[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: 26CFR1.410(b)-1]

[Page 552-555]
 
                       TITLE 26--INTERNAL REVENUE
 
    CHAPTER I--INTERNAL REVENUE SERVICE, DEPARTMENT OF THE TREASURY 
                               (CONTINUED)
 
PART 1_INCOME TAXES--Table of Contents
 
Sec. 1.410(b)-1  Minimum coverage requirements (before 1994).

    (a) In general. A plan is not a qualified plan (and a trust forming 
a part of the plan is not a qualified trust) unless the plan satisfies 
section 410(b)(1). For plan years prior to the applicable effective date 
set forth in Sec. 1.410(b)-10, a plan satisfies section 410(b)(1) if it 
satisfies the requirements of paragraph (b)(1) or (b)(2) of this 
section. See also Sec. 1.410(b)-2 for plan years beginning on or after 
the applicable effective date set forth in Sec. 1.410(b)-10.
    (b) Coverage tests--(1) Percentage test. A plan satisfies the 
requirements of this subparagraph if it benefits--
    (i) Seventy percent or more of all employees, or

[[Page 553]]

    (ii) Eighty percent or more of all employees who are eligible to 
benefit under the plan if 70 percent or more of all the employees are 
eligible to benefit under the plan,

excluding in each case employees who have not satisfied the minimum age 
and service requirements (if any) prescribed by the plan, as of the date 
coverage is tested, as a condition of participation and employees 
permitted to be excluded under paragraph (c) of this section. The 
percentage requirements of this subparagraph refer to a percentage of 
active employees, including employees temporarily on leave, such as 
those in the Armed Forces of the United States, if such employees are 
eligible under the plan.
    (2) Classification test. A plan satisfies the requirements of 
section 410(b)(1) and this subparagraph if it benefits such employees as 
qualify under a classification of employees set up by the employer, 
which classification is found by the Internal Revenue Service not to be 
discriminatory in favor of employees who are officers, shareholders, or 
highly compensated. For purposes of this subparagraph, except as 
provided by paragraph (c) of this section, all active employees 
(including employees who do not satisfy the minimum age or service 
requirements of the plan) are taken into account.
    (c) Exclusion of certain employees. Under section 410(b)(2), for 
purposes of section 410(b)(1) and paragraph (b) of this section, there 
shall be excluded from consideration employees described in 
subparagraphs (1), (2), and (3) of this paragraph.
    (1) Bargaining unit. Under section 410(b)(2)(A) and this paragraph, 
there may be excluded from consideration employees not included in the 
plan 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 retirement benefits were the 
subject of good faith bargaining between such employee representatives 
and such employer or employers. For purposes of determining whether such 
bargaining occurred, it is not material that such employees are not 
covered by another plan or that the plan was not considered in such 
bargaining.
    (2) Air pilots. Under section 410(b)(2)(B) and this paragraph there 
may be excluded from consideration, in the case of a plan established or 
maintained pursuant to an agreement which the Secretary of Labor finds 
to be a collective bargaining agreement between air pilots represented 
in accordance with title II of the Railway Labor Act and one or more 
employers all employees not covered by such agreement. Section 
410(b)(2)(B) and this subparagraph do not apply to a plan if the plan 
provides contributions or benefits for employees whose principal duties 
are not customarily performed aboard aircraft in flight.
    (3) Nonresident aliens. Under section 410(b)(2)(C) and this 
paragraph, there may be excluded from consideration employees who are 
nonresident aliens and who receive no earned income (within the meaning 
of section 911(b) and the regulations thereunder) from the employer 
which constitutes income from sources within the United States (within 
the meaning of section 861(a)(3) and the regulations thereunder).
    (d) Special rules--(1) Highly compensated. The classification of an 
employee as highly compensated for purposes of section 410(b)(1)(B) and 
Sec. 1.410(b)-1(b)(2) is made on the basis of the facts and 
circumstances of each case, taking into account the level of the 
employee's compensation and the level of compensation paid by the 
employer to other employees, whether or not covered by the plan. Average 
compensation levels determined on a local, regional, or national basis, 
are not relevant for this purpose. Further, the classification of an 
employee as highly compensated is not made solely on the basis of the 
number or percentage of employees whose compensation exceeds, or is 
exceeded by, the employee's.
    (2) Discrimination. The determination as to whether a plan 
discriminates in favor of employees who are officers, shareholders, or 
highly compensated is made on the basis of the facts and circumstances 
of each case, allowing a reasonable difference between the ratio of such 
employees benefited by the

[[Page 554]]

plan to all such employees of the employer and the ratio of the 
employees (other than officers, shareholders, or highly compensated) of 
the employer benefited by the plan to all employees (other than 
officers, shareholders, or highly compensated). A showing that a 
specified percentage of employees covered by a plan are not officers, 
shareholders, or highly compensated, is not in itself sufficient to 
establish that the plan does not discriminate in favor of employees who 
are officers, shareholders, or highly compensated.
    (3) Multiple plans--(i) An employer may designate two or more plans 
as constituting a single plan which is intended to qualify for purposes 
of section 410(b)(1) and this section, in which case all plans so 
designated shall be considered as a single plan in determining whether 
the requirements of such section are satisfied by each of the separate 
plans. A determination that the combination of plans so designated does 
not satisfy such requirements does not preclude a determination that one 
or more of such plans, considered separately, satisfies such 
requirements.
    (ii) Notwithstanding subdivision (i) of this subparagraph, a plan 
which is subject to the limitations of section 401(a)(17) of the Code or 
section 301(d)(3) of the Tax Reduction Act of 1975 cannot be considered 
with any other plan which covers any employee covered by such plan.
    (4) Profit-sharing plans. Employees under a profit-sharing plan who 
receive the amounts allocated to their accounts before the expiration of 
a period of time or the occurrence of a contingency specified in the 
plan shall not be considered covered by the plan. Thus, in case a plan 
permits employees to receive immediately the amounts allocated to their 
accounts, or to have such amounts paid to a profit-sharing plan for 
them, the employees who receive the shares immediately shall not be 
considered covered by the plan.
    (5) Certain classifications. See section 401(a)(5) and the 
regulations thereunder for rules relating to classifications of 
employees which are not considered to be discriminatory per se for 
purposes of section 410(b)(1)(B) and Sec. 1.410(b)-1(b)(2).
    (6) Integration with Social Security Act. See section 401(a)(5) and 
the regulations thereunder for rules relating to integration of plans 
with the Social Security Act.
    (7) Different age and service requirements--(i) Application. The 
rules of this subparagraph (7) apply to a plan which must satisfy the 
minimum age and service requirements of section 410(a)(1)(A) in order to 
be a qualified plan. Accordingly, the rules are inapplicable to plans 
described in section 410(c)(1) (see Sec. 1.410(a)-1(c)(1)); plans 
satisfying the alternative minimum age and service requirements of 
section 410(a)(1)(B) but not satisfying the requirements of section 
410(a)(1)(A); and plans which provide contributions or benefits for 
employees, some or all of whom are owner-employees (see section 
401(a)(10)).
    (ii) General rules. A provision for different age and service 
requirements for present and future employees either upon establishment 
or subsequent amendment is not, of itself, discriminatory under section 
410(b)(1)(B) even though present employees who are officers, 
shareholders, or highly compensated cannot meet the age and service 
requirements for future employees at the time the plan is established or 
amended and even though present participants who are officers, 
shareholders, or highly compensated would not have satisfied the age and 
service requirements for future employees at the time they became 
participants in the plan. Furthermore, prohibited discrimination will be 
deemed not to arise in operation, solely because of such different 
requirements, when future employees are added to the employer's work 
force.
    (8) Certain controlled groups. In applying the percentage test and 
classification test described in paragraph (b) (1) and (2) of this 
section for a year, all the employees of corporations or trades and 
businesses whose employees are treated as employed by a single employer 
by reason of section 414 (b) or (c) must be taken into account. The 
preceding sentence shall apply for a plan year if, on 1 day in each 
quarter of such plan year, such corporations are members of a controlled 
group of corporations (within the meaning of section

[[Page 555]]

414(b)) of such trades or businesses are under common control (within 
the meaning of section 414(c)).
    (9) Transitional rule. In the case of a cash and deferred profit-
sharing plan, in existence on June 27, 1974, the requirements of 
paragraph (b)(2) of this section are satisfied if over one-half of the 
participants in the plan are among the lowest paid two-thirds of all 
eligible employees. This subparagraph shall not apply after December 31, 
1977.
    (e) Example. The rules provided by this section are illustrated by 
the following example:

    Example. An employer established a non-contributory defined benefit 
plan covering all employees of its ABC Division who are hired prior to 
age 60 and who are at least 25 years old. The normal retirement age 
under the plan is age 65. The employer has 100 employees including 20 
employees who are under age 25 and 10 employees who were hired over age 
60. The plan does not cover 15 employees who are over age 25 and were 
hired before age 60 because they are not in the ABC Division. Of these 
15 excluded employees, 3 have less than 1 year of service. In addition, 
12 of the 55 employees covered have less than one year of service. The 
plan can be shown not to satisfy the requirements of IRC section 
410(b)(1)(A) as follows:

(i) Number of employees........................................      100
(ii) Number of employees excluded on account of minimum age and       20
 service.......................................................
(iii) (i)-(ii).................................................       80
(iv) Number of employees who must be covered if plan is to            56
 satisfy IRC section 410(b)(1)(A), 70% of (iii)................
(v) Number of employees actually covered.......................       55



Because the number of employees covered is less than the number of 
employees who must be covered, the plan does not satisfy the percentage 
coverage requirements of IRC section 410(b)(1)(A).

(Sec. 410 (88 Stat. 898; 26 U.S.C. 410))

[T.D. 7508, 42 FR 47197, Sept. 20, 1977, as amended by T.D. 7735, 45 FR 
74722, Nov. 12, 1980; T.D. 8363, 56 FR 47643, Sept. 19, 1991; T.D. 8487, 
58 FR 46839, Sept. 3, 1993]