[Code of Federal Regulations]
[Title 26, Volume 5]
[Revised as of April 1, 2004]
From the U.S. Government Printing Office via GPO Access
[CITE: 26CFR1.401(a)(9)-8]

[Page 219-224]
 
                       TITLE 26--INTERNAL REVENUE
 
    CHAPTER I--INTERNAL REVENUE SERVICE, DEPARTMENT OF THE TREASURY 
                               (CONTINUED)
 
PART 1_INCOME TAXES--Table of Contents
 
Sec. 1.401(a)(9)-8  Special rules.

    Q-1. What distribution rules apply if an employee is a participant 
in more than one plan?
    A-1. If an employee is a participant in more than one plan, the 
plans in which the employee participates are not permitted to be 
aggregated for purposes of testing whether the distribution requirements 
of section 401(a)(9) are met. The distribution of the benefit of the 
employee under each plan must separately meet the requirements of 
section 401(a)(9). For this purpose, a plan described in section 414(k) 
is treated as two separate plans, a defined contribution plan to the 
extent benefits are based on an individual account and a defined benefit 
plan with respect to the remaining benefits.
    Q-2. If an employee's benefit under a defined contribution plan is 
divided into separate accounts (or under a defined benefit plan is 
divided into segregated shares), do the distribution rules in section 
401(a)(9) and these regulations apply separately to each separate 
account?
    A-2. (a) Defined contribution plan. (1) Except as otherwise provided 
in this A-2, if an employee's benefit under a defined contribution plan 
is divided into separate accounts under the plan, the separate accounts 
will be aggregated for purposes of satisfying the rules in section 
401(a)(9). Thus, except as otherwise provided in this A-2, all separate 
accounts, including a separate account for employee contributions under 
section 72(d)(2), will be aggregated for purposes of section 401(a)(9).
    (2) If the employee's benefit in a defined contribution plan is 
divided into separate accounts and the beneficiaries with respect to one 
separate account differ from the beneficiaries with respect to the other 
separate accounts of the employee under the plan, for years subsequent 
to the calendar year containing the date on which the separate accounts 
were established, or date of death if later, such separate account under 
the plan is not aggregated with the other separate accounts under the 
plan in order to determine whether the distributions from such separate 
account under the plan satisfy section 401(a)(9). Instead, the rules in 
section

[[Page 220]]

401(a)(9) separately apply to such separate account under the plan. 
However, the applicable distribution period for each such separate 
account is determined disregarding the other beneficiaries of the 
employee's benefit only if the separate account is established on a date 
no later than the last day of the year following the calendar year of 
the employee's death. For example, if, in the case of a distribution 
described in section 401(a)(9)(B)(iii) and (iv), the only beneficiary of 
a separate account under the plan established on a date no later than 
the end of the year following the calendar year of the employee's death 
is the employee's surviving spouse, and beneficiaries other than the 
surviving spouse are designated with respect to the other separate 
accounts with respect to the employee, distribution of the spouse's 
separate account under the plan need not commence until the date 
determined under the first sentence in A-3(b) of Sec. 1.401(a)(9)-3, 
even if distribution of the other separate accounts under the plan must 
commence at an earlier date. Similarly, in the case of a distribution 
after the death of an employee to which section 401(a)(9)(B)(i) does not 
apply, distribution from a separate account of an employee established 
on a date no later than the end of the year following the year of the 
employee's death may be made over a beneficiary's life expectancy in 
accordance with section 401(a)(9)(B)(iii) and (iv) even though 
distributions from other separate accounts under the plan with different 
beneficiaries are being made in accordance with the 5-year rule in 
section 401(a)(9)(B)(ii).
    (3) A portion of an employee's account balance under a defined 
contribution plan is permitted to be used to purchase an annuity 
contract while another portion stays in the account. In that case, the 
remaining account under the plan must be distributed in accordance with 
Sec. 1.401(a)(9)-5 in order to satisfy section 401(a)(9) and the 
annuity payments under the annuity contract must satisfy Sec. 
1.401(a)(9)-6T in order to satisfy section 401(a)(9).
    (b) Defined benefit plan. The rules of paragraph (a)(2) and (3) of 
this A-2 also apply to benefits under a defined benefit plan where the 
benefits under the plan are separated into separate identifiable 
components which are separately distributed.
    Q-3. What are separate accounts for purposes of section 401(a)(9)?
    A-3. For purposes of section 401(a)(9), separate accounts in an 
employee's account are separate portions of an employee's benefit 
reflecting the separate interests of the employee's beneficiaries under 
the plan as of the date of the employee's death for which separate 
accounting is maintained. The separate accounting must allocate all 
post-death investment gains and losses, contributions, and forfeitures, 
for the period prior to the establishment of the separate accounts on a 
pro rata basis in a reasonable and consistent manner among the separate 
accounts. However, once the separate accounts are actually established, 
the separate accounting can provide for separate investments for each 
separate account under which gains and losses from the investment of the 
account are only allocated to that account, or investment gain or losses 
can continue to be allocated among the separate accounts on a pro rata 
basis. A separate accounting must allocate any post-death distribution 
to the separate account of the beneficiary receiving that distribution.
    Q-4. If a distribution is required to be made to an employee by 
section 401(a)(9)(A) or is required to be made to a surviving spouse 
under section 401(a)(9)(B), must the distribution be made even if the 
employee, or spouse where applicable, fails to consent to a distribution 
while a benefit is immediately distributable?
    A-4. Yes, section 411(a)(11) and section 417(e) (see Sec. Sec. 
1.411(a)(11)-1(c)(2) and 1.417(e)-1(c)) require employee and spousal 
consent to certain distributions of plan benefits while such benefits 
are immediately distributable. If an employee's normal retirement age is 
later than the employee's required beginning date and, therefore, 
benefits are still immediately distributable, the plan must, 
nevertheless, distribute plan benefits to the employee (or where 
applicable, to the spouse) in a manner that satisfies the requirements 
of section 401(a)(9). Section 401(a)(9) must be satisfied even though 
the employee (or

[[Page 221]]

spouse, where applicable) fails to consent to the distribution. In such 
a case, the plan may distribute in the form of a qualified joint and 
survivor annuity (QJSA) or in the form of a qualified preretirement 
survivor annuity (QPSA), as applicable, and the consent requirements of 
sections 411(a)(11) and 417(e) are deemed to be satisfied if the plan 
has made reasonable efforts to obtain consent from the employee (or 
spouse if applicable) and if the distribution otherwise meets the 
requirements of section 417. If, because of section 401(a)(11)(B), the 
plan is not required to distribute in the form of a QJSA to a employee 
or a QPSA to a surviving spouse, the plan may distribute the required 
minimum distribution amount to satisfy section 401(a)(9) and the consent 
requirements of sections 411(a)(11) and 417(e) are deemed to be 
satisfied if the plan has made reasonable efforts to obtain consent from 
the employee (or spouse if applicable) and if the distribution otherwise 
meets the requirements of section 417.
    Q-5. Who is an employee's spouse or surviving spouse for purposes of 
section 401(a)(9)?
    A-5. Except as otherwise provided in A-6(a) of this section (in the 
case of distributions of a portion of an employee's benefit payable to a 
former spouse of an employee pursuant to a qualified domestic relations 
order), for purposes of section 401(a)(9), an individual is a spouse or 
surviving spouse of an employee if such individual is treated as the 
employee's spouse under applicable state law. In the case of 
distributions after the death of an employee, for purposes of 
determining whether, under the life expectancy rule in section 
401(a)(9)(B)(iii) and (iv), the provisions of section 401(a)(9)(B)(iv) 
apply, the spouse of the employee is determined as of the date of death 
of the employee.
    Q-6. In order to satisfy section 401(a)(9), are there any special 
rules which apply to the distribution of all or a portion of an 
employee's benefit payable to an alternate payee pursuant to a qualified 
domestic relations order as defined in section 414(p) (QDRO)?
    A-6. (a) A former spouse to whom all or a portion of the employee's 
benefit is payable pursuant to a QDRO will be treated as a spouse 
(including a surviving spouse) of the employee for purposes of section 
401(a)(9), including the minimum distribution incidental benefit 
requirement, regardless of whether the QDRO specifically provides that 
the former spouse is treated as the spouse for purposes of sections 
401(a)(11) and 417.
    (b)(1) If a QDRO provides that an employee's benefit is to be 
divided and a portion is to be allocated to an alternate payee, such 
portion will be treated as a separate account (or segregated share) 
which separately must satisfy the requirements of section 401(a)(9) and 
may not be aggregated with other separate accounts (or segregated 
shares) of the employee for purposes of satisfying section 401(a)(9). 
Except as otherwise provided in paragraph (b)(2) of this A-6, 
distribution of such separate account allocated to an alternate payee 
pursuant to a QDRO must be made in accordance with section 401(a)(9). 
For example, in general, distribution of such account will satisfy 
section 401(a)(9)(A) if required minimum distributions from such account 
during the employee's lifetime begin not later than the employee's 
required beginning date and the required minimum distribution is 
determined in accordance with Sec. 1.401(a)(9)-5 for each distribution 
calendar year (using an applicable distribution period determined under 
A-4 of Sec. 1.401(a)(9)-5 for the employee in the distribution calendar 
year either using the Uniform Lifetime Table in A-2 of Sec. 
1.401(a)(9)-9 or using the joint life expectancy of the employee and a 
spousal alternate payee in the distribution calendar year if the spousal 
alternate payee is more than 10 years younger than the employee). The 
determination of whether distribution from such account after the death 
of the employee to the alternate payee will be made in accordance with 
section 401(a)(9)(B)(i) or section 401(a)(9)(B)(ii) or (iii) and (iv) 
will depend on whether distributions have begun as determined under A-6 
of Sec. 1.401(a)(9)-2 (which provides, in general, that distributions 
are not treated as having begun until the employee's required beginning 
date even though payments may actually have begun before that date). For 
example, if the alternate payee dies before the employee

[[Page 222]]

and distribution of the separate account allocated to the alternate 
payee pursuant to the QDRO is to be made to the alternate payee's 
beneficiary, such beneficiary may be treated as a designated beneficiary 
for purposes of determining the minimum distribution required from such 
account after the death of the employee if the beneficiary of the 
alternate payee is an individual and if such beneficiary is a 
beneficiary under the plan or specified to or in the plan. Specification 
in or pursuant to the QDRO is treated as specification to the plan.
    (2) Distribution of the separate account allocated to an alternate 
payee pursuant to a QDRO will satisfy the requirements of section 
401(a)(9)(A)(ii) if such account is to be distributed, beginning not 
later than the employee's required beginning date, over the life of the 
alternate payee (or over a period not extending beyond the life 
expectancy of the alternate payee). Also, if the plan permits the 
employee to elect whether distribution upon the death of the employee 
will be made in accordance with the 5-year rule in section 
401(a)(9)(B)(ii) or the life expectancy rule in section 
401(a)(9)(B)(iii) and (iv) pursuant to A-4(c) of Sec. 1.401(a)(9)-3, 
such election is to be made only by the alternate payee for purposes of 
distributing the separate account allocated to the alternate payee 
pursuant to the QDRO. If the alternate payee dies after distribution of 
the separate account allocated to the alternate payee pursuant to a QDRO 
has begun (determined under A-6 of Sec. 1.401(a)(9)-2) but before the 
employee dies, distribution of the remaining portion of that portion of 
the benefit allocated to the alternate payee must be made in accordance 
with the rules in Sec. 1.401(a)(9)-5 or 1.401(a)(9)-6T for 
distributions during the life of the employee. Only after the death of 
the employee is the amount of the required minimum distribution 
determined in accordance with the rules of section 401(a)(9)(B).
    (c) If a QDRO does not provide that an employee's benefit is to be 
divided but provides that a portion of an employee's benefit (otherwise 
payable to the employee) is to be paid to an alternate payee, such 
portion will not be treated as a separate account (or segregated share) 
of the employee. Instead, such portion will be aggregated with any 
amount distributed to the employee and will be treated as having been 
distributed to the employee for purposes of determining whether section 
401(a)(9) has been satisfied with respect to that employee.
    Q-7. Will a plan fail to satisfy section 401(a)(9) merely because it 
fails to distribute an amount otherwise required to be distributed by 
section 401(a)(9) during the period in which the issue of whether a 
domestic relations order is a QDRO is being determined?
    A-7. A plan will not fail to satisfy section 401(a)(9) merely 
because it fails to distribute an amount otherwise required to be 
distributed by section 401(a)(9) during the period in which the issue of 
whether a domestic relations order is a QDRO is being determined 
pursuant to section 414(p)(7), provided that the period does not extend 
beyond the 18-month period described in section 414(p)(7)(E). To the 
extent that a distribution otherwise required under section 401(a)(9) is 
not made during this period, any segregated amounts, as defined in 
section 414(p)(7)(A), will be treated as though the amounts are not 
vested during the period and any distributions with respect to such 
amounts must be made under the relevant rules for nonvested benefits 
described in either A-8 of Sec. 1.401(a)(9)-5 or A-6 of Sec. 
1.401(a)(9)-6T, as applicable.
    Q-8. Will a plan fail to satisfy section 401(a)(9) where an 
individual's distribution from the plan is less than the amount 
otherwise required to satisfy section 401(a)(9) because distributions 
were being paid under an annuity contract issued by a life insurance 
company in state insurer delinquency proceedings and have been reduced 
or suspended by reasons of such state proceedings?
    A-8. A plan will not fail to satisfy section 401(a)(9) merely 
because an individual's distribution from the plan is less than the 
amount otherwise required to satisfy section 401(a)(9) because 
distributions were being paid under an annuity contract issued by a life 
insurance company in state insurer delinquency proceedings and have been 
reduced or suspended by reasons of such state proceedings. To the extent

[[Page 223]]

that a distribution otherwise required under section 401(a)(9) is not 
made during the state insurer delinquency proceedings, this amount and 
any additional amount accrued during this period will be treated as 
though such amounts are not vested during the period and any 
distributions with respect to such amounts must be made under the 
relevant rules for nonvested benefits described in either A-8 of Sec. 
1.401(a)(9)-5 or A-6 of Sec. 1.401(a)(9)-6T, as applicable.
    Q-9. Will a plan fail to qualify as a pension plan within the 
meaning of section 401(a) solely because the plan permits distributions 
to commence to an employee on or after April 1 of the calendar year 
following the calendar year in which the employee attains age 70\1/2\ 
even though the employee has not retired or attained the normal 
retirement age under the plan as of the date on which such distributions 
commence?
    A-9. No, a plan will not fail to qualify as a pension plan within 
the meaning of section 401(a) solely because the plan permits 
distributions to commence to an employee on or after April 1 of the 
calendar year following the calendar year in which the employee attains 
age 70\1/2\ even though the employee has not retired or attained the 
normal retirement age under the plan as of the date on which such 
distributions commence. This rule applies without regard to whether the 
employee is a 5-percent owner with respect to the plan year ending in 
the calendar year in which distributions commence.
    Q-10. Is the distribution of an annuity contract a distribution for 
purposes of section 401(a)(9)?
    A-10. No, the distribution of an annuity contract is not a 
distribution for purposes of section 401(a)(9).
    Q-11. Will a payment by a plan after the death of an employee fail 
to be treated as a distribution for purposes of section 401(a)(9) solely 
because it is made to an estate or a trust?
    A-11. A payment by a plan after the death of an employee will not 
fail to be treated as a distribution for purposes of section 401(a)(9) 
solely because it is made to an estate or a trust. As a result, the 
estate or trust which receives a payment from a plan after the death of 
an employee need not distribute the amount of such payment to the 
beneficiaries of the estate or trust in accordance with section 
401(a)(9)(B). Pursuant to A-3 of Sec. 1.401(a)(9)-4, an estate may not 
be a designated beneficiary. Thus, pursuant to A-4 of Sec. 1.401(a)(9)-
3, distribution to the estate must satisfy the 5-year rule in section 
401(a)(9)(B)(iii) if the distribution to the employee had not begun (as 
defined in A-6 of Sec. 1.401(a)(9)-2) as of the employee's date of 
death. However, see A-5 and A-6 of Sec. 1.401(a)(9)-4 for provisions 
under which beneficiaries of a trust with respect to the trust's 
interest in an employee's benefit are treated as having been designated 
as beneficiaries of the employee under the plan.
    Q-12. Will a plan fail to satisfy section 411(d)(6) if the plan is 
amended to eliminate the availability of an optional form of benefit to 
the extent that the optional form does not satisfy section 401(a)(9)?
    A-12. No, pursuant to section 411(d)(6)(B), a plan will not fail to 
satisfy section 411(d)(6) merely because the plan is amended to 
eliminate the availability of an optional form of benefit to the extent 
that the optional form does not satisfy section 401(a)(9). (See also A-3 
of Sec. 1.401(a)(9)-1, which requires a plan to provide that, 
notwithstanding any other plan provision, it will not distribute 
benefits under any option that does not satisfy section 401(a)(9).)
    Q-13. Is a plan disqualified merely because it pays benefits under a 
designation made before January 1, 1984, in accordance with section 
242(b)(2) of the Tax Equity and Fiscal Responsibility Act (TEFRA)?
    A-13. No, even though the distribution requirements added by TEFRA 
were retroactively repealed by the Tax Reform Act of 1984 (TRA of 1984), 
the transitional election rule in section 242(b) of TEFRA was preserved. 
Satisfaction of the spousal consent requirements of section 417(a) and 
(e) (added by the Retirement Equity Act of 1984) will not be considered 
a revocation of the pre-1984 designation. However, sections 401(a)(11) 
and 417 must be satisfied with respect to any distribution subject to 
those sections. The election provided in section 242(b) of TEFRA is

[[Page 224]]

hereafter referred to as a section 242(b)(2) election.
    Q-14. If an amount is transferred from one plan (transferor plan) to 
another plan (transferee plan), may the transferee plan distribute the 
amount transferred in accordance with a section 242(b)(2) election made 
under either the transferor plan or under the transferee plan?
    A-14. (a) If an amount is transferred from one plan (transferor 
plan) to another plan (transferee plan), the amount transferred may be 
distributed in accordance with a section 242(b)(2) election made under 
the transferor plan if the employee did not elect to have the amount 
transferred and if the amount transferred is separately accounted for by 
the transferee plan. However, only the benefit attributable to the 
amount transferred, plus earnings thereon, may be distributed in 
accordance with the section 242(b)(2) election made under the transferor 
plan. If the employee elected to have the amount transferred, the 
transfer will be treated as a distribution and rollover of the amount 
transferred for purposes of this section.
    (b) In the case in which an amount is transferred from one plan to 
another plan, the amount transferred may not be distributed in 
accordance with a section 242(b)(2) election made under the transferee 
plan. If a section 242(b)(2) election was made under the transferee 
plan, the amount transferred must be separately accounted for. If the 
amount transferred is not separately accounted for under the transferee 
plan, the section 242(b)(2) election under the transferee plan is 
revoked and section 401(a)(9) will apply to subsequent distributions by 
the transferee plan.
    (c) A merger, spinoff, or consolidation, as defined in Sec. 
1.414(l)-1(b), will be treated as a transfer for purposes of the section 
242(b)(2) election.
    Q-15. If an amount is distributed by one plan (distributing plan) 
and rolled over into another plan (receiving plan), may the receiving 
plan distribute the amount rolled over in accordance with a section 
242(b)(2) election made under either the distributing plan or the 
receiving plan?
    A-15. No, if an amount is distributed by one plan (distributing 
plan) and rolled over into another plan (receiving plan), the receiving 
plan must distribute the amount rolled over in accordance with section 
401(a)(9) whether or not the employee made a section 242(b)(2) election 
under the distributing plan. Further, if the amount rolled over was not 
distributed in accordance with the election, the election under the 
distributing plan is revoked and section 401(a)(9) will apply to all 
subsequent distributions by the distributing plan. Finally, if the 
employee made a section 242(b)(2) election under the receiving plan and 
such election is still in effect, the amount rolled over must be 
separately accounted for under the receiving plan and distributed in 
accordance with section 401(a)(9). If amounts rolled over are not 
separately accounted for, any section 242(b)(2) election under the 
receiving plan is revoked and section 401(a)(9) will apply to subsequent 
distributions by the receiving plan.
    Q-16. May a section 242(b)(2) election be revoked after the date by 
which distributions are required to commence in order to satisfy section 
401(a)(9) and this section of the regulations?
    A-16. Yes, a section 242(b)(2) election may be revoked after the 
date by which distributions are required to commence in order to satisfy 
section 401(a)(9) and this section of the regulations. However, if the 
section 242(b)(2) election is revoked after the date by which 
distributions are required to commence in order to satisfy section 
401(a)(9) and this section of the regulations and the total amount of 
the distributions which would have been required to be made prior to the 
date of the revocation in order to satisfy section 401(a)(9), but for 
the section 242(b)(2) election, have not been made, the plan must 
distribute by the end of the calendar year following the calendar year 
in which the revocation occurs the total amount not yet distributed 
which was required to have been distributed to satisfy the requirements 
of section 401(a)(9) and continue distributions in accordance with such 
requirements.

[T.D. 8987, 67 FR 18994, Apr. 17, 2002]

[[Page 225]]