[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: 26CFR1.72(p)-1]

[Page 293-304]
 
                       TITLE 26--INTERNAL REVENUE
 
    CHAPTER I--INTERNAL REVENUE SERVICE, DEPARTMENT OF THE TREASURY 
                               (CONTINUED)
 
PART 1_INCOME TAXES--Table of Contents
 
Sec. 1.72(p)-1  Loans treated as distributions.

    The questions and answers in this section provide guidance under 
section 72(p) pertaining to loans from qualified employer plans 
(including government plans and tax-sheltered annuities and employer 
plans that were formerly qualified). The examples included in the 
questions and answers in this section are based on the assumption that a 
bona fide loan is made to a participant from a qualified defined 
contribution plan pursuant to an enforceable agreement (in accordance 
with paragraph (b) of Q&A-3 of this section), with adequate security and 
with an interest rate and repayment terms that are commercially 
reasonable. (The particular interest rate used, which is solely for 
illustration, is 8.75 percent compounded annually.) In addition, unless 
the contrary is specified, it is assumed in the examples that the amount 
of the loan does not exceed 50 percent of the participant's 
nonforfeitable account balance, the participant has no other outstanding 
loan (and had no prior loan) from the plan or any other plan maintained 
by the participant's employer or any other person required to be 
aggregated with the employer under section 414(b), (c) or (m), and the 
loan is not excluded from section 72(p) as a loan made in the ordinary 
course of an investment program as described in Q&A-18 of this section. 
The regulations and examples in this section do not provide guidance on 
whether a loan from a plan would result in a prohibited transaction 
under section 4975 of the Internal Revenue Code or on whether a loan 
from a plan covered by Title I of the Employee Retirement Income 
Security Act of 1974 (88 Stat. 829) (ERISA) would be consistent with the 
fiduciary standards of ERISA or would result in a prohibited transaction 
under section 406 of ERISA. The questions and answers are as follows:
    Q-1: In general, what does section 72(p) provide with respect to 
loans from a qualified employer plan?
    A-1: (a) Loans. Under section 72(p), an amount received by a 
participant or beneficiary as a loan from a qualified employer plan is 
treated as having been received as a distribution from the plan (a 
deemed distribution), unless the loan satisfies the requirements of Q&A-
3 of this section. For purposes of section 72(p) and this section, a 
loan made from a contract that has been purchased under a qualified 
employer plan (including a contract that has been distributed to the 
participant or beneficiary) is considered a loan made under a qualified 
employer plan.
    (b) Pledges and assignments. Under section 72(p), if a participant 
or beneficiary assigns or pledges (or agrees to assign or pledge) any 
portion of his or her interest in a qualified employer plan as security 
for a loan, the portion of the individual's interest assigned or pledged 
(or subject to an agreement to assign or pledge) is treated as a loan 
from the plan to the individual, with the result that such portion is 
subject to the deemed distribution rule described in paragraph (a) of 
this Q&A-1. For purposes of section 72(p) and this section, any 
assignment or pledge of (or agreement to assign or to pledge) any 
portion of a participant's or beneficiary's interest in a contract that 
has been purchased under a qualified employer plan (including a contract 
that has been distributed to the participant or beneficiary) is 
considered an assignment or pledge of (or agreement to assign or pledge) 
an interest in a qualified employer plan. However, if all or a portion 
of a participant's or beneficiary's interest in a qualified employer 
plan is pledged or assigned as security for a loan from the plan to the 
participant or the beneficiary, only the amount of the loan received by 
the participant or the beneficiary, not the amount pledged or assigned, 
is treated as a loan.
    Q-2: What is a qualified employer plan for purposes of section 
72(p)?
    A-2: For purposes of section 72(p) and this section, a qualified 
employer plan means--
    (a) A plan described in section 401(a) which includes a trust exempt 
from tax under section 501(a);
    (b) An annuity plan described in section 403(a);
    (c) A plan under which amounts are contributed by an individual's 
employer for an annuity contract described in section 403(b);

[[Page 294]]

    (d) Any plan, whether or not qualified, established and maintained 
for its employees by the United States, by a State or political 
subdivision thereof, or by an agency or instrumentality of the United 
States, a State or a political subdivision of a State; or
    (e) Any plan which was (or was determined to be) described in 
paragraph (a), (b), (c), or (d) of this Q&A-2.
    Q-3: What requirements must be satisfied in order for a loan to a 
participant or beneficiary from a qualified employer plan not to be a 
deemed distribution?
    A-3: (a) In general. A loan to a participant or beneficiary from a 
qualified employer plan will not be a deemed distribution to the 
participant or beneficiary if the loan satisfies the repayment term 
requirement of section 72(p)(2)(B), the level amortization requirement 
of section 72(p)(2)(C), and the enforceable agreement requirement of 
paragraph (b) of this Q&A-3, but only to the extent the loan satisfies 
the amount limitations of section 72(p)(2)(A).
    (b) Enforceable agreement requirement. A loan does not satisfy the 
requirements of this paragraph unless the loan is evidenced by a legally 
enforceable agreement (which may include more than one document) and the 
terms of the agreement demonstrate compliance with the requirements of 
section 72(p)(2) and this section. Thus, the agreement must specify the 
amount and date of the loan and the repayment schedule. The agreement 
does not have to be signed if the agreement is enforceable under 
applicable law without being signed. The agreement must be set forth 
either--
    (1) In a written paper document;
    (2) In an electronic medium that is reasonably accessible to the 
participant or the beneficiary and that is provided under a system that 
satisfies the following requirements:
    (i) The system must be reasonably designed to preclude any 
individual other than the participant or the beneficiary from requesting 
a loan.
    (ii) The system must provide the participant or the beneficiary with 
a reasonable opportunity to review and to confirm, modify, or rescind 
the terms of the loan before the loan is made.
    (iii) The system must provide the participant or the beneficiary, 
within a reasonable time after the loan is made, a confirmation of the 
loan terms either through a written paper document or through an 
electronic medium that is reasonably accessible to the participant or 
the beneficiary and that is provided under a system that is reasonably 
designed to provide the confirmation in a manner no less understandable 
to the participant or beneficiary than a written document and, under 
which, at the time the confirmation is provided, the participant or the 
beneficiary is advised that he or she may request and receive a written 
paper document at no charge, and, upon request, that document is 
provided to the participant or beneficiary at no charge; or
    (3) In such other form as may be approved by the Commissioner.
    Q-4: If a loan from a qualified employer plan to a participant or 
beneficiary fails to satisfy the requirements of Q&A-3 of this section, 
when does a deemed distribution occur?
    A-4: (a) Deemed distribution. For purposes of section 72, a deemed 
distribution occurs at the first time that the requirements of Q&A-3 of 
this section are not satisfied, in form or in operation. This may occur 
at the time the loan is made or at a later date. If the terms of the 
loan do not require repayments that satisfy the repayment term 
requirement of section 72(p)(2)(B) or the level amortization requirement 
of section 72(p)(2)(C), or the loan is not evidenced by an enforceable 
agreement satisfying the requirements of paragraph (b) of Q&A-3 of this 
section, the entire amount of the loan is a deemed distribution under 
section 72(p) at the time the loan is made. If the loan satisfies the 
requirements of Q&A-3 of this section except that the amount loaned 
exceeds the limitations of section 72(p)(2)(A), the amount of the loan 
in excess of the applicable limitation is a deemed distribution under 
section 72(p) at the time the loan is made. If the loan initially 
satisfies the requirements of section 72(p)(2)(A), (B) and (C) and the 
enforceable agreement requirement of paragraph (b) of Q&A-3 of this 
section, but payments are not made in accordance with the terms 
applicable

[[Page 295]]

to the loan, a deemed distribution occurs as a result of the failure to 
make such payments. See Q&A-10 of this section regarding when such a 
deemed distribution occurs and the amount thereof and Q&A-11 of this 
section regarding the tax treatment of a deemed distribution.
    (b) Examples. The following examples illustrate the rules in 
paragraph (a) of this Q&A-4 and are based upon the assumptions described 
in the introductory text of this section:

    Example 1. (i) A participant has a nonforfeitable account balance of 
$200,000 and receives $70,000 as a loan repayable in level quarterly 
installments over five years.
    (ii) Under section 72(p), the participant has a deemed distribution 
of $20,000 (the excess of $70,000 over $50,000) at the time of the loan, 
because the loan exceeds the $50,000 limit in section 72(p)(2)(A)(i). 
The remaining $50,000 is not a deemed distribution.
    Example 2. (i) A participant with a nonforfeitable account balance 
of $30,000 borrows $20,000 as a loan repayable in level monthly 
installments over five years.
    (ii) Because the amount of the loan is $5,000 more than 50% of the 
participant's nonforfeitable account balance, the participant has a 
deemed distribution of $5,000 at the time of the loan. The remaining 
$15,000 is not a deemed distribution. (Note also that, if the loan is 
secured solely by the participant's account balance, the loan may be a 
prohibited transaction under section 4975 because the loan may not 
satisfy 29 CFR 2550.408b-1(f)(2).)
    Example 3. (i) The nonforfeitable account balance of a participant 
is $100,000 and a $50,000 loan is made to the participant repayable in 
level quarterly installments over seven years. The loan is not eligible 
for the section 72(p)(2)(B)(ii) exception for loans used to acquire 
certain dwelling units.
    (ii) Because the repayment period exceeds the maximum five-year 
period in section 72(p)(2)(B)(i), the participant has a deemed 
distribution of $50,000 at the time the loan is made.
    Example 4. (i) On August 1, 2002, a participant has a nonforfeitable 
account balance of $45,000 and borrows $20,000 from a plan to be repaid 
over five years in level monthly installments due at the end of each 
month. After making monthly payments through July 2003, the participant 
fails to make any of the payments due thereafter.
    (ii) As a result of the failure to satisfy the requirement that the 
loan be repaid in level monthly installments, the participant has a 
deemed distribution. See paragraph (c) of Q&A-10 of this section 
regarding when such a deemed distribution occurs and the amount thereof.

    Q-5: What is a principal residence for purposes of the exception in 
section 72(p)(2)(B)(ii) from the requirement that a loan be repaid in 
five years?
    A-5: Section 72(p)(2)(B)(ii) provides that the requirement in 
section 72(p)(2)(B)(i) that a plan loan be repaid within five years does 
not apply to a loan used to acquire a dwelling unit which will within a 
reasonable time be used as the principal residence of the participant (a 
principal residence plan loan). For this purpose, a principal residence 
has the same meaning as a principal residence under section 121.
    Q-6: In order to satisfy the requirements for a principal residence 
plan loan, is a loan required to be secured by the dwelling unit that 
will within a reasonable time be used as the principal residence of the 
participant?
    A-6: A loan is not required to be secured by the dwelling unit that 
will within a reasonable time be used as the participant's principal 
residence in order to satisfy the requirements for a principal residence 
plan loan.
    Q-7: What tracing rules apply in determining whether a loan 
qualifies as a principal residence plan loan?
    A-7: The tracing rules established under section 163(h)(3)(B) apply 
in determining whether a loan is treated as for the acquisition of a 
principal residence in order to qualify as a principal residence plan 
loan.
    Q-8: Can a refinancing qualify as a principal residence plan loan?
    A-8: (a) Refinancings. In general, no, a refinancing cannot qualify 
as a principal residence plan loan. However, a loan from a qualified 
employer plan used to repay a loan from a third party will qualify as a 
principal residence plan loan if the plan loan qualifies as a principal 
residence plan loan without regard to the loan from the third party.
    (b) Example. The following example illustrates the rules in 
paragraph (a) of this Q&A-8 and is based upon the assumptions described 
in the introductory text of this section:

    Example. (i) On July 1, 2003, a participant requests a $50,000 plan 
loan to be repaid in level monthly installments over 15 years. On August 
1, 2003, the participant acquires a principal residence and pays a 
portion of the purchase price with a $50,000 bank loan. On

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September 1, 2003, the plan loans $50,000 to the participant, which the 
participant uses to pay the bank loan.
    (ii) Because the plan loan satisfies the requirements to qualify as 
a principal residence plan loan (taking into account the tracing rules 
of section 163(h)(3)(B)), the plan loan qualifies for the exception in 
section 72(p)(2)(B)(ii).

    Q-9: Does the level amortization requirement of section 72(p)(2)(C) 
apply when a participant is on a leave of absence without pay?
    A-9: (a) Leave of absence. The level amortization requirement of 
section 72(p)(2)(C) does not apply for a period, not longer than one 
year (or such longer period as may apply under section 414(u) and 
paragraph (b) of this Q&A-9), that a participant is on a bona fide leave 
of absence, either without pay from the employer or at a rate of pay 
(after applicable employment tax withholdings) that is less than the 
amount of the installment payments required under the terms of the loan. 
However, the loan (including interest that accrues during the leave of 
absence) must be repaid by the latest permissible term of the loan and 
the amount of the installments due after the leave ends must not be less 
than the amount required under the terms of the original loan.
    (b) Military service. In accordance with section 414(u)(4), if a 
plan suspends the obligation to repay a loan made to an employee from 
the plan for any part of a period during which the employee is 
performing service in the uniformed services (as defined in 38 U.S.C. 
chapter 43), whether or not qualified military service, such suspension 
shall not be taken into account for purposes of section 72(p) or this 
section. Thus, if a plan suspends loan repayments for any part of a 
period during which the employee is performing military service 
described in the preceding sentence, such suspension shall not cause the 
loan to be deemed distributed even if the suspension exceeds one year 
and even if the term of the loan is extended. However, the loan will not 
satisfy the repayment term requirement of section 72(p)(2)(B) and the 
level amortization requirement of section 72(p)(2)(C) unless loan 
repayments resume upon the completion of such period of military service 
and the loan is repaid thereafter by amortization in substantially level 
installments over a period that ends not later than the latest 
permissible term of the loan.
    (c) Latest permissible term of a loan. For purposes of this Q&A-9, 
the latest permissible term of a loan is the latest date permitted under 
section 72(p)(2)(B) (i.e., five years from the date of the loan, 
assuming that the replacement loan does not qualify for the exception at 
section 72(p)(2)(B)(ii) for principal residence plan loans) plus any 
additional period of suspension permitted under paragraph (b) of this 
Q&A-9.
    (d) Examples. The following examples illustrate the rules of this 
Q&A-9 and are based upon the assumptions described in the introductory 
text of this section:

    Example 1. (i) On July 1, 2003, a participant with a nonforfeitable 
account balance of $80,000 borrows $40,000 to be repaid in level monthly 
installments of $825 each over 5 years. The loan is not a principal 
residence plan loan. The participant makes 9 monthly payments and 
commences an unpaid leave of absence that lasts for 12 months. The 
participant was not performing military service during this period. 
Thereafter, the participant resumes active employment and resumes making 
repayments on the loan until the loan is repaid. The amount of each 
monthly installment is increased to $1,130 in order to repay the loan by 
June 30, 2008.
    (ii) Because the loan satisfies the requirements of section 
72(p)(2), the participant does not have a deemed distribution. 
Alternatively, section 72(p)(2) would be satisfied if the participant 
continued the monthly installments of $825 after resuming active 
employment and on June 30, 2008 repaid the full balance remaining due.
    Example 2. (i) The facts are the same as in Example 1, except the 
participant was on leave of absence performing service in the uniformed 
services (as defined in chapter 43 of title 38, United States Code) for 
two years and the rate of interest charged during this period of 
military service is reduced to 6 percent compounded annually under 50 
App. section 526 (relating to the Soldiers' and Sailors' Civil Relief 
Act Amendments of 1942). After the military service ends on April 2, 
2006, the participant resumes active employment on April 19, 2006, 
continues the monthly installments of $825 thereafter, and on June 30, 
2010, repays the full balance remaining due ($6,487).
    (ii) Because the loan satisfies the requirements of section 72(p)(2) 
and paragraph (b) of this Q&A-9, the participant does not have a deemed 
distribution. Alternatively, section 72(p)(2) would also be satisfied if 
the amount

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of each monthly installment after April 19, 2006, is increased to $930 
in order to repay the loan by June 30, 2010 (without any balance 
remaining due then).

    Q-10: If a participant fails to make the installment payments 
required under the terms of a loan that satisfied the requirements of 
Q&A-3 of this section when made, when does a deemed distribution occur 
and what is the amount of the deemed distribution?
    A-10: (a) Timing of deemed distribution. Failure to make any 
installment payment when due in accordance with the terms of the loan 
violates section 72(p)(2)(C) and, accordingly, results in a deemed 
distribution at the time of such failure. However, the plan 
administrator may allow a cure period and section 72(p)(2)(C) will not 
be considered to have been violated if the installment payment is made 
not later than the end of the cure period, which period cannot continue 
beyond the last day of the calendar quarter following the calendar 
quarter in which the required installment payment was due.
    (b) Amount of deemed distribution. If a loan satisfies Q&A-3 of this 
section when made, but there is a failure to pay the installment 
payments required under the terms of the loan (taking into account any 
cure period allowed under paragraph (a) of this Q&A-10), then the amount 
of the deemed distribution equals the entire outstanding balance of the 
loan (including accrued interest) at the time of such failure.
    (c) Example. The following example illustrates the rules in 
paragraphs (a) and (b) of this Q&A-10 and is based upon the assumptions 
described in the introductory text of this section:

    Example. (i) On August 1, 2002, a participant has a nonforfeitable 
account balance of $45,000 and borrows $20,000 from a plan to be repaid 
over 5 years in level monthly installments due at the end of each month. 
After making all monthly payments due through July 31, 2003, the 
participant fails to make the payment due on August 31, 2003 or any 
other monthly payments due thereafter. The plan administrator allows a 
three-month cure period.
    (ii) As a result of the failure to satisfy the requirement that the 
loan be repaid in level installments pursuant to section 72(p)(2)(C), 
the participant has a deemed distribution on November 30, 2003, which is 
the last day of the three-month cure period for the August 31, 2003 
installment. The amount of the deemed distribution is $17,157, which is 
the outstanding balance on the loan at November 30, 2003. Alternatively, 
if the plan administrator had allowed a cure period through the end of 
the next calendar quarter, there would be a deemed distribution on 
December 31, 2003 equal to $17,282, which is the outstanding balance of 
the loan at December 31, 2003.

    Q-11: Does section 72 apply to a deemed distribution as if it were 
an actual distribution?
    A-11: (a) Tax basis. If the employee's account includes after-tax 
contributions or other investment in the contract under section 72(e), 
section 72 applies to a deemed distribution as if it were an actual 
distribution, with the result that all or a portion of the deemed 
distribution may not be taxable.
    (b) Section 72(t) and (m). Section 72(t) (which imposes a 10 percent 
tax on certain early distributions) and section 72(m)(5) (which imposes 
a separate 10 percent tax on certain amounts received by a 5-percent 
owner) apply to a deemed distribution under section 72(p) in the same 
manner as if the deemed distribution were an actual distribution.
    Q-12: Is a deemed distribution under section 72(p) treated as an 
actual distribution for purposes of the qualification requirements of 
section 401, the distribution provisions of section 402, the 
distribution restrictions of section 401(k)(2)(B) or 403(b)(11), or the 
vesting requirements of Sec. 1.411(a)-7(d)(5) (which affects the 
application of a graded vesting schedule in cases involving a prior 
distribution)?
    A-12: No; thus, for example, if a participant in a money purchase 
plan who is an active employee has a deemed distribution under section 
72(p), the plan will not be considered to have made an in-service 
distribution to the participant in violation of the qualification 
requirements applicable to money purchase plans. Similarly, the deemed 
distribution is not eligible to be rolled over to an eligible retirement 
plan and is not considered an impermissible distribution of an amount 
attributable to elective contributions in a section 401(k) plan. See 
also Sec. 1.402(c)-2, Q&A-4(d) and Sec. 1.401(k)-1(d)(6)(ii).
    Q-13: How does a reduction (offset) of an account balance in order 
to repay a

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plan loan differ from a deemed distribution?
    A-13: (a) Difference between deemed distribution and plan loan 
offset amount. (1) Loans to a participant from a qualified employer plan 
can give rise to two types of taxable distributions--
    (i) A deemed distribution pursuant to section 72(p); and
    (ii) A distribution of an offset amount.
    (2) As described in Q&A-4 of this section, a deemed distribution 
occurs when the requirements of Q&A-3 of this section are not satisfied, 
either when the loan is made or at a later time. A deemed distribution 
is treated as a distribution to the participant or beneficiary only for 
certain tax purposes and is not a distribution of the accrued benefit. A 
distribution of a plan loan offset amount (as defined in Sec. 1.402(c)-
2, Q&A-9(b)) occurs when, under the terms governing a plan loan, the 
accrued benefit of the participant or beneficiary is reduced (offset) in 
order to repay the loan (including the enforcement of the plan's 
security interest in the accrued benefit). A distribution of a plan loan 
offset amount could occur in a variety of circumstances, such as where 
the terms governing the plan loan require that, in the event of the 
participant's request for a distribution, a loan be repaid immediately 
or treated as in default.
    (b) Plan loan offset. In the event of a plan loan offset, the amount 
of the account balance that is offset against the loan is an actual 
distribution for purposes of the Internal Revenue Code, not a deemed 
distribution under section 72(p). Accordingly, a plan may be prohibited 
from making such an offset under the provisions of section 401(a), 
401(k)(2)(B) or 403(b)(11) prohibiting or limiting distributions to an 
active employee. See Sec. 1.402(c)-2, Q&A-9(c), Example 6. See also 
Q&A-19 of this section for rules regarding the treatment of a loan after 
a deemed distribution.
    Q-14: How is the amount includible in income as a result of a deemed 
distribution under section 72(p) required to be reported?
    A-14: The amount includible in income as a result of a deemed 
distribution under section 72(p) is required to be reported on Form 
1099-R (or any other form prescribed by the Commissioner).
    Q-15: What withholding rules apply to plan loans?
    A-15: To the extent that a loan, when made, is a deemed distribution 
or an account balance is reduced (offset) to repay a loan, the amount 
includible in income is subject to withholding. If a deemed distribution 
of a loan or a loan repayment by benefit offset results in income at a 
date after the date the loan is made, withholding is required only if a 
transfer of cash or property (excluding employer securities) is made to 
the participant or beneficiary from the plan at the same time. See 
Sec. Sec. 35.3405-1, f-4, and 31.3405(c)-1, Q&A-9 and Q&A-11, of this 
chapter for further guidance on withholding rules.
    Q-16: If a loan fails to satisfy the requirements of Q&A-3 of this 
section and is a prohibited transaction under section 4975, is the 
deemed distribution of the loan under section 72(p) a correction of the 
prohibited transaction?
    A-16: No, a deemed distribution is not a correction of a prohibited 
transaction under section 4975. See Sec. Sec. 141.4975-13 and 
53.4941(e)-1(c)(1) of this chapter for guidance concerning correction of 
a prohibited transaction.
    Q-17: What are the income tax consequences if an amount is 
transferred from a qualified employer plan to a participant or 
beneficiary as a loan, but there is an express or tacit understanding 
that the loan will not be repaid?
    A-17: If there is an express or tacit understanding that the loan 
will not be repaid or, for any reason, the transaction does not create a 
debtor-creditor relationship or is otherwise not a bona fide loan, then 
the amount transferred is treated as an actual distribution from the 
plan for purposes of the Internal Revenue Code, and is not treated as a 
loan or as a deemed distribution under section 72(p).
    Q-18: If a qualified employer plan maintains a program to invest in 
residential mortgages, are loans made pursuant to the investment program 
subject to section 72(p)?
    A-18: (a) Residential mortgage loans made by a plan in the ordinary 
course

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of an investment program are not subject to section 72(p) if the 
property acquired with the loans is the primary security for such loans 
and the amount loaned does not exceed the fair market value of the 
property. An investment program exists only if the plan has established, 
in advance of a specific investment under the program, that a certain 
percentage or amount of plan assets will be invested in residential 
mortgages available to persons purchasing the property who satisfy 
commercially customary financial criteria. A loan will not be considered 
as made under an investment program if--
    (1) Any of the loans made under the program matures upon a 
participant's termination from employment;
    (2) Any of the loans made under the program is an earmarked asset of 
a participant's or beneficiary's individual account in the plan; or
    (3) The loans made under the program are made available only to 
participants or beneficiaries in the plan.
    (b) Paragraph (a)(3) of this Q&A-18 shall not apply to a plan which, 
on December 20, 1995, and at all times thereafter, has had in effect a 
loan program under which, but for paragraph (a)(3) of this Q&A-18, the 
loans comply with the conditions of paragraph (a) of this Q&A-18 to 
constitute residential mortgage loans in the ordinary course of an 
investment program.
    (c) No loan that benefits an officer, director, or owner of the 
employer maintaining the plan, or their beneficiaries, will be treated 
as made under an investment program.
    (d) This section does not provide guidance on whether a residential 
mortgage loan made under a plan's investment program would result in a 
prohibited transaction under section 4975, or on whether such a loan 
made by a plan covered by Title I of ERISA would be consistent with the 
fiduciary standards of ERISA or would result in a prohibited transaction 
under section 406 of ERISA. See 29 CFR 2550.408b-1.
    Q-19: If there is a deemed distribution under section 72(p), is the 
interest that accrues thereafter on the amount of the deemed 
distribution an indirect loan for income tax purposes and what effect 
does the deemed distribution have on subsequent loans?
    A-19: (a) General rule. Except as provided in paragraph (b) of this 
Q&A-19, a deemed distribution of a loan is treated as a distribution for 
purposes of section 72. Therefore, a loan that is deemed to be 
distributed under section 72(p) ceases to be an outstanding loan for 
purposes of section 72, and the interest that accrues thereafter under 
the plan on the amount deemed distributed is disregarded for purposes of 
applying section 72 to the participant or the beneficiary. Even though 
interest continues to accrue on the outstanding loan (and is taken into 
account for purposes of determining the tax treatment of any subsequent 
loan in accordance with paragraph (b) of this Q&A-19), this additional 
interest is not treated as an additional loan (and thus, does not result 
in an additional deemed distribution) for purposes of section 72(p). 
However, a loan that is deemed distributed under section 72(p) is not 
considered distributed for all purposes of the Internal Revenue Code. 
See Q&A-11 through Q&A-16 of this section.
    (b) Effect on subsequent loans--(1) Application of section 
72(p)(2)(A). A loan that is deemed distributed under section 72(p) 
(including interest accruing thereafter) and that has not been repaid 
(such as by a plan loan offset) is considered outstanding for purposes 
of applying section 72(p)(2)(A) to determine the maximum amount of any 
subsequent loan to the participant or beneficiary.
    (2) Additional security for subsequent loans. If a loan is deemed 
distributed to a participant or beneficiary under section 72(p) and has 
not been repaid (such as by a plan loan offset), then no payment made 
thereafter to the participant or beneficiary is treated as a loan for 
purposes of section 72(p)(2) unless the loan otherwise satisfies section 
72(p)(2) and this section and either of the following conditions is 
satisfied:
    (i) There is an arrangement among the plan, the participant or 
beneficiary, and the employer, enforceable under applicable law, under 
which repayments will be made by payroll withholding. For this purpose, 
an arrangement will not fail to be enforceable merely because a party 
has the right to revoke the arrangement prospectively.

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    (ii) The plan receives adequate security from the participant or 
beneficiary that is in addition to the participant's or beneficiary's 
accrued benefit under the plan.
    (3) Condition no longer satisfied. If, following a deemed 
distribution that has not been repaid, a payment is made to a 
participant or beneficiary that satisfies the conditions in paragraph 
(b)(2) of this Q&A-19 for treatment as a plan loan and, subsequently, 
before repayment of the second loan, the conditions in paragraph (b)(2) 
of this Q&A-19 are no longer satisfied with respect to the second loan 
(for example, if the loan recipient revokes consent to payroll 
withholding), the amount then outstanding on the second loan is treated 
as a deemed distribution under section 72(p).
    Q-20: May a participant refinance an outstanding loan or have more 
than one loan outstanding from a plan?
    A-20: (a) Refinancings and multiple loans--(1) General rule. A 
participant who has an outstanding loan that satisfies section 72(p)(2) 
and this section may refinance that loan or borrow additional amounts 
if, under the facts and circumstances, the loans collectively satisfy 
the amount limitations of section 72(p)(2)(A) and the prior loan and the 
additional loan each satisfy the requirements of section 72(p)(2)(B) and 
(C) and this section. For this purpose, a refinancing includes any 
situation in which one loan replaces another loan.
    (2) Loans that repay a prior loan and have a later repayment date. 
For purposes of section 72(p)(2) and this section (including the amount 
limitations of section 72(p)(2)(A)), if a loan that satisfies section 
72(p)(2) is replaced by a loan (a replacement loan) and the term of the 
replacement loan ends after the latest permissible term of the loan it 
replaces (the replaced loan), then the replacement loan and the replaced 
loan are both treated as outstanding on the date of the transaction. For 
purposes of the preceding sentence, the latest permissible term of the 
replaced loan is the latest date permitted under section 72(p)(2)(C) 
(i.e., five years from the original date of the replaced loan, assuming 
that the replaced loan does not qualify for the exception at section 
72(p)(2)(B)(ii) for principal residence plan loans and that no 
additional period of suspension applied to the replaced loan under Q&A-9 
(b) of this section). Thus, for example, if the term of the replacement 
loan ends after the latest permissible term of the replaced loan and the 
sum of the amount of the replacement loan plus the outstanding balance 
of all other loans on the date of the transaction, including the 
replaced loan, fails to satisfy the amount limitations of section 
72(p)(2)(A), then the replacement loan results in a deemed distribution. 
This paragraph (a)(2) does not apply to a replacement loan if the terms 
of the replacement loan would satisfy section 72(p)(2) and this section 
determined as if the replacement loan consisted of two separate loans, 
the replaced loan (amortized in substantially level payments over a 
period ending not later than the last day of the latest permissible term 
of the replaced loan) and, to the extent the amount of the replacement 
loan exceeds the amount of the replaced loan, a new loan that is also 
amortized in substantially level payments over a period ending not later 
than the last day of the latest permissible term of the replacement 
loan.
    (b) Examples. The following examples illustrate the rules of this 
Q&A-20 and are based on the assumptions described in the introductory 
text of this section:

    Example 1. (i) A participant with a vested account balance that 
exceeds $100,000 borrows $40,000 from a plan on January 1, 2005, to be 
repaid in 20 quarterly installments of $2,491 each. Thus, the term of 
the loan ends on December 31, 2009. On January 1, 2006, when the 
outstanding balance on the loan is $33,322, the loan is refinanced and 
is replaced by a new $40,000 loan from the plan to be repaid in 20 
quarterly installments. Under the terms of the refinanced loan, the loan 
is to be repaid in level quarterly installments (of $2,491 each) over 
the next 20 quarters. Thus, the term of the new loan ends on December 
31, 2010.
    (ii) Under section 72(p)(2)(A), the amount of the new loan, when 
added to the outstanding balance of all other loans from the plan, must 
not exceed $50,000 reduced by the excess of the highest outstanding 
balance of loans from the plan during the 1-year period ending on 
December 31, 2005, over the outstanding balance of loans from the plan 
on January 1, 2006, with such outstanding balance to be determined 
immediately prior to the new $40,000 loan. Because the term of the

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new loan ends later than the term of the loan it replaces, under 
paragraph (a)(2) of this Q&A-20, both the new loan and the loan it 
replaces must be taken into account for purposes of applying section 
72(p)(2), including the amount limitations in section 72(p)(2)(A). The 
amount of the new loan is $40,000, the outstanding balance on January 1, 
2006, of the loan it replaces is $33,322, and the highest outstanding 
balance of loans from the plan during 2005 was $40,000. Accordingly, 
under section 72(p)(2)(A), the sum of the new loan and the outstanding 
balance on January 1, 2006, of the loan it replaces must not exceed 
$50,000 reduced by $6,678 (the excess of the $40,000 maximum outstanding 
loan balance during 2005 over the $33,322 outstanding balance on January 
1, 2006, determined immediately prior to the new loan) and, thus, must 
not exceed $43,322. The sum of the new loan ($40,000) and the 
outstanding balance on January 1, 2006, of the loan it replaces 
($33,322) is $73,322. Since $73,322 exceeds the $43,322 limit under 
section 72(p)(2)(A) by $30,000, there is a deemed distribution of 
$30,000 on January 1, 2006.
    (iii) However, no deemed distribution would occur if, under the 
terms of the refinanced loan, the amount of the first 16 installments on 
the refinanced loan were equal to $2,907, which is the sum of the $2,491 
originally scheduled quarterly installment payment amount under the 
first loan, plus $416 (which is the amount required to repay, in level 
quarterly installments over 5 years beginning on January 1, 2006, the 
excess of the refinanced loan over the January 1, 2006, balance of the 
first loan ($40,000 minus $33,322 equals $6,678)), and the amount of the 
4 remaining installments was equal to $416. The refinancing would not be 
subject to paragraph (a)(2) of this Q&A-20 because the terms of the new 
loan would satisfy section 72(p)(2) and this section (including the 
substantially level amortization requirements of section 72(p)(2)(B) and 
(C)) determined as if the new loan consisted of 2 loans, one of which is 
in the amount of the first loan ($33,322) and is amortized in 
substantially level payments over a period ending December 31, 2009 (the 
last day of the term of the first loan) and the other of which is in the 
additional amount ($6,678) borrowed under the new loan. Similarly, the 
transaction also would not result in a deemed distribution (and would 
not be subject to paragraph (a)(2) of this Q&A-20) if the terms of the 
refinanced loan provided for repayments to be made in level quarterly 
installments (of $2,990 each) over the next 16 quarters.
    Example 2. (i) The facts are the same as in Example 1(i), except 
that the applicable interest rate used by the plan when the loan is 
refinanced is significantly lower due to a reduction in market rates of 
interest and, under the terms of the refinanced loan, the amount of the 
first 16 installments on the refinanced loan is equal to $2,848 and the 
amount of the next 4 installments on the refinanced loan is equal to 
$406. The $2,848 amount is the sum of $2,442 to repay the first loan by 
December 31, 2009 (the term of the first loan), plus $406 (which is the 
amount to repay, in level quarterly installments over 5 years beginning 
on January 1, 2006, the $6,678 excess of the refinanced loan over the 
January 1, 2006, balance of the first loan).
    (ii) The transaction does not result in a deemed distribution (and 
is not subject to paragraph (a)(2) of this Q&A-20) because the terms of 
the new loan would satisfy section 72(p)(2) and this section (including 
the substantially level amortization requirements of section 72(p)(2)(B) 
and (C)) determined as if the new loan consisted of 2 loans, one of 
which is in the amount of the first loan ($33,322) and is amortized in 
substantially level payments over a period ending December 31, 2009 (the 
last day of the term of the first loan), and the other of which is in 
the additional amount ($6,678) borrowed under the new loan. The 
transaction would also not result in a deemed distribution (and not be 
subject to paragraph (a)(2) of this Q&A-20) if the terms of the new loan 
provided for repayments to be made in level quarterly installments (of 
$2,931 each) over the next 16 quarters.

    Q-21: Is a participant's tax basis under the plan increased if the 
participant repays the loan after a deemed distribution?
    A-21: (a) Repayments after deemed distribution. Yes, if the 
participant or beneficiary repays the loan after a deemed distribution 
of the loan under section 72(p), then, for purposes of section 72(e), 
the participant's or beneficiary's investment in the contract (tax 
basis) under the plan increases by the amount of the cash repayments 
that the participant or beneficiary makes on the loan after the deemed 
distribution. However, loan repayments are not treated as after-tax 
contributions for other purposes, including sections 401(m) and 
415(c)(2)(B).
    (b) Example. The following example illustrates the rules in 
paragraph (a) of this Q&A-21 and is based on the assumptions described 
in the introductory text of this section:

    Example. (i) A participant receives a $20,000 loan on January 1, 
2003, to be repaid in 20 quarterly installments of $1,245 each. On 
December 31, 2003, the outstanding loan balance ($19,179) is deemed 
distributed as a result of a failure to make quarterly installment 
payments that were due on September 30, 2003 and December 31, 2003. On 
June 30, 2004, the

[[Page 302]]

participant repays $5,147 (which is the sum of the three installment 
payments that were due on September 30, 2003, December 31, 2003, and 
March 31, 2004, with interest thereon to June 30, 2004, plus the 
installment payment due on June 30, 2004). Thereafter, the participant 
resumes making the installment payments of $1,245 from September 30, 
2004 through December 31, 2007. The loan repayments made after December 
31, 2003 through December 31, 2007 total $22,577.
    (ii) Because the participant repaid $22,577 after the deemed 
distribution that occurred on December 31, 2003, the participant has 
investment in the contract (tax basis) equal to $22,577 (14 payments of 
$1,245 each plus a single payment of $5,147) as of December 31, 2007.

    Q-22: When is the effective date of section 72(p) and the 
regulations in this section?
    A-22: (a) Statutory effective date. Section 72(p) generally applies 
to assignments, pledges, and loans made after August 13, 1982.
    (b) Regulatory effective date. This section applies to assignments, 
pledges, and loans made on or after January 1, 2002.
    (c) Loans made before the regulatory effective date--(1) General 
rule. A plan is permitted to apply Q&A-19 and Q&A-21 of this section to 
a loan made before the regulatory effective date in paragraph (b) of 
this Q&A-22 (and after the statutory effective date in paragraph (a) of 
this Q&A-22) if there has not been any deemed distribution of the loan 
before the transition date or if the conditions of paragraph (c)(2) of 
this Q&A-22 are satisfied with respect to the loan.
    (2) Consistency transition rule for certain loans deemed distributed 
before the regulatory effective date. (i) The rules in this paragraph 
(c)(2) of this Q&A-22 apply to a loan made before the regulatory 
effective date in paragraph (b) of this Q&A-22 (and after the statutory 
effective date in paragraph (a) of this Q&A-22) if there has been any 
deemed distribution of the loan before the transition date.
    (ii) The plan is permitted to apply Q&A-19 and Q&A-21 of this 
section to the loan beginning on any January 1, but only if the plan 
reported, in Box 1 of Form 1099-R, for a taxable year no later than the 
latest taxable year that would be permitted under this section (if this 
section had been in effect for all loans made after the statutory 
effective date in paragraph (a) of this Q&A-22), a gross distribution of 
an amount at least equal to the initial default amount. For purposes of 
this section, the initial default amount is the amount that would be 
reported as a gross distribution under Q&A-4 and Q&A-10 of this section 
and the transition date is the January 1 on which a plan begins applying 
Q&A-19 and Q&A-21 of this section to a loan.
    (iii) If a plan applies Q&A-19 and Q&A-21 of this section to such a 
loan, then the plan, in its reporting and withholding on or after the 
transition date, must not attribute investment in the contract (tax 
basis) to the participant or beneficiary based upon the initial default 
amount.
    (iv) This paragraph (c)(2)(iv) of this Q&A-22 applies if--
    (A) The plan attributed investment in the contract (tax basis) to 
the participant or beneficiary based on the deemed distribution of the 
loan;
    (B) The plan subsequently made an actual distribution to the 
participant or beneficiary before the transition date; and
    (C) Immediately before the transition date, the initial default 
amount (or, if less, the amount of the investment in the contract so 
attributed) exceeds the participant's or beneficiary's investment in the 
contract (tax basis). If this paragraph (c)(2)(iv) of this Q&A-22 
applies, the plan must treat the excess (the loan transition amount) as 
a loan amount that remains outstanding and must include the excess in 
the participant's or beneficiary's income at the time of the first 
actual distribution made on or after the transition date.
    (3) Examples. The rules in paragraph (c)(2) of this Q&A-22 are 
illustrated by the following examples, which are based on the 
assumptions described in the introductory text of this section (and, 
except as specifically provided in the examples, also assume that no 
distributions are made to the participant and that the participant has 
no investment in the contract with respect to the plan). Example 1, 
Example 2, and Example 4 of this paragraph (c)(3) of this Q&A-22 
illustrate the application of the rules in paragraph (c)(2) of this

[[Page 303]]

Q&A-22 to a plan that, before the transition date, did not treat 
interest accruing after the initial deemed distribution as resulting in 
additional deemed distributions under section 72(p). Example 3 of this 
paragraph (c)(3) of this Q&A-22 illustrates the application of the rules 
in paragraph (c)(2) of this Q&A-22 to a plan that, before the transition 
date, treated interest accruing after the initial deemed distribution as 
resulting in additional deemed distributions under section 72(p). The 
examples are as follows:

    Example 1. (i) In 1998, when a participant's account balance under a 
plan is $50,000, the participant receives a loan from the plan. The 
participant makes the required repayments until 1999 when there is a 
deemed distribution of $20,000 as a result of a failure to repay the 
loan. For 1999, as a result of the deemed distribution, the plan 
reports, in Box 1 of Form 1099-R, a gross distribution of $20,000 (which 
is the initial default amount in accordance with paragraph (c)(2)(ii) of 
this Q&A-22) and, in Box 2 of Form 1099-R, a taxable amount of $20,000. 
The plan then records an increase in the participant's tax basis for the 
same amount ($20,000). Thereafter, the plan disregards, for purposes of 
section 72, the interest that accrues on the loan after the 1999 deemed 
distribution. Thus, as of December 31, 2001, the total taxable amount 
reported by the plan as a result of the deemed distribution is $20,000 
and the plan's records show that the participant's tax basis is the same 
amount ($20,000). As of January 1, 2002, the plan decides to apply Q&A-
19 of this section to the loan. Accordingly, it reduces the 
participant's tax basis by the initial default amount of $20,000, so 
that the participant's remaining tax basis in the plan is zero. 
Thereafter, the amount of the outstanding loan is not treated as part of 
the account balance for purposes of section 72. The participant attains 
age 59\1/2\ in the year 2003 and receives a distribution of the full 
account balance under the plan consisting of $60,000 in cash and the 
loan receivable. At that time, the plan's records reflect an offset of 
the loan amount against the loan receivable in the participant's account 
and a distribution of $60,000 in cash.
    (ii) For the year 2003, the plan must report a gross distribution of 
$60,000 in Box 1 of Form 1099-R and a taxable amount of $60,000 in Box 2 
of Form 1099-R.
    Example 2. (i) The facts are the same as in Example 1, except that 
in 1999, immediately prior to the deemed distribution, the participant's 
account balance under the plan totals $50,000 and the participant's tax 
basis is $10,000. For 1999, the plan reports, in Box 1 of Form 1099-R, a 
gross distribution of $20,000 (which is the initial default amount in 
accordance with paragraph (c)(2)(ii) of this Q&A-22) and reports, in Box 
2 of Form 1099-R, a taxable amount of $16,000 (the $20,000 deemed 
distribution minus $4,000 of tax basis ($10,000 times ($20,000/$50,000)) 
allocated to the deemed distribution). The plan then records an increase 
in tax basis equal to the $20,000 deemed distribution, so that the 
participant's remaining tax basis as of December 31, 1999, totals 
$26,000 ($10,000 minus $4,000 plus $20,000). Thereafter, the plan 
disregards, for purposes of section 72, the interest that accrues on the 
loan after the 1999 deemed distribution. Thus, as of December 31, 2001, 
the total taxable amount reported by the plan as a result of the deemed 
distribution is $16,000 and the plan's records show that the 
participant's tax basis is $26,000. As of January 1, 2002, the plan 
decides to apply Q&A-19 of this section to the loan. Accordingly, it 
reduces the participant's tax basis by the initial default amount of 
$20,000, so that the participant's remaining tax basis in the plan is 
$6,000. Thereafter, the amount of the outstanding loan is not treated as 
part of the account balance for purposes of section 72. The participant 
attains age 59\1/2\ in the year 2003 and receives a distribution of the 
full account balance under the plan consisting of $60,000 in cash and 
the loan receivable. At that time, the plan's records reflect an offset 
of the loan amount against the loan receivable in the participant's 
account and a distribution of $60,000 in cash.
    (ii) For the year 2003, the plan must report a gross distribution of 
$60,000 in Box 1 of Form 1099-R and a taxable amount of $54,000 in Box 2 
of Form 1099-R.
    Example 3. (i) In 1993, when a participant's account balance in a 
plan is $100,000, the participant receives a loan of $50,000 from the 
plan. The participant makes the required loan repayments until 1995 when 
there is a deemed distribution of $28,919 as a result of a failure to 
repay the loan. For 1995, as a result of the deemed distribution, the 
plan reports, in Box 1 of Form 1099-R, a gross distribution of $28,919 
(which is the initial default amount in accordance with paragraph 
(c)(2)(ii) of this Q&A-22) and, in Box 2 of Form 1099-R, a taxable 
amount of $28,919. For 1995, the plan also records an increase in the 
participant's tax basis for the same amount ($28,919). Each year 
thereafter through 2001, the plan reports a gross distribution equal to 
the interest accruing that year on the loan balance, reports a taxable 
amount equal to the interest accruing that year on the loan balance 
reduced by the participant's tax basis allocated to the gross 
distribution, and records a net increase in the participant's tax basis 
equal to that taxable amount. As of December 31, 2001, the taxable 
amount reported by the plan as a result of the loan totals $44,329 and 
the plan's records for purposes of section

[[Page 304]]

72 show that the participant's tax basis totals the same amount 
($44,329). As of January 1, 2002, the plan decides to apply Q&A-19 of 
this section. Accordingly, it reduces the participant's tax basis by the 
initial default amount of $28,919, so that the participant's remaining 
tax basis in the plan is $15,410 ($44,329 minus $28,919). Thereafter, 
the amount of the outstanding loan is not treated as part of the account 
balance for purposes of section 72. The participant attains age 59\1/2\ 
in the year 2003 and receives a distribution of the full account balance 
under the plan consisting of $180,000 in cash and the loan receivable 
equal to the $28,919 outstanding loan amount in 1995 plus interest 
accrued thereafter to the payment date in 2003. At that time, the plan's 
records reflect an offset of the loan amount against the loan receivable 
in the participant's account and a distribution of $180,000 in cash.
    (ii) For the year 2003, the plan must report a gross distribution of 
$180,000 in Box 1 of Form 1099-R and a taxable amount of $164,590 in Box 
2 of Form 1099-R ($180,000 minus the remaining tax basis of $15,410).
    Example 4. (i) The facts are the same as in Example 1, except that 
in 2000, after the deemed distribution, the participant receives a 
$10,000 hardship distribution. At the time of the hardship distribution, 
the participant's account balance under the plan totals $50,000. For 
2000, the plan reports, in Box 1 of Form 1099-R, a gross distribution of 
$10,000 and, in Box 2 of Form 1099-R, a taxable amount of $6,000 (the 
$10,000 actual distribution minus $4,000 of tax basis ($10,000 times 
($20,000/$50,000)) allocated to this actual distribution). The plan then 
records a decrease in tax basis equal to $4,000, so that the 
participant's remaining tax basis as of December 31, 2000, totals 
$16,000 ($20,000 minus $4,000). After 1999, the plan disregards, for 
purposes of section 72, the interest that accrues on the loan after the 
1999 deemed distribution. Thus, as of December 31, 2001, the total 
taxable amount reported by the plan as a result of the deemed 
distribution plus the 2000 actual distribution is $26,000 and the plan's 
records show that the participant's tax basis is $16,000. As of January 
1, 2002, the plan decides to apply Q&A-19 of this section to the loan. 
Accordingly, it reduces the participant's tax basis by the initial 
default amount of $20,000, so that the participant's remaining tax basis 
in the plan is reduced from $16,000 to zero. However, because the 
$20,000 initial default amount exceeds $16,000, the plan records a loan 
transition amount of $4,000 ($20,000 minus $16,000). Thereafter, the 
amount of the outstanding loan, other than the $4,000 loan transition 
amount, is not treated as part of the account balance for purposes of 
section 72. The participant attains age 59\1/2\ in the year 2003 and 
receives a distribution of the full account balance under the plan 
consisting of $60,000 in cash and the loan receivable. At that time, the 
plan's records reflect an offset of the loan amount against the loan 
receivable in the participant's account and a distribution of $60,000 in 
cash.
    (ii) In accordance with paragraph (c)(2)(iv) of this Q&A-22, the 
plan must report in Box 1 of Form 1099-R a gross distribution of $64,000 
and in Box 2 of Form 1099-R a taxable amount for the participant for the 
year 2003 equal to $64,000 (the sum of the $60,000 paid in the year 2003 
plus $4,000 as the loan transition amount).

    (d) Effective date for Q&A-19(b)(2) and Q&A-20. Q&A-19(b)(2) and 
Q&A-20 of this section apply to assignments, pledges, and loans made on 
or after January 1, 2004.

[T.D. 8894, 65 FR 46591, July 31, 2000, as amended by T.D. 9021, 67 FR 
71824, Dec. 3, 2002; 68 FR 9532, 9535, Feb. 28, 2003]