnished directly by the employer, either alone or in conjunction with 
other employers, or through a third party such as an educational 
institution. Education is not limited to courses that are job related or 
part of a degree program.
    (d) Exclusive benefit. The program may benefit only the employees of 
the employer, including, at the employer's option, individuals who are 
employees within the meaning of paragraph (h)(1) of this section. A 
program that provides benefits to spouses or dependents of employees is 
not a qualified program within the meaning of this section.
    (e) Prohibited discrimination--(1) Eligibility for benefits. The 
program must benefit the employer's employees generally. Among those 
benefited may be employees who are officers, shareholders, self-employed 
or highly compensated. A program is not for the benefit of employees 
generally, however, if the program discriminates in favor of employees 
described in the preceeding sentence (or in favor of their spouses and 
dependents who are themselves employees) in requirements relating to 
eligibility for benefits. Thus, although a program need not provide 
benefits for all employees, it must benefit those employees who qualify 
under a classification of employees that does not discriminate in favor 
of the employees with respect to whom discrimination is prohibited. The 
classification of employees to be considered benefited will consist of 
that group of employees who are actually eligible for educational 
assistance under the program, taking into account the eligibility 
requirements set forth in the written plan, the eligibility requirements 
reflected in the types of educational assistance available under the 
program, and any other conditions that may affect the availability of 
benefits under the program. Thus, for example, if an employer's plan 
provides that all employees are eligible for educational assistance, yet 
limits that assistance to courses of study leading to postgraduate 
degrees in fields relating to the employer's business, then only those 
employees able to pursue such a course of study are considered actually 
eligible for educational assistance under the program. Whether any 
classification of employees discriminates in favor of employees with 
respect to whom discrimination is prohibited will generally be 
determined by applying the

[[Page 543]]

same standards as are applied under section 410(b)(1)(B) (relating to 
qualified pension, profit-sharing and stock bonus plans), without regard 
to section 401(a)(5). For purposes of making this determination, there 
shall be excluded from consideration employees not covered by the 
program who are included in a unit of employees covered by an agreement 
which the Secretary of Labor finds to be a collective bargaining 
agreement between employee representatives and one or more employers, if 
the Internal Revenue Service finds that educational assistance benefits 
were the subject of good faith bargaining between the employee 
representatives and the employer or employers. For purposes of 
determining whether such bargaining occurred, it is not material that 
the employees are not covered by another educational assistance program 
or that the employer's present program was not considered in the 
bargaining.
    (2) Factors not considered in determining the existence of 
prohibited discrimination. A program shall not be considered 
discriminatory under this paragraph (e) merely because--
    (i) Different types of educational assistance available under the 
program are utilized to a greater degree by employees with respect to 
whom discrimination is prohibited than by other employees, or
    (ii) With respect to a course of study for which benefits are 
otherwise available, successful completion of the course, attaining a 
particular course grade, or satisfying a reasonable condition subsequent 
(such as remaining employed for one year after completing the course) 
are required or considered in determining the availability of benefits.
    (f) Benefit limitation--(1) In general. Under section 127(b)(3), a 
program is a qualified program for a program year only if no more than 
5% of the amounts paid or incurred by the employer for educational 
assistance benefits during the year are provided to the limitation class 
described in subparagraph (2). For purposes of this paragraph (f), the 
program year must be specified in the written plan as either the 
calendar year or the taxable year of the employer.
    (2) Limitation class. The limitation class consists of--
    (i) Shareholders. Individuals who, on any day of the program year, 
own more than 5% of the total number of shares of outstanding stock of 
the employer, or
    (ii) Owners. In the case of an employer's trade or business which is 
not incorporated, individuals who, on any day of the program year, own 
more than 5% of the capital or profits interest in the employer, and
    (iii) Spouses or dependents. Individuals who are spouses or 
dependents of shareholders or owners described in subdivision (i) or 
(ii). For purposes of determining stock ownership, the attribution rules 
described in paragraph (h)(4) of this section apply. The regulations 
prescribed under section 414(c) are applicable in determining an 
individual's interest in the capital or profits of an unincorporated 
trade or business.
    (g) Notification of employees. A program is not a qualified program 
unless employees eligible to participate in the program are given 
reasonable notice of the terms and availability of the program.
    (h) Definitions. For purposes of this section and Sec. 1.127-1--
    (1) Employee. The term ``employee'' includes--
    (i) A retired, disabled or laid-off employee,
    (ii) A present employee who is on leave, as, for example, in the 
Armed Forces of the United States, or
    (iii) An individual who is self-employed within the meaning of 
section 401(c)(1).
    (2) Employer. An individual who owns the entire interest in an 
unincorporated trade or business shall be treated as his or her own 
employer. A partnership is treated as the employer of each partner who 
is an employee within the meaning of section 401(c)(1).
    (3) Officer. An officer is an individual who is an officer within 
the meaning of regulations prescribed under section 414(c).
    (4) Shareholder. The term ``shareholder'' includes an individual who 
is a shareholder as determined by the attribution rules under section 
1563 (d) and (e), without regard to section 1563(e)(3)(C).

[[Page 544]]

    (5) Highly compensated. The term ``highly compensated'' has the same 
meaning as it does for purposes of section 410(b)(1)(B).
    (i) Substantiation. An employee receiving payments under a qualified 
educational assistance program must be prepared to provide 
substantiation to the employer such that it is reasonable to believe 
that payments or reimbursements made under the program constitute 
educational assistance within the meaning of paragraph (c) of this 
section.

[T.D. 7898, 48 FR 31017, July 6, 1983]