[Code of Federal Regulations]
[Title 26, Volume 6]
[Revised as of April 1, 2004]
From the U.S. Government Printing Office via GPO Access
[CITE: 26CFR1.457-10]

[Page 180-186]
 
                       TITLE 26--INTERNAL REVENUE
 
    CHAPTER I--INTERNAL REVENUE SERVICE, DEPARTMENT OF THE TREASURY 
                               (CONTINUED)
 
PART 1_INCOME TAXES--Table of Contents
 
Sec. 1.457-10  Miscellaneous provisions.

    (a) Plan terminations and frozen plans--(1) In general. An eligible 
employer may amend its plan to eliminate future deferrals for existing 
participants or to limit participation to existing participants and 
employees. An eligible plan may also contain provisions that permit plan 
termination and permit amounts deferred to be distributed on 
termination. In order for a plan to be considered terminated, amounts 
deferred under an eligible plan must be distributed to all plan 
participants and beneficiaries as soon as administratively practicable 
after termination of the eligible plan. The mere provision for, and 
making of, distributions to participants or beneficiaries upon a plan 
termination will not cause an eligible plan to cease to satisfy the 
requirements of section 457(b) or the regulations.
    (2) Employers that cease to be eligible employers--(i) Plan not 
terminated. An eligible employer that ceases to be an eligible employer 
may no longer maintain an eligible plan. If the employer was a tax-
exempt entity and the plan is not terminated as permitted under

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paragraph (a)(2)(ii) of this section, the tax consequences to 
participants and beneficiaries in the previously eligible (unfunded) 
plan of an ineligible employer are determined in accordance with either 
section 451 if the employer becomes an entity other than a State or 
Sec. 1.457-11 if the employer becomes a State. If the employer was a 
State and the plan is neither terminated as permitted under paragraph 
(a)(2)(ii) of this section nor transferred to another eligible plan of 
that State as permitted under paragraph (b) of this section, the tax 
consequences to participants in the previously eligible governmental 
plan of an ineligible employer, the assets of which are held in trust 
pursuant to Sec. 1.457-8(a), are determined in accordance with section 
402(b) (section 403(c) in the case of an annuity contract) and the trust 
is no longer to be treated as a trust that is exempt from tax under 
section 501(a).
    (ii) Plan termination. As an alternative to determining the tax 
consequences to the plan and participants under paragraph (a)(2)(i) of 
this section, the employer may terminate the plan and distribute the 
amounts deferred (and all plan assets) to all plan participants as soon 
as administratively practicable in accordance with paragraph (a)(1) of 
this section. Such distribution may include eligible rollover 
distributions in the case of a plan that was an eligible governmental 
plan. In addition, if the employer is a State, another alternative to 
determining the tax consequences under paragraph (a)(2)(i) of this 
section is to transfer the assets of the eligible governmental plan to 
an eligible governmental plan of another eligible employer within the 
same State under the plan-to-plan transfer rules of paragraph (b) of 
this section.
    (3) Examples. The provisions of this paragraph (a) are illustrated 
by the following examples:

     Example 1. (i) Facts. Employer Y, a corporation that owns a State 
hospital, sponsors an eligible governmental plan funded through a trust. 
Employer Y is acquired by a for-profit hospital and Employer Y ceases to 
be an eligible employer under section 457(e)(1) or Sec. 1.457-2(e). 
Employer Y terminates the plan and, during the next 6 months, 
distributes to participants and beneficiaries all amounts deferred that 
were under the plan.
    (ii) Conclusion. The termination and distribution does not cause the 
plan to fail to be an eligible governmental plan. Amounts that are 
distributed as eligible rollover distributions may be rolled over to an 
eligible retirement plan described in section 402(c)(8)(B).
     Example 2. (i) Facts. The facts are the same as in Example 1, 
except that Employer Y decides to continue to maintain the plan.
    (ii) Conclusion. If Employer Y continues to maintain the plan, the 
tax consequences to participants and beneficiaries will be determined in 
accordance with either section 402(b) if the compensation deferred is 
funded through a trust, section 403(c) if the compensation deferred is 
funded through annuity contracts, or Sec. 1.457-11 if the compensation 
deferred is not funded through a trust or annuity contract. In addition, 
if Employer Y continues to maintain the plan, the trust will no longer 
be treated as exempt from tax under section 501(a).
    Example 3. (i) Facts. Employer Z, a corporation that owns a tax-
exempt hospital, sponsors an unfunded eligible plan. Employer Z is 
acquired by a for-profit hospital and is no longer an eligible employer 
under section 457(e)(1) or Sec. 1.457-2(e). Employer Z terminates the 
plan and distributes all amounts deferred under the eligible plan to 
participants and beneficiaries within a one-year period.
    (ii) Conclusion. Distributions under the plan are treated as made 
under an eligible plan of a tax-exempt entity and the distributions of 
the amounts deferred are includible in the gross income of the 
participant or beneficiary in the year distributed.
    Example 4. (i) Facts. The facts are the same as in Example 3, except 
that Employer Z decides to maintain instead of terminate the plan.
    (ii) Conclusion. If Employer Z maintains the plan, the tax 
consequences to participants and beneficiaries in the plan will 
thereafter be determined in accordance with section 451.

    (b) Plan-to-plan transfers--(1) General rule. An eligible 
governmental plan may provide for the transfer of amounts deferred by a 
participant or beneficiary to another eligible governmental plan if the 
conditions in paragraphs (b)(2), (3), or (4) of this section are met. An 
eligible plan of a tax-exempt entity may provide for transfers of 
amounts deferred by a participant to another eligible plan of a tax-
exempt entity if the conditions in paragraph (b)(5) of this section are 
met. In addition, an eligible governmental plan may accept transfers 
from another eligible governmental plan as described in

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the first sentence of this paragraph (b)(1), and an eligible plan of a 
tax-exempt entity may accept transfers from another eligible plan of a 
tax-exempt entity as described in the preceding sentence. However, a 
State may not transfer the assets of its eligible governmental plan to a 
tax-exempt entity's eligible plan and the plan of a tax-exempt entity 
may not accept such a transfer. Similarly, a tax-exempt entity may not 
transfer the assets of its eligible plan to an eligible governmental 
plan and an eligible governmental plan may not accept such a transfer. 
In addition, if the conditions in paragraph (b)(4) of this section 
(relating to permissive past service credit and repayments under section 
415) are met, an eligible governmental plan of a State may provide for 
the transfer of amounts deferred by a participant or beneficiary to a 
qualified plan (under section 401(a)) maintained by a State. However, a 
qualified plan may not transfer assets to an eligible governmental plan 
or to an eligible plan of a tax-exempt entity, and an eligible 
governmental plan or the plan of a tax-exempt entity may not accept such 
a transfer.
    (2) Requirements for post-severance plan-to-plan transfers among 
eligible governmental plans. A transfer under paragraph (b)(1) of this 
section from an eligible governmental plan to another eligible 
governmental plan is permitted if the following conditions are met--
    (i) The transferor plan provides for transfers;
    (ii) The receiving plan provides for the receipt of transfers;
    (iii) The participant or beneficiary whose amounts deferred are 
being transferred will have an amount deferred immediately after the 
transfer at least equal to the amount deferred with respect to that 
participant or beneficiary immediately before the transfer; and
    (iv) In the case of a transfer for a participant, the participant 
has had a severance from employment with the transferring employer and 
is performing services for the entity maintaining the receiving plan.
    (3) Requirements for plan-to-plan transfers of all plan assets of 
eligible governmental plan. A transfer under paragraph (b)(1) of this 
section from an eligible governmental plan to another eligible 
governmental plan is permitted if the following conditions are met--
    (i) The transfer is from an eligible governmental plan to another 
eligible governmental plan within the same State;
    (ii) All of the assets held by the transferor plan are transferred;
    (iii) The transferor plan provides for transfers;
    (iv) The receiving plan provides for the receipt of transfers;
    (v) The participant or beneficiary whose amounts deferred are being 
transferred will have an amount deferred immediately after the transfer 
at least equal to the amount deferred with respect to that participant 
or beneficiary immediately before the transfer; and
    (vi) The participants or beneficiaries whose deferred amounts are 
being transferred are not eligible for additional annual deferrals in 
the receiving plan unless they are performing services for the entity 
maintaining the receiving plan.
    (4) Requirements for plan-to-plan transfers among eligible 
governmental plans of the same employer. A transfer under paragraph 
(b)(1) of this section from an eligible governmental plan to another 
eligible governmental plan is permitted if the following conditions are 
met--
    (i) The transfer is from an eligible governmental plan to another 
eligible governmental plan of the same employer (and, for this purpose, 
the employer is not treated as the same employer if the participant's 
compensation is paid by a different entity);
    (ii) The transferor plan provides for transfers;
    (iii) The receiving plan provides for the receipt of transfers;
    (iv) The participant or beneficiary whose amounts deferred are being 
transferred will have an amount deferred immediately after the transfer 
at least equal to the amount deferred with respect to that participant 
or beneficiary immediately before the transfer; and
    (v) The participant or beneficiary whose deferred amounts are being

[[Page 183]]

transferred is not eligible for additional annual deferrals in the 
receiving plan unless the participant or beneficiary is performing 
services for the entity maintaining the receiving plan.
    (5) Requirements for post-severance plan-to-plan transfers among 
eligible plans of tax-exempt entities. A transfer under paragraph (b)(1) 
of this section from an eligible plan of a tax-exempt employer to 
another eligible plan of a tax-exempt employer is permitted if the 
following conditions are met--
    (i) The transferor plan provides for transfers;
    (ii) The receiving plan provides for the receipt of transfers;
    (iii) The participant or beneficiary whose amounts deferred are 
being transferred will have an amount deferred immediately after the 
transfer at least equal to the amount deferred with respect to that 
participant or beneficiary immediately before the transfer; and
    (iv) In the case of a transfer for a participant, the participant 
has had a severance from employment with the transferring employer and 
is performing services for the entity maintaining the receiving plan.
    (6) Treatment of amount transferred following a plan-to-plan 
transfer between eligible plans. Following a transfer of any amount 
between eligible plans under paragraphs (b)(1) through (b)(5) of this 
section--
    (i) The transferred amount is subject to the restrictions of Sec. 
1.457-6 (relating to when distributions are permitted to be made to a 
participant under an eligible plan) in the receiving plan in the same 
manner as if the transferred amount had been originally been deferred 
under the receiving plan if the participant is performing services for 
the entity maintaining the receiving plan, and
    (ii) In the case of a transfer between eligible plans of tax-exempt 
entities, except as otherwise determined by the Commissioner, the 
transferred amount is subject to Sec. 1.457-7(c)(2) (relating to when 
amounts are considered to be made available under an eligible plan of a 
tax-exempt entity) in the same manner as if the elections made by the 
participant or beneficiary under the transferor plan had been made under 
the receiving plan.
    (7) Examples. The provisions of paragraphs (b)(1) through (6) of 
this section are illustrated by the following examples:

    Example 1. (i) Facts. Participant A, the president of City X's 
hospital, has accepted a position with another hospital which is a tax-
exempt entity. A participates in the eligible governmental plan of City 
X. A would like to transfer the amounts deferred under City X's eligible 
governmental plan to the eligible plan of the tax-exempt hospital.
    (ii) Conclusion. City X's plan may not transfer A's amounts deferred 
to the tax-exempt employer's eligible plan. In addition, because the 
amounts deferred would no longer be held in trust for the exclusive 
benefit of participants and their beneficiaries, the transfer would 
violate the exclusive benefit rule of section 457(g) and Sec. 1.457-
8(a).
    Example 2. (i) Facts. County M, located in State S, operates several 
health clinics and maintains an eligible governmental plan for employees 
of those clinics. One of the clinics operated by County M is being 
acquired by a hospital operated by State S, and employees of that clinic 
will become employees of State S. County M permits those employees to 
transfer their balances under County M's eligible governmental plan to 
the eligible governmental plan of State S.
    (ii) Conclusion. If the eligible governmental plans of County M and 
State S provide for the transfer and acceptance of the transfer (and the 
other requirements of paragraph (b)(1) of this section are satisfied), 
then the requirements of paragraph (b)(2) of this section are satisfied 
and, thus, the transfer will not cause either plan to violate the 
requirements of section 457 or these regulations.
    Example 3. (i) Facts. City Employer Z, a hospital, sponsors an 
eligible governmental plan. City Employer Z is located in State B. All 
of the assets of City Employer Z are being acquired by a tax-exempt 
hospital. City Employer Z, in accordance with the plan-to-plan transfer 
rules of paragraph (b) of this section, would like to transfer the total 
amount of assets deferred under City Employer Z's eligible governmental 
plan to the acquiring tax-exempt entity's eligible plan.
    (ii) Conclusion. City Employer Z may not permit participants to 
transfer the amounts to the eligible plan of the tax-exempt entity. In 
addition, because the amounts deferred would no longer be held in trust 
for the exclusive benefit of participants and their beneficiaries, the 
transfer would violate the exclusive benefit rule of section 457(g) and 
Sec. 1.457-8(a).
    Example 4. (i) Facts. The facts are the same as in Example 3, except 
that City Employer

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Z, instead of transferring all of its assets to the eligible plan of the 
tax-exempt entity, decides to transfer all of the amounts deferred under 
City Z's eligible governmental plan to the eligible governmental plan of 
County B in which City Z is located. County B's eligible plan does not 
cover employees of City Z, but is willing to allow the assets of City 
Z's plan to be transferred to County B's plan, a related state 
government entity, also located in State B.
    (ii) Conclusion. If City Employer Z's (transferor) eligible 
governmental plan provides for such transfer and the eligible 
governmental plan of County B permits the acceptance of such a transfer 
(and the other requirements of paragraph (b)(1) of this section are 
satisfied), then the requirements of paragraph (b)(3) of this section 
are satisfied and, thus, City Employer Z may transfer the total amounts 
deferred under its eligible governmental plan, prior to termination of 
that plan, to the eligible governmental plan maintained by County B. 
However, the participants of City Employer Z whose deferred amounts are 
being transferred are not eligible to participate in the eligible 
governmental plan of County B, the receiving plan, unless they are 
performing services for County B.
    Example 5. (i) Facts. State C has an eligible governmental plan. 
Employees of City U in State C are among the eligible employees for 
State C's plan and City U decides to adopt another eligible governmental 
plan only for its employees. State C decides to allow employees to elect 
to transfer all of the amounts deferred for an employee under State C's 
eligible governmental plan to City U's eligible governmental plan.
    (ii) Conclusion. If State C's (transferor) eligible governmental 
plan provides for such transfer and the eligible governmental plan of 
City U permits the acceptance of such a transfer (and the other 
requirements of paragraph (b)(1) of this section are satisfied), then 
the requirements of paragraph (b)(4) of this section are satisfied and, 
thus, State C may transfer the total amounts deferred under its eligible 
governmental plan to the eligible governmental plan maintained by City 
U.

    (8) Purchase of permissive past service credit by plan-to-plan 
transfers from an eligible governmental plan to a qualified plan--(i) 
General rule. An eligible governmental plan of a State may provide for 
the transfer of amounts deferred by a participant or beneficiary to a 
defined benefit governmental plan (as defined in section 414(d)), and no 
amount shall be includible in gross income by reason of the transfer, if 
the conditions in paragraph (b)(8)(ii) of this section are met. A 
transfer under this paragraph (b)(8) is not treated as a distribution 
for purposes of Sec. 1.457-6. Therefore, such a transfer may be made 
before severance from employment.
    (ii) Conditions for plan-to-plan transfers from an eligible 
governmental plan to a qualified plan. A transfer may be made under this 
paragraph (b)(8) only if the transfer is either--
    (A) For the purchase of permissive past service credit (as defined 
in section 415(n)(3)(A)) under the receiving defined benefit 
governmental plan; or
    (B) A repayment to which section 415 does not apply by reason of 
section 415(k)(3).
    (iii) Example. The provisions of this paragraph (b)(8) are 
illustrated by the following example:

    Example. (i) Facts. Plan X is an eligible governmental plan 
maintained by County Y for its employees. Plan X provides for 
distributions only in the event of death, an unforeseeable emergency, or 
severance from employment with County Y (including retirement from 
County Y). Plan S is a qualified defined benefit plan maintained by 
State T for its employees. County Y is within State T. Employee A is an 
employee of County Y and is a participant in Plan X. Employee A 
previously was an employee of State T and is still entitled to benefits 
under Plan S. Plan S includes provisions allowing participants in 
certain plans, including Plan X, to transfer assets to Plan S for the 
purchase of past service credit under Plan S and does not permit the 
amount transferred to exceed the amount necessary to fund the benefit 
resulting from the past service credit. Although not required to do so, 
Plan X allows Employee A to transfer assets to Plan S to provide a past 
service benefit under Plan S.
    (ii) Conclusion. The transfer is permitted under this paragraph 
(b)(8).

    (c) Qualified domestic relations orders under eligible plans--(1) 
General rule. An eligible plan does not become an ineligible plan 
described in section 457(f) solely because its administrator or sponsor 
complies with a qualified domestic relations order as defined in section 
414(p), including an order requiring the distribution of the benefits of 
a participant to an alternate payee in advance of the general rules for 
eligible plan distributions under Sec. 1.457-6. If a distribution or 
payment is made from an eligible plan to an alternate payee pursuant to 
a qualified domestic relations order, rules similar to the

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rules of section 402(e)(1)(A) shall apply to the distribution or 
payment.
    (2) Examples. The provisions of this paragraph (c) are illustrated 
by the following examples:

    Example 1. (i) Facts. Participant C and C's spouse D are divorcing. 
C is employed by State S and is a participant in an eligible plan 
maintained by State S. C has an account valued at $100,000 under the 
plan. Pursuant to the divorce, a court issues a qualified domestic 
relations order on September 1, 2003 that allocates 50 percent of C's 
$100,000 plan account to D and specifically provides for an immediate 
distribution to D of D's share within 6 months of the order. Payment is 
made to D in January of 2004.
    (ii) Conclusion. State S's eligible plan does not become an 
ineligible plan described in section 457(f) and Sec. 1.457-11 solely 
because its administrator or sponsor complies with the qualified 
domestic relations order requiring the immediate distribution to D in 
advance of the general rules for eligible plan distributions under Sec. 
1.457-6. In accordance with section 402(e)(1)(A), D (not C) must include 
the distribution in gross income. The distribution is includible in D's 
gross income in 2004. If the qualified domestic relations order were to 
provide for distribution to D at a future date, amounts deferred 
attributable to D's share will be includible in D's gross income when 
paid to D.
    Example 2. (i) Facts. The facts are the same as in Example 1, except 
that S is a tax-exempt entity, instead of a State.
    (ii) Conclusion. State S's eligible plan does not become an 
ineligible plan described in section 457(f) and Sec. 1.457-11 solely 
because its administrator or sponsor complies with the qualified 
domestic relations order requiring the immediate distribution to D in 
advance of the general rules for eligible plan distributions under Sec. 
1.457-6. In accordance with section 402(e)(1)(A), D (not C) must include 
the distribution in gross income. The distribution is includible in D's 
gross income in 2004, assuming that the plan did not make the 
distribution available to D in 2003. If the qualified domestic relations 
order were to provide for distribution to D at a future date, amounts 
deferred attributable to D's share would be includible in D's gross 
income when paid or made available to D.

    (d) Death benefits and life insurance proceeds. A death benefit plan 
under section 457(e)(11) is not an eligible plan. In addition, no amount 
paid or made available under an eligible plan as death benefits or life 
insurance proceeds is excludable from gross income under section 101.
    (e) Rollovers to eligible governmental plans--(1) General rule. An 
eligible governmental plan may accept contributions that are eligible 
rollover distributions (as defined in section 402(c)(4)) made from 
another eligible retirement plan (as defined in section 402(c)(8)(B)) if 
the conditions in paragraph (e)(2) of this section are met. Amounts 
contributed to an eligible governmental plan as eligible rollover 
distributions are not taken into account for purposes of the annual 
limit on annual deferrals by a participant in Sec. 1.457-4(c) or Sec. 
1.457-5, but are otherwise treated in the same manner as amounts 
deferred under section 457 for purposes of Sec. Sec. 1.457-3 through 
1.457-9 and this section.
    (2) Conditions for rollovers to an eligible governmental plan. An 
eligible governmental plan that permits eligible rollover distributions 
made from another eligible retirement plan to be paid into the eligible 
governmental plan is required under this paragraph (e)(2) to provide 
that it will separately account for any eligible rollover distributions 
it receives. A plan does not fail to satisfy this requirement if it 
separately accounts for particular types of eligible rollover 
distributions (for example, if it maintains a separate account for 
eligible rollover distributions attributable to annual deferrals that 
were made under other eligible governmental plans and a separate account 
for amounts attributable to other eligible rollover distributions), but 
this requirement is not satisfied if any such separate account includes 
any amount that is not attributable to an eligible rollover 
distribution.
    (3) Example. The provisions of this paragraph (e) are illustrated by 
the following example:

    Example. (i) Facts. Plan T is an eligible governmental plan that 
provides that employees who are eligible to participate in Plan T may 
make rollover contributions to Plan T from amounts distributed to an 
employee from an eligible retirement plan. An eligible retirement plan 
is defined in Plan T as another eligible governmental plan, a qualified 
section 401(a) or 403(a) plan, or a section 403(b) contract, or an 
individual retirement arrangement (IRA) that holds such amounts. Plan T 
requires rollover contributions to be paid by the eligible retirement 
plan directly to Plan T (a direct rollover) or to be paid by the 
participant within 60 days after the date on which the participant 
received the amount from the other eligible retirement plan. Plan

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T does not take rollover contributions into account for purposes of the 
plan's limits on amounts deferred that conform to Sec. 1.457-4(c). 
Rollover contributions paid to Plan T are invested in the trust in the 
same manner as amounts deferred under Plan T and rollover contributions 
(and earnings thereon) are available for distribution to the participant 
at the same time and in the same manner as amounts deferred under Plan 
T. In addition, Plan T provides that, for each participant who makes a 
rollover contribution to Plan T, the Plan T record-keeper is to 
establish a separate account for the participant's rollover 
contributions. The record-keeper calculates earnings and losses for 
investments held in the rollover account separately from earnings and 
losses on other amounts held under the plan and calculates disbursements 
from and payments made to the rollover account separately from 
disbursements from and payments made to other amounts held under the 
plan.
    (ii) Conclusion. Plan T does not lose its status as an eligible 
governmental plan as a result of the receipt of rollover contributions. 
The conclusion would not be different if the Plan T record-keeper were 
to establish two separate accounts, one of which is for the 
participant's rollover contributions attributable to annual deferrals 
that were made under an eligible governmental plan and the other of 
which is for other rollover contributions.

    (f) Deemed IRAs under eligible governmental plans. See regulations 
under section 408(q) for guidance regarding the treatment of separate 
accounts or annuities as individual retirement plans (IRAs).

[T.D. 9075, 68 FR 41240, July 11, 2003; 68 FR 51447, Aug. 27, 2003]