[Code of Federal Regulations]
[Title 26, Volume 15]
[Revised as of April 1, 2004]
From the U.S. Government Printing Office via GPO Access
[CITE: 26CFR31.3121(v)(2)-1]

[Page 102-136]
 
                       TITLE 26--INTERNAL REVENUE
 
    CHAPTER I--INTERNAL REVENUE SERVICE, DEPARTMENT OF THE TREASURY 
                               (CONTINUED)
 
PART 31_EMPLOYMENT TAXES AND COLLECTION OF INCOME TAX AT SOURCE--Table of Contents
 
  Subpart B_Federal Insurance Contributions Act (Chapter 21, Internal 
                          Revenue Code of 1954)
 
Sec. 31.3121(v)(2)-1  Treatment of amounts deferred under certain 
nonqualified deferred compensation plans.

    (a) Timing of wage inclusion--(1) General timing rule for wages. 
Remuneration for employment that constitutes wages within the meaning of 
section 3121(a) generally is taken into account for purposes of the 
Federal Insurance Contributions Act (FICA) taxes imposed under sections 
3101 and 3111 at the time the remuneration is actually or constructively 
paid. See Sec. 31.3121(a)-2(a).
    (2) Special timing rule for an amount deferred under a nonqualified 
deferred compensation plan--(i) In general. To the extent that 
remuneration deferred under a nonqualified deferred compensation plan 
constitutes wages within the meaning of section 3121(a), the 
remuneration is subject to the special timing rule described in this 
paragraph (a)(2). Remuneration is considered deferred under a 
nonqualified deferred compensation plan within the meaning of section 
3121(v)(2) and this section only if it is provided pursuant to a plan 
described in paragraph (b) of this section. The amount deferred under a 
nonqualified deferred compensation plan is determined under paragraph 
(c) of this section.
    (ii) Special timing rule. Except as otherwise provided in this 
section, an amount deferred under a nonqualified deferred compensation 
plan is required to be taken into account as wages for FICA tax purposes 
as of the later of--
    (A) The date on which the services creating the right to that amount 
are performed (within the meaning of paragraph (e)(2) of this section); 
or
    (B) The date on which the right to that amount is no longer subject 
to a substantial risk of forfeiture (within the meaning of paragraph 
(e)(3) of this section).
    (iii) Inclusion in wages only once (nonduplication rule). Once an 
amount deferred under a nonqualified deferred compensation plan is taken 
into account (within the meaning of paragraph (d)(1) of this section), 
then neither the amount taken into account nor the income attributable 
to the amount taken into account (within the meaning of paragraph (d)(2) 
of this section) is treated as wages for FICA tax purposes at any time 
thereafter.
    (iv) Benefits that do not result from a deferral of compensation. If 
a nonqualified deferred compensation plan (within the meaning of 
paragraph (b)(1) of this section) provides both a benefit that results 
from the deferral of compensation (within the meaning of paragraph 
(b)(3) of this section) and a benefit that does not result from the 
deferral of compensation, the benefit that does not result from the 
deferral of compensation is not subject to the special timing rule 
described in this paragraph (a)(2). For example, if a nonqualified 
deferred compensation plan provides retirement benefits which result 
from the deferral of compensation and disability pay (within the meaning 
of paragraph (b)(4)(iv)(C) of this section) which does not result from 
the deferral of compensation, the retirement benefits provided under the 
plan are subject to the special timing rule in this paragraph (a)(2) and 
the disability pay is not.
    (v) Remuneration that does not constitute wages. If remuneration 
under a nonqualified deferred compensation plan does not constitute 
wages within the meaning of section 3121(a), then

[[Page 103]]

that remuneration is not taken into account as wages for FICA tax 
purposes under either the general timing rule described in paragraph 
(a)(1) of this section or the special timing rule described in this 
paragraph (a)(2). For example, benefits under a death benefit plan 
described in section 3121(a)(13) do not constitute wages for FICA tax 
purposes. Therefore, these benefits are not included as wages under the 
general timing rule described in paragraph (a)(1) of this section or the 
special timing rule described in this paragraph (a)(2), even if the 
death benefit plan would otherwise be considered a nonqualified deferred 
compensation plan within the meaning of paragraph (b)(1) of this 
section.
    (b) Nonqualified deferred compensation plan--(1) In general. For 
purposes of this section, the term nonqualified deferred compensation 
plan means any plan or other arrangement, other than a plan described in 
section 3121(a)(5), that is established (within the meaning of paragraph 
(b)(2) of this section) by an employer for one or more of its employees, 
and that provides for the deferral of compensation (within the meaning 
of paragraph (b)(3) of this section). A nonqualified deferred 
compensation plan may be adopted unilaterally by the employer or may be 
negotiated among or agreed to by the employer and one or more employees 
or employee representatives. A plan may constitute a nonqualified 
deferred compensation plan under this section without regard to whether 
the deferrals under the plan are made pursuant to an election by the 
employee or whether the amounts deferred are treated as deferred 
compensation for income tax purposes (e.g., whether the amounts are 
subject to the deduction rules of section 404). In addition, a plan may 
constitute a nonqualified deferred compensation plan under this section 
whether or not it is an employee benefit plan under section 3(3) of the 
Employee Retirement Income Security Act of 1974 (ERISA), as amended (29 
U.S.C. 1002(3)). For purposes of this section, except where the context 
indicates otherwise, the term plan includes a plan or other arrangement.
    (2) Plan establishment--(i) Date plan is established. For purposes 
of this section, a plan is established on the latest of the date on 
which it is adopted, the date on which it is effective, and the date on 
which the material terms of the plan are set forth in writing. For 
purposes of this section, a plan will be deemed to be set forth in 
writing if it is set forth in any other form that is approved by the 
Commissioner. The material terms of the plan include the amount (or the 
method or formula for determining the amount) of deferred compensation 
to be provided under the plan and the time when it may or will be 
provided.
    (ii) Plan amendments. In the case of an amendment that increases the 
amount deferred under a nonqualified deferred compensation plan, the 
plan is not considered established with respect to the additional amount 
deferred until the plan, as amended, is established in accordance with 
paragraph (b)(2)(i) of this section.
    (iii) Transition rule for written plan requirement. For purposes of 
this section, an unwritten plan that was adopted and effective before 
March 25, 1996, is treated as established under this section as of the 
later of the date on which it was adopted or became effective, provided 
that the material terms of the plan are set forth in writing before 
January 1, 2000.
    (3) Plan must provide for the deferral of compensation--(i) Deferral 
of compensation defined. A plan provides for the deferral of 
compensation with respect to an employee only if, under the terms of the 
plan and the relevant facts and circumstances, the employee has a 
legally binding right during a calendar year to compensation that has 
not been actually or constructively received and that, pursuant to the 
terms of the plan, is payable to (or on behalf of) the employee in a 
later year. An employee does not have a legally binding right to 
compensation if that compensation may be unilaterally reduced or 
eliminated by the employer after the services creating the right to the 
compensation have been performed. For this purpose, compensation is not 
considered subject to unilateral reduction or elimination merely because 
it may be reduced or eliminated by operation of the objective terms of 
the plan, such

[[Page 104]]

as the application of an objective provision creating a substantial risk 
of forfeiture (within the meaning of section 83). Similarly, an employee 
does not fail to have a legally binding right to compensation merely 
because the amount of compensation is determined under a formula that 
provides for benefits to be offset by benefits provided under a plan 
that is qualified under section 401(a), or because benefits are reduced 
due to investment losses or, in a final average pay plan, subsequent 
decreases in compensation.
    (ii) Compensation payable pursuant to the employer's customary 
payment timing arrangement. There is no deferral of compensation (within 
the meaning of this paragraph (b)(3)) merely because compensation is 
paid after the last day of a calendar year pursuant to the timing 
arrangement under which the employer ordinarily compensates employees 
for services performed during a payroll period described in section 
3401(b).
    (iii) Short-term deferrals. If, under a nonqualified deferred 
compensation plan, there is a deferral of compensation (within the 
meaning of this paragraph (b)(3)) that causes an amount to be deferred 
from a calendar year to a date that is not more than a brief period of 
time after the end of that calendar year, then, at the employer's 
option, that amount may be treated as if it were not subject to the 
special timing rule described in paragraph (a)(2) of this section. An 
employer may apply this option only if the employer does so for all 
employees covered by the plan and all substantially similar nonqualified 
deferred compensation plans. For purposes of this paragraph (b)(3)(iii), 
whether compensation is deferred to a date that is not more than a brief 
period of time after the end of a calendar year is determined in 
accordance with Sec. 1.404(b)-1T, Q&A-2, of this chapter.
    (4) Plans, arrangements, and benefits that do not provide for the 
deferral of compensation--(i) In general. Notwithstanding paragraph 
(b)(3)(i) of this section, an amount or benefit described in any of 
paragraphs (b)(4)(ii) through (viii) of this section is not treated as 
resulting from the deferral of compensation for purposes of section 
3121(v)(2) and this section and, thus, is not subject to the special 
timing rule of paragraph (a)(2) of this section.
    (ii) Stock options, stock appreciation rights, and other stock value 
rights. The grant of a stock option, stock appreciation right, or other 
stock value right does not constitute the deferral of compensation for 
purposes of section 3121(v)(2). In addition, amounts received as a 
result of the exercise of a stock option, stock appreciation right, or 
other stock value right do not result from the deferral of compensation 
for purposes of section 3121(v)(2) if such amounts are actually or 
constructively received in the calendar year of the exercise. For 
purposes of this paragraph (b)(4)(ii), a stock value right is a right 
granted to an employee with respect to one or more shares of employer 
stock that, to the extent exercised, entitles the employee to a payment 
for each share of stock equal to the excess, or a percentage of the 
excess, of the value of a share of the employer's stock on the date of 
exercise over a specified price (greater than zero).
    Thus, for example, the term stock value right does not include a 
phantom stock or other arrangement under which an employee is awarded 
the right to receive a fixed payment equal to the value of a specified 
number of shares of employer stock.
    (iii) Restricted property. If an employee receives property from, or 
pursuant to, a plan maintained by an employer, there is no deferral of 
compensation (within the meaning of section 3121(v)(2)) merely because 
the value of the property is not includible in income (under section 83) 
in the year of receipt by reason of the property being nontransferable 
and subject to a substantial risk of forfeiture. However, a plan under 
which an employee obtains a legally binding right to receive property 
(whether or not the property is restricted property) in a future year 
may provide for the deferral of compensation within the meaning of 
paragraph (b)(3) of this section and, accordingly, may constitute a 
nonqualified deferred compensation plan, even though benefits under the 
plan are or may be paid in the form of property.
    (iv) Certain welfare benefits--(A) In general. Vacation benefits, 
sick leave,

[[Page 105]]

compensatory time, disability pay, severance pay, and death benefits do 
not result from the deferral of compensation for purposes of section 
3121(v)(2), even if those benefits constitute wages within the meaning 
of section 3121(a).
    (B) Severance pay. Benefits that are provided under a severance pay 
arrangement (within the meaning of section 3(2)(B)(i) of ERISA) that 
satisfies the conditions in 29 CFR 2510.3-2(b)(1)(i) through (iii) are 
considered severance pay for purposes of this paragraph (b)(4)(iv). If 
benefits are provided under a severance pay arrangement (within the 
meaning of section 3(2)(B)(i) of ERISA), but do not satisfy one or more 
of the conditions in 29 CFR 2510.3-2(b)(1)(i) through (iii), then 
whether those benefits are severance pay within the meaning of this 
paragraph (b)(4)(iv) depends upon the relevant facts and circumstances. 
For this purpose, relevant facts and circumstances include whether the 
benefits are provided over a short period of time commencing immediately 
after (or shortly after) termination of employment or for a substantial 
period of time following termination of employment and whether the 
benefits are provided after any termination or only after retirement (or 
another specified type of termination). Benefits provided under a 
severance pay arrangement (within the meaning of section 3(2)(B)(i) of 
ERISA) are in all cases severance pay within the meaning of this 
paragraph (b)(4)(iv) if the benefits payable under the plan upon an 
employee's termination of employment are payable only if that 
termination is involuntary.
    (C) Death benefits and disability pay--(1) General definition. 
Payments made under a nonqualified deferred compensation plan in the 
event of death are death benefits within the meaning of this paragraph 
(b)(4)(iv), but only to the extent the total benefits payable under the 
plan exceed the lifetime benefits payable under the plan. Similarly, 
payments made under a nonqualified deferred compensation plan in the 
event of disability are disability pay within the meaning of this 
paragraph (b)(4)(iv), but only to the extent the disability benefits 
payable under the plan exceed the lifetime benefits payable under the 
plan. Accordingly, any benefits that a nonqualified deferred 
compensation plan provides in the event of death or disability that are 
associated with an amount deferred under this section are disregarded in 
applying this section to the extent the benefits payable under the plan 
in the event of death or in the event of disability have a value in 
excess of the lifetime benefits payable under the plan.
    (2) Total benefits payable defined. For purposes of paragraph 
(b)(4)(iv)(C)(1) of this section, the term total benefits payable under 
a plan means the present value of the total benefits payable to or on 
behalf of the employee (including benefits payable in the event of the 
employee's death) under the plan, disregarding any benefits that are 
payable only in the event of disability and determined separately with 
respect to each form of distribution or other election that may apply 
with respect to the employee.
    (3) Disability benefits payable defined. For purposes of paragraph 
(b)(4)(iv)(C)(1) of this section, the term disability benefits payable 
under a plan means the present value of the benefits payable to or on 
behalf of the employee under the plan, including benefits payable in the 
event of the employee's disability but excluding death benefits within 
the meaning of this paragraph (b)(4)(iv).
    (4) Lifetime benefits payable defined. For purposes of paragraph 
(b)(4)(iv)(C)(1) of this section, the term lifetime benefits payable 
under a plan means the present value of the benefits that could be 
payable to the employee under the plan during the employee's lifetime, 
determined under the plan's optional form of distribution or other 
election that is or was available to the employee at any time with 
respect to the amount deferred and that provides the largest present 
value to the employee during the employee's lifetime of any such form or 
election so available.
    (5) Rules of application. For purposes of determining present value 
under this paragraph (b)(4)(iv)(C), present value is determined as of 
the time immediately preceding the time the amount deferred under a 
nonqualified deferred

[[Page 106]]

compensation plan is required to be taken into account under paragraph 
(e) of this section, using actuarial assumptions that are reasonable as 
of that date but taking into consideration only benefits that result 
from the deferral of compensation, as determined under this paragraph 
(b), and benefits payable in the event of death or disability. In 
addition, for purposes of paragraph (b)(4)(iv)(C)(4) of this section, 
present value must be determined without any discount for the 
probability that the employee may die before benefit payments commence 
and without regard to any benefits payable solely in the event of 
disability.
    (v) Certain benefits provided in connection with impending 
termination--(A) In general. Benefits provided in connection with 
impending termination of employment under paragraph (b)(4)(v)(B) or (C) 
of this section do not result from the deferral of compensation within 
the meaning of section 3121(v)(2).
    (B) Window benefits--(1) In general. For purposes of this paragraph 
(b)(4)(v), except as provided in paragraph (b)(4)(v)(B)(3) of this 
section, a window benefit is provided in connection with impending 
termination of employment. For this purpose, a window benefit is an 
early retirement benefit, retirement-type subsidy, social security 
supplement, or other form of benefit made available by an employer for a 
limited period of time (no greater than one year) to employees who 
terminate employment during that period or to employees who terminate 
employment during that period under specified circumstances.
    (2) Special rule for recurring window benefits. A benefit will not 
be considered a window benefit if an employer establishes a pattern of 
repeatedly providing for similar benefits in similar situations for 
substantially consecutive, limited periods of time. Whether the 
recurrence of these benefits constitutes a pattern of amendments is 
determined based on the facts and circumstances. Although no one factor 
is determinative, relevant factors include whether the benefits are on 
account of a specific business event or condition, the degree to which 
the benefits relate to the event or condition, and whether the event or 
condition is temporary or discrete or is a permanent aspect of the 
employer's business.
    (3) Transition rule for window benefits. In the case of a window 
benefit that is made available for a period of time that begins before 
January 1, 2000, an employer may choose to treat the window benefit as a 
benefit that results from the deferral of compensation if the sole 
reason the window benefit would otherwise fail to be provided pursuant 
to a nonqualified deferred compensation plan is the application of 
paragraph (b)(4)(v)(B)(1) of this section.
    (C) Termination within 12 months of establishment of a benefit or 
plan. For purposes of this paragraph (b)(4)(v), a benefit is provided in 
connection with impending termination of employment, without regard to 
whether it constitutes a window benefit, if--
    (1) An employee's termination of employment occurs within 12 months 
of the establishment of the plan (or amendment) providing the benefit; 
and
    (2) The facts and circumstances indicate that the plan (or 
amendment) is established in contemplation of the employee's impending 
termination of employment.
    (vi) Benefits established after termination. Benefits established 
with respect to an employee after the employee's termination of 
employment do not result from a deferral of compensation within the 
meaning of section 3121(v)(2). However, cost-of-living adjustments on 
benefit payments under a nonqualified deferred compensation plan (within 
the meaning of paragraph (b) of this section) shall not be considered 
benefits established after the employee's termination of employment for 
purposes of this paragraph (b)(4)(vi) merely because the employee does 
not obtain the right to the adjustment until after the employee's 
termination of employment. For purposes of the preceding sentence, cost-
of-living adjustments are payments that satisfy conditions similar to 
those of 29 CFR 2510.3-2(g)(1)(ii) and (iii).
    (vii) Excess parachute payments. An excess parachute payment (as 
defined in section 280G(b)) under an agreement entered into or renewed 
after June 14, 1984, in taxable years ending after such date, does not 
result from the deferral

[[Page 107]]

of compensation within the meaning of section 3121(v)(2). For this 
purpose, any contract entered into before June 15, 1984, that is amended 
after June 14, 1984, in any relevant significant aspect, is treated as a 
contract entered into after June 14, 1984.
    (viii) Compensation for current services. A plan does not provide 
for the deferral of compensation within the meaning of section 
3121(v)(2) if, based on the relevant facts and circumstances, the 
compensation is paid for current services.
    (5) Examples. This paragraph (b) is illustrated by the following 
examples:

    Example 1: (i) In December of 2001, Employer L tells Employee A 
that, if specified goals are satisfied for 2002, Employee A will receive 
a bonus on July 1, 2003, equal to a specified percentage of 2002 
compensation. Because Employee A meets the specified goals, Employer L 
pays the bonus to Employee A on July 1, 2003, consistent with its oral 
commitment.
    (ii) This arrangement is not a nonqualified deferred compensation 
plan under this section because its terms were not set forth in writing 
and, therefore, it was not established in accordance with paragraph 
(b)(2) of this section.
    Example 2: (i) In 2004, Employer M establishes a compensation 
arrangement for Employee B under which Employer M agrees to pay Employee 
B a specified amount based on a percentage of his salary for 2004. The 
amount due is to be paid out of the general assets of Employer M and is 
payable in 2008.
    (ii) Employee B has a legally binding right during 2004 to an amount 
of compensation that has not been actually or constructively received 
and that, pursuant to the terms of the arrangement, is payable in a 
later year. Therefore, the arrangement provides for the deferral of 
compensation.
    Example 3: (i) Employer N establishes a nonqualified deferred 
compensation plan (within the meaning of paragraph (b)(1) of this 
section) for Employee C in 1984. The plan is amended on January 1, 2001, 
to increase benefits, and the amendment provides that the increase in 
benefits is on account of Employee C's performance of services for 
Employer N from 1985 through 2000.
    (ii) The additional benefits that resulted from the plan amendment 
cannot be taken into account as amounts deferred for 1985 through 2000, 
even though the plan was established before then. Pursuant to paragraphs 
(b)(2)(ii) and (e)(1) of this section, the additional benefits cannot be 
taken into account before the latest of the date on which the amendment 
is adopted, the date on which the amendment is effective, or the date on 
which the material terms of the plan, as amended, are set forth in 
writing.
    Example 4: (i) In 2002, Employer O, a state or local government, 
establishes a plan for certain employees that provides for the deferral 
of compensation and that is subject to section 457(a).
    (ii) Paragraph (b)(1) of this section provides that nonqualified 
deferred compensation plan means any plan that is established by an 
employer and that provides for the deferral of compensation, other than 
a plan described in section 3121(a)(5). Section 3121(a)(5) lists, among 
other plans, an exempt governmental deferred compensation plan as 
defined in section 3121(v)(3). Under section 3121(v)(3)(A), this 
definition does not include any plan to which section 457(a) applies. 
Thus, the plan established by Employer O is not an exempt governmental 
deferred compensation plan described in section 3121(v)(3) and, 
consequently, is not a plan described in section 3121(a)(5). 
Accordingly, the plan is a nonqualified deferred compensation plan 
within the meaning of section 3121(v)(2) and paragraph (b)(1) of this 
section.
    (iii) However, the general timing rule of paragraph (a)(1) of this 
section and the special timing rule of paragraph (a)(2) of this section 
apply only to remuneration for employment that constitutes wages. Under 
section 3121(b)(7), certain service performed in the employ of a state, 
or any political subdivision of a state, is not employment. Thus, even 
though the plan is a nonqualified deferred compensation plan, the extent 
to which section 3121(v)(2) applies to a participating employee will 
depend on whether or not the service performed for Employer O is 
excluded from the definition of employment under section 3121(b)(7).
    Example 5: (i) In 2000, Employer P establishes a plan that provides 
for bonuses to be paid to employees based on an objective formula that 
takes into account the employees' performance for the year. Employer P 
does not have the discretion to reduce the amount of any employee's 
bonus after the end of the year. The bonus is not actually calculated 
until March 1 of the following year, and is paid on March 15 of that 
following year.
    (ii) The plan provides for the deferral of compensation because the 
employees have a legally binding right, as of the last day of a calendar 
year, to an amount of compensation that has not been actually or 
constructively received and, pursuant to the terms of the plan, that 
compensation is payable in a later year. However, because the bonuses 
under the plan are paid within a brief period of time after the end of 
the calendar year from which they are deferred, Employer P may choose, 
pursuant to paragraph (b)(3)(iii) of this section, to treat all the 
bonuses as if they are not subject to the special timing rule of 
paragraph (a)(2) of this section.

[[Page 108]]

    (iii) If the employer uses the special timing rule, the amount 
deferred would be taken into account as wages on December 31, 2000. If 
the employer chooses not to use the special timing rule, the amount of 
the bonus is wages on the date it is actually or constructively paid, 
March 15, 2000.
    Example 6: (i) Employer Q establishes a plan under which bonuses 
based on performance in one year may be paid on February 1 of the 
following year at the discretion of the board of directors. The board of 
directors meets in January of each year to determine the amount, if any, 
of the bonuses to be paid based on performance in the prior year.
    (ii) Because an employee does not have a legally binding right to 
any bonus until January of the year in which the bonus is paid, any 
bonus paid under the plan in that year is not deferred from the 
preceding calendar year, and the plan does not provide for the deferral 
of compensation within the meaning of paragraph (b)(3)(i) of this 
section.
    Example 7: (i) Employer R maintains a plan for employees that 
provides nonqualified stock options described in Sec. 1.83-7(a) of this 
chapter. Under the plan, employees are granted in 2001 the option to 
acquire shares of employer stock at the fair market value of the shares 
on the date of grant ($50 per share). The options can be exercised at 
any time from the date of grant through 2010. The options do not have a 
readily ascertainable fair market value for purposes of section 83 at 
the date of grant, and shares are issued upon the exercise of the 
options without being subject to a substantial risk of forfeiture within 
the meaning of section 83. In 2005, when the fair market value of a 
share of employer stock is $80, Employee D exercises an option to 
acquire 1,000 shares.
    (ii) Under paragraph (b)(4)(ii) of this section, neither the grant 
of a stock option nor amounts received currently as a result of the 
exercise of a stock option result from the deferral of compensation for 
purposes of section 3121(v)(2). Thus, under the general timing rule of 
paragraph (a)(1) of this section, the $30,000 spread between the amount 
paid for the shares ($50,000) and the fair market value of the shares on 
the date of exercise ($80,000) is taken into account as wages for FICA 
tax purposes in the year of exercise.
    (iii) If the options had been granted at $45 per share, $5 per share 
below the fair market value on date of grant, the $35,000 spread between 
the amount paid for the shares ($45,000) and the fair market value of 
the shares on the date of exercise ($80,000) would similarly be taken 
into account as wages for FICA tax purposes in the year of exercise.
    Example 8: (i) Employer T establishes a phantom stock plan for 
certain employees. Under the plan, an employee is credited on the last 
day of each calendar year with a dollar amount equal to the fair market 
value of 1,000 shares of employer stock. Upon termination of employment 
for any reason, each employee is entitled to receive the value on the 
date of termination, in cash or employer stock, of the shares with which 
he or she has been credited.
    (ii) Because compensation to which the employee has a legally 
binding right as of the last day of one year is paid in a subsequent 
year, the phantom stock plan provides for the deferral of compensation. 
The phantom stock plan does not provide stock value rights within the 
meaning of paragraph (b)(4)(ii) of this section because it provides for 
awards equal in value to the full fair market value of a specified 
number of shares of Employer T stock, rather than the excess of that 
fair market value over a specified price.
    Example 9: (i) Employer U establishes a severance pay arrangement 
(within the meaning of section 3(2)(b)(i) of ERISA) which provides for 
payments solely upon an employee's death, disability, or dismissal from 
employment. The amount of the payments to an employee is based on the 
length of continuous active service with Employer U at the time of 
dismissal, and is paid in monthly installments over a period of three 
years.
    (ii) Because benefits payable under the plan upon termination of 
employment are payable only upon an employee's involuntary termination, 
the plan is a severance pay plan within the meaning of paragraph 
(b)(4)(iv)(B) of this section. Thus, the benefits are not treated as 
resulting from the deferral of compensation for purposes of section 
3121(v)(2).
    Example 10: (i) Employer V establishes a nonqualified deferred 
compensation plan under which employees will receive benefit payments 
commencing at age 65 as a life annuity or in one of several actuarially 
equivalent annuity forms. If an employee dies before benefit payments 
commence under the plan, a benefit is payable to the employee's 
designated beneficiary in a single lump sum payment equal to the present 
value of the employee's annuity benefit. This benefit (sometimes called 
a full reserve death benefit) is calculated using the applicable 
interest rate specified in section 417(e) and, for the period after age 
65, the applicable mortality table specified in section 417(e), both of 
which are reasonable actuarial assumptions. During 2002, Employee E 
obtains a legally binding right to an annuity benefit under the plan, 
payable at age 65. This annuity benefit has a present value of $10,000 
at the end of 2002, determined using the same assumptions as are used 
under the plan to calculate the full reserve death benefit.
    (ii) The present value, at the end of 2002, of the total benefits 
payable to or on behalf of Employee E (i.e., the sum of the present 
value of the annuity benefit commencing at age 65, and the present value 
of the full reserve death benefit, with both determined

[[Page 109]]

using the actuarial assumptions described in paragraph (i) of this 
Example 10, except also taking into account the probability of death 
prior to age 65) is $10,000. This present value does not exceed the 
present value of the annuity benefits that could be payable to Employee 
E under the plan during Employee E's lifetime determined without a 
discount for the possibility that Employee E might die before age 65 
(also $10,000). Thus, the benefit payable in the event of Employee E's 
death is not a death benefit for purposes of paragraph (b)(4)(iv) of 
this section.
    (iii) The same result would apply in the case of a plan that bases 
benefits on an interest bearing account balance and pays the account 
balance at termination of employment or death (because the sum of the 
deferred benefits payable in the future if the employee terminates 
employment before death with a discount for the probability of death 
before that date plus the present value of the benefit payable in the 
event of death necessarily equals the present value of the deferred 
benefits payable with no discount for the probability of death).
    Example 11: (i) The facts are the same as in Example 10, except 
that, in lieu of the full reserve death benefit, the plan provides a 
monthly life annuity benefit to an employee's spouse in the event of the 
employee's death before benefit payments commence equal to 100 percent 
of the monthly annuity that would be payable to the employee at age 65 
under the life annuity form. Employee E is age 63 and has a spouse who 
is age 51. The sum of the present value of Employee E's annuity benefit 
commencing at age 65 determined with a discount for the possibility that 
Employee E might die before age 65 and the present value of the 100 
percent annuity death benefit for Employee E's spouse exceeds $10,000.
    (ii) The amount deferred for 2002 is $10,000 (because the 100 
percent annuity death benefit for Employee E's spouse is disregarded to 
the extent that the total benefits payable to or on behalf of Employee E 
exceeds the present value of the annuity benefits that could be payable 
to Employee E under the plan during Employee E's lifetime without a 
discount for the probability of Employee E's death before benefit 
payments commence).
    Example 12: (i) On January 1, 2001, Employer W establishes a plan 
that covers only Employee F, who owns a significant portion of the 
business and who has 30 years of service as of that date. The plan 
provides that, upon Employee F's termination of employment at any time, 
he will receive $200,000 per year for each of the immediately succeeding 
five years. Employee F terminates employment on March 1, 2001.
    (ii) Because Employee F terminates employment within 12 months of 
the establishment of the plan and the facts and circumstances set forth 
above indicate that the plan was established in contemplation of 
impending termination of employment, the plan is considered to be 
established in connection with impending termination within the meaning 
of paragraph (b)(4)(v) of this section. Therefore, the benefits provided 
under the plan are not treated as resulting from the deferral of 
compensation for purposes of section 3121(v)(2).
    Example 13: (i) Employer X establishes a plan on January 1, 2004, to 
supplement the qualified retirement benefits of recently hired 55-year 
old Employee G, who forfeited retirement benefits with her former 
employer in order to accept employment with Employer X. The plan 
provides that Employee G will receive $50,000 per year for life 
beginning at age 65, regardless of when she terminates employment. On 
April 15, 2004, Employee G unexpectedly terminates employment.
    (ii) The facts and circumstances indicate that the plan was not 
established in contemplation of impending termination. Thus, even though 
Employee G terminated employment within 12 months of the establishment 
of the plan, the plan is not considered to be established in connection 
with impending termination within the meaning of paragraph (b)(4)(v) of 
this section. Benefits provided under the plan are treated as resulting 
from the deferral of compensation for purposes of section 3121(v)(2).
    Example 14: (i) Employer Y establishes a plan to provide 
supplemental retirement benefits to a group of management employees who 
are at various stages of their careers. All employees covered by the 
plan are subject to the same benefit formula. Employee H is planning to 
(and actually does) retire within six months of the date on which the 
plan is established.
    (ii) Even though Employee H terminated employment within 12 months 
of the establishment of the plan, the plan is not considered to have 
been established in connection with Employee H's impending termination 
within the meaning of paragraph (b)(4)(v) of this section because the 
facts and circumstances indicate otherwise.
    Example 15: (i) Employee J owns 100 percent of Employer Z, a 
corporation that provides consulting services. Substantially all of 
Employer Z's revenue is derived as a result of the services performed by 
Employee J. In each of 2001, 2002, and 2003, Employer Z has gross 
receipts of $180,000 and expenses (other than salary) of $80,000. In 
each of 2001 and 2002, Employer Z pays Employee J a salary of $100,000 
for services performed in each of those years. On December 31, 2002, 
Employer Z establishes a plan to pay Employee J $80,000 in 2003. The 
plan recites that the payment is in recognition of prior services. In 
2003, Employer Z pays Employee J a salary of $20,000 and the $80,000 due 
under the plan.

[[Page 110]]

    (ii) The facts and circumstances described above indicate that the 
$80,000 paid pursuant to the plan is based on services performed by 
Employee J in 2003 and, thus, is paid for current services within the 
meaning of paragraph (b)(4)(viii) of this section. Accordingly, the plan 
does not provide for the deferral of compensation within the meaning of 
section 3121(v)(2), and the $80,000 payment is included as wages in 2003 
under the general timing rule of paragraph (a)(1) of this section.

    (c) Determination of the amount deferred--(1) Account balance 
plans--(i) General rule. For purposes of this section, if benefits for 
an employee are provided under a nonqualified deferred compensation plan 
that is an account balance plan, the amount deferred for a period equals 
the principal amount credited to the employee's account for the period, 
increased or decreased by any income attributable to the principal 
amount through the date the principal amount is required to be taken 
into account as wages under paragraph (e) of this section.
    (ii) Definitions--(A) Account balance plan. For purposes of this 
section, an account balance plan is a nonqualified deferred compensation 
plan under the terms of which a principal amount (or amounts) is 
credited to an individual account for an employee, the income 
attributable to each principal amount is credited (or debited) to the 
individual account, and the benefits payable to the employee are based 
solely on the balance credited to the individual account.
    (B) Income. For purposes of this section, income means any increase 
or decrease in the amount credited to an employee's account that is 
attributable to amounts previously credited to the employee's account, 
regardless of whether the plan denominates that increase or decrease as 
income.
    (iii) Additional rules--(A) Commingled accounts. A plan does not 
fail to be an account balance plan merely because, under the terms of 
the plan, benefits payable to an employee are based solely on a 
specified percentage of an account maintained for all (or a portion of) 
plan participants under which principal amounts and income are credited 
(or debited) to such account.
    (B) Bifurcation permitted. An employer may treat a portion of a 
nonqualified deferred compensation plan as a separate account balance 
plan if that portion satisfies the requirements of this paragraph (c)(1) 
and the amount payable to employees under that portion is determined 
independently of the amount payable under the other portion of the plan.
    (C) Actuarial equivalents. A plan does not fail to be an account 
balance plan merely because the plan permits employees to elect to 
receive their benefits under the plan in a form of benefit other than 
payment of the account balance, provided the amount of benefit payable 
in that other form is actuarially equivalent to payment of the account 
balance using actuarial assumptions that are reasonable. Conversely, a 
plan is not an account balance plan if it provides an optional form of 
benefit that is not actuarially equivalent to the account balance using 
actuarial assumptions that are reasonable. For this purpose, the 
determination of whether forms are actuarially equivalent using 
actuarial assumptions that are reasonable is determined under the rules 
applicable to nonaccount balance plans under paragraph (c)(2)(iii) of 
this section.
    (2) Nonaccount balance plans--(i) General rule. For purposes of this 
section, if benefits for an employee are provided under a nonqualified 
deferred compensation plan that is not an account balance plan (a 
nonaccount balance plan), the amount deferred for a period equals the 
present value of the additional future payment or payments to which the 
employee has obtained a legally binding right (as described in paragraph 
(b)(3)(i) of this section) under the plan during that period.
    (ii) Present value defined. For purposes of this section, present 
value means the value as of a specified date of an amount or series of 
amounts due thereafter, where each amount is multiplied by the 
probability that the condition or conditions on which payment of the 
amount is contingent will be satisfied, and is discounted according to 
an assumed rate of interest to reflect the time value of money. For 
purposes of this section, the present value must be determined as of the 
date the amount deferred is required to be taken into account as wages 
under

[[Page 111]]

paragraph (e) of this section using actuarial assumptions and methods 
that are reasonable as of that date. For this purpose, a discount for 
the probability that an employee will die before commencement of benefit 
payments is permitted, but only to the extent that benefits will be 
forfeited upon death. In addition, the present value cannot be 
discounted for the probability that payments will not be made (or will 
be reduced) because of the unfunded status of the plan, the risk 
associated with any deemed or actual investment of amounts deferred 
under the plan, the risk that the employer, the trustee, or another 
party will be unwilling or unable to pay, the possibility of future plan 
amendments, the possibility of a future change in the law, or similar 
risks or contingencies. Nor is the present value affected by the 
possibility that some of the payments due under the plan will be 
eligible for one of the exclusions from wages in section 3121(a).
    (iii) Treatment of actuarially equivalent benefits--(A) In general. 
In the case of a nonaccount balance plan that permits employees to 
receive their benefits in more than one form or commencing at more than 
one date, the amount deferred is determined by assuming that payments 
are made in the normal form of benefit commencing at normal commencement 
date if the requirements of paragraph (c)(2)(iii)(B) of this section are 
satisfied. Accordingly, in the case of a nonaccount balance plan that 
permits employees to receive their benefits in more than one form or 
commencing at more than one date, unless the requirements of paragraph 
(c)(2)(iii)(B) of this section are satisfied, the amount deferred is 
treated as not reasonably ascertainable under the rules of paragraph 
(e)(4)(i)(B) of this section until a form of benefit and a time of 
commencement are selected.
    (B) Use of normal form commencing at normal commencement date. The 
requirements of this paragraph (c)(2)(iii)(B) are satisfied by a 
nonaccount balance plan if the plan has a single normal form of benefit 
commencing at normal commencement date for the amount deferred and each 
other optional form is actuarially equivalent to the normal form of 
benefit commencing at normal commencement date using actuarial 
assumptions that are reasonable. For this purpose, each form of benefit 
for payment of the amount deferred commencing at a date is a separate 
optional form. For purposes of this paragraph (c)(2)(iii)(B), each 
optional form is actuarially equivalent to the normal form of benefit 
commencing at normal commencement date only if the terms of the plan in 
effect when the amount is deferred provide for every optional form to be 
actuarially equivalent and further provide for actuarial assumptions to 
determine actuarial equivalency that will be reasonable at the time the 
optional form is selected, without regard to whether market interest 
rates are higher or lower at the time the optional form is selected than 
at the time the amount is deferred. Thus, a plan that provides for every 
optional form to be actuarially equivalent satisfies this paragraph 
(c)(2)(iii)(B) if it provides for actuarial equivalence to be 
determined--
    (1) When an optional form is selected or when benefit payments under 
the optional form commence, based on assumptions that are reasonable 
then;
    (2) Based on an index that reflects market rates of interest from 
time to time (for example, the plan specifies that all benefits will be 
actuarially equivalent using the applicable interest rate and applicable 
mortality table specified in section 417(e)); or
    (3) Based on actuarial assumptions specified in the plan and 
provides for those assumptions to be revised to be reasonable 
assumptions if they cease to be reasonable assumptions.
    (C) Fixed mortality assumptions permitted. A plan does not fail to 
satisfy paragraph (c)(2)(iii)(B) of this section merely because the plan 
specifies a fixed mortality assumption that is reasonable at the time 
the amount is deferred, even if that assumption is not reasonable at the 
time the optional form is selected. (But see paragraph (c)(2)(iii)(E) of 
this section for additional rules that apply if the mortality assumption 
is not reasonable at the time the optional form is selected.)
    (D) Normal form of benefit commencing at normal commencement date 
defined. For purposes of this paragraph (c)(2)(iii), the normal form of 
benefit

[[Page 112]]

commencing at normal commencement date under the plan is the form, and 
date of commencement, under which the payments due to the employee under 
the plan are expressed, prior to adjustments for form or timing of 
commencement of payments.
    (E) Rule applicable if actuarial assumptions cease to be reasonable. 
If the terms of the plan in effect when an amount is deferred provide 
for actuarial assumptions to determine actuarial equivalency that will 
be reasonable at the time the optional form is selected or payments 
commence as provided in paragraph (c)(2)(iii)(B) of this section, but, 
at that time, the actuarial assumptions used under the plan are not 
reasonable, the employee will be treated as obtaining a legally binding 
right at that time (or, if earlier, at the date on which the plan is 
amended to provide actuarial assumptions that are not reasonable) to any 
additional benefits that result from the use of an unreasonable 
actuarial assumption. This might occur, for example, if the plan 
specifies that the actuarial assumptions will be reasonable assumptions 
to be set at the time the optional form is selected and the assumptions 
used are in fact not reasonable at that time.
    (3) Separate determination for each period. The amount deferred 
under this paragraph (c) is determined separately for each period for 
which there is an amount deferred under the plan. In addition, 
paragraphs (d) and (e) of this section are applied separately with 
respect to the amount deferred for each such period. Thus, for example, 
the fraction described in paragraph (d)(1)(ii)(B) of this section and 
the amount of the true-up at the resolution date described in paragraph 
(e)(4)(ii)(B) of this section are determined separately with respect to 
each amount deferred. See paragraph (e)(4)(ii)(D) of this section for 
special rules for allocating amounts deferred over more than one year.
    (4) Examples. This paragraph (c) is illustrated by the following 
examples. (The examples illustrate the rules in this paragraph (c) and 
include various interest rate and mortality table assumptions, including 
the applicable section 417(e) mortality table, the GAM 83 (male) 
mortality table, and UP-84 mortality table. These tables can be obtained 
from the Society of Actuaries at its internet site at http://
www.soa.org.) The examples are as follows:

    Example 1: (i) Employer M establishes a nonqualified deferred 
compensation plan for Employee A. Under the plan, 10 percent of annual 
compensation is credited on behalf of Employee A on December 31 of each 
year. In addition, a reasonable rate of interest is credited quarterly 
on the balance credited to Employee A as of the last day of the 
preceding quarter. All amounts credited under the plan are 100 percent 
vested and the benefits payable to Employee A are based solely on the 
balance credited to Employee A's account.
    (ii) The plan is an account balance plan. Thus, pursuant to 
paragraph (c)(1) of this section, the amount deferred for a calendar 
year is equal to 10 percent of annual compensation.
    Example 2: (i) Employer N establishes a nonqualified deferred 
compensation plan for Employee B. Under the plan, 2.5 percent of annual 
compensation is credited quarterly on behalf of Employee B. In addition, 
a reasonable rate of interest is credited quarterly on the balance 
credited to Employee B's account as of the last day of the preceding 
quarter. All amounts credited under the plan are 100 percent vested, and 
the benefits payable to Employee B are based solely on the balance 
credited to Employee B's account. As permitted by paragraph (e)(5) of 
this section, any amount deferred under the plan for the calendar year 
is taken into account as wages on the last day of the year.
    (ii) The plan is an account balance plan. Thus, pursuant to 
paragraph (c)(1) of this section, the amount deferred for a calendar 
year equals 10 percent of annual compensation (i.e., the sum of the 
principal amounts credited to Employee B's account for the year) plus 
the interest credited with respect to that 10 percent principal amount 
through the last day of the calendar year. If Employer N had not chosen 
to apply paragraph (e)(5) of this section and, thus, had taken into 
account 2.5 percent of compensation quarterly, the interest credited 
with respect to those quarterly amounts would not have been treated as 
part of the amount deferred for the year.
    Example 3: (i) Employer O establishes a nonqualified deferred 
compensation plan for a group of five employees. Under the plan, a 
specified sum is credited to an account for the benefit of the group of 
employees on July 31 of each year. Income on the balance of the account 
is credited annually at a rate that is reasonable for each year. The 
benefit payable to an employee is equal to one-fifth of the account 
balance and is payable, at the

[[Page 113]]

employee's option, in a lump sum or in 10 annual installments that 
reflect income on the balance.
    (ii) The plan is an account balance plan notwithstanding the fact 
that the employee's benefit is equal to a specified percentage of an 
account maintained for a group of employees.
    Example 4: (i) The facts are the same as in Example 3, except that 
the plan also permits an employee to elect a life annuity that is 
actuarially equivalent to the account balance based on the applicable 
interest rate and applicable mortality table specified in section 417(e) 
at the time the benefit is elected by the employee.
    (ii) Under paragraphs (c)(1)(iii)(C) and (c)(2)(iii) of this 
section, the plan does not fail to be an account balance plan merely 
because the plan permits employees to elect to receive their benefits 
under the plan in a form that is actuarially equivalent to payment of 
the account balance using actuarial assumptions that are reasonable at 
the time the form is selected.
    Example 5: (i) Employer P establishes a nonqualified deferred 
compensation plan for a group of employees. Under the plan, each 
participating employee has a fully vested right to receive a life 
annuity, payable monthly beginning at age 65, equal to the product of 2 
percent for each year of service and the employee's highest average 
annual compensation for any 3-year period. The plan also provides that, 
if an employee dies before age 65, the present value of the future 
payments will be paid to his or her beneficiary. As permitted under 
paragraph (e)(5) of this section, any amount deferred under the plan for 
a calendar year is taken into account as FICA wages as of the last day 
of the year. As of December 31, 2002, Employee C is age 60, has 25 years 
of service, and high 3-year average compensation of $100,000 (the 
average for the years 2000 through 2002). As of December 31, 2003, 
Employee C is age 61, has 26 years of service, and has high 3-year 
average compensation of $104,000. As of December 31, 2004, Employee C is 
age 62, has 27 years of service, and has high 3-year average 
compensation of $105,000. The assumptions that Employer P uses to 
determine the amount deferred for 2003 (a 7 percent interest rate and, 
for the period after commencement of benefit payments, the GAM 83 (male) 
mortality table) and for 2004 (a 7.5 percent interest rate and, for the 
period after commencement of benefit payments, the GAM 83 (male) 
mortality table) are assumed, solely for purposes of this example, to be 
reasonable actuarial assumptions.
    (ii) As of December 31, 2002, Employee C has a legally binding right 
to receive lifetime payments of $50,000 (2 percent x 25 years x 
$100,000) per year. As of December 31, 2003, Employee C has a legally 
binding right to receive lifetime payments of $54,080 (2 percent x 26 
years x $104,000) per year. Thus, during 2003, Employee C has earned a 
legally binding right to additional lifetime payments of $4,080 
($54,080-$50,000) per year beginning at age 65. The amount deferred for 
2003 is the present value, as of December 31, 2003, of these additional 
payments, which is $28,767 ($4,080 x the present value factor for a 
deferred annuity payable at age 65, using the specified actuarial 
assumptions for 2003). Similarly, during 2004, Employee C has earned a 
legally binding right to additional lifetime payments of $2,620 (2 
percent x 27 years x $105,000, minus $54,080) per year beginning at age 
65. The amount deferred for 2004 is the present value, as of December 
31, 2004, of these additional payments, which is $18,845 ($2,620 x the 
present value factor for a deferred annuity payable at age 65, using the 
specified actuarial assumptions for 2004).
    Example 6: (i) Employer Q establishes a nonqualified deferred 
compensation plan for Employee D on January 1, 2001, when Employee D is 
age 63. During 2001, Employee D obtains a fully vested right to receive 
a life annuity under the nonqualified deferred compensation plan equal 
to the excess of $200,000 over the life annuity benefits payable to 
Employee D under a qualified defined benefit pension plan sponsored by 
Employer Q. The life annuity benefit payable annually under the 
qualified plan is the lesser of $200,000 and the section 415(b)(1)(A) 
limitation in effect for the year, where the section 415(b)(1)(A) 
limitation is automatically adjusted to reflect changes in the cost of 
living. Benefits under both the qualified and nonqualified plan are 
payable monthly beginning at age 65. For purposes of this example, the 
section 415(b)(1)(A) limit for 2001 is assumed to be $140,000. The 
nonqualified plan provides no benefits in the event Employee D dies 
prior to commencement of benefit payments. As permitted under paragraph 
(e)(5) of this section, any amount deferred under the plan for a 
calendar year is taken into account as FICA wages as of the last day of 
the year. The assumptions that Employer Q uses to determine the amount 
deferred for 2001 (a 7 percent interest rate, a 3 percent increase in 
the cost of living and the GAM 83 (male) mortality table) are assumed, 
solely for purposes of this example, to be reasonable actuarial 
assumptions. As of December 31, 2001, Employee D has a legally binding 
right to receive lifetime payments as set forth in the following table:

[[Page 114]]



----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                                                      Assumed
                                                                                  qualified plan    Net annual
                              Year                                 Annual gross   annual payment   payment under
                                                                      amount      (based on cost   nonqualified
                                                                                    of  living)        plan
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
2003............................................................        $200,000        $145,000         $55,000
2004............................................................         200,000         150,000          50,000
2005............................................................         200,000         155,000          45,000
2006............................................................         200,000         160,000          40,000
2007............................................................         200,000         165,000          35,000
2008............................................................         200,000         170,000          30,000
2009............................................................         200,000         175,000          25,000
2010............................................................         200,000         180,000          20,000
2011............................................................         200,000         185,000          15,000
2012............................................................         200,000         190,000          10,000
2013............................................................         200,000         195,000           5,000
2014 and thereafter.............................................         200,000      205,000 or               0
                                                                                         greater
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

    (ii) The amount deferred for 2001 is the present value, as of 
December 31, 2001, of the net lifetime payments under the nonqualified 
plan, or $223,753.

    (d) Amounts taken into account and income attributable thereto--(1) 
Amounts taken into account--(i) In general. For purposes of this 
section, an amount deferred under a nonqualified deferred compensation 
plan is taken into account as of the date it is included in computing 
the amount of wages as defined in section 3121(a), but only to the 
extent that any additional FICA tax that results from such inclusion 
(including any interest and penalties for late payment) is actually paid 
before the expiration of the applicable period of limitations for the 
period in which the amount deferred was required to be taken into 
account under paragraph (e) of this section. Because an amount deferred 
for a calendar year is combined with the employee's other wages for the 
year for purposes of computing FICA taxes with respect to the employee 
for the year, if the employee has other wages that equal or exceed the 
wage base limitations for the Old-Age, Survivors, and Disability 
Insurance (OASDI) portion (or, in the case of years before 1994, the 
Hospital Insurance (HI) portion) of FICA for the year, no portion of the 
amount deferred will actually result in additional OASDI (or HI) tax. 
However, because there is no wage base limitation for the HI portion of 
FICA for years after 1993, the entire amount deferred (in addition to 
all other wages) is subject to the HI tax for the year and, thus, will 
not be considered taken into account for purposes of this section unless 
the HI tax relating to the amount deferred is actually paid. In 
determining whether any additional FICA tax relating to the amount 
deferred is actually paid, any FICA tax paid in a year is treated as 
paid with respect to an amount deferred only after FICA tax is paid on 
all other wages for the year.
    (ii) Amounts not taken into account--(A) Failure to take an amount 
deferred into account under the special timing rule. If an amount 
deferred for a period (as determined under paragraph (c) of this 
section) is not taken into account, then the nonduplication rule of 
paragraph (a)(2)(iii) of this section does not apply, and benefit 
payments attributable to that amount deferred are included as wages in 
accordance with the general timing rule of paragraph (a)(1) of this 
section. For example, if an amount deferred is required to be taken into 
account in a particular year under paragraph (e) of this section, but 
the employer fails to pay the additional FICA tax resulting from that 
amount, then the amount deferred and the income attributable to that 
amount must be included as wages when actually or constructively paid.
    (B) Failure to take a portion of an amount deferred into account 
under the special timing rule. If, as of the date an amount deferred is 
required to be taken into account, only a portion of the amount deferred 
(as determined under paragraph (c) of this section) has

[[Page 115]]

been taken into account, then a portion of each subsequent benefit 
payment that is attributable to that amount is excluded from wages 
pursuant to the nonduplication rule of paragraph (a)(2)(iii) of this 
section and the balance is subject to the general timing rule of 
paragraph (a)(1) of this section. The portion that is excluded from 
wages is fixed immediately before the attributable benefit payments 
commence (or, if later, the date the amount deferred is required to be 
taken into account) and is determined by multiplying each such payment 
by a fraction, the numerator of which is the amount that was taken into 
account (plus income attributable to that amount determined under 
paragraph (d)(2) of this section through the date the portion is fixed) 
and the denominator of which is the present value of the future benefit 
payments attributable to the amount deferred, determined as of the date 
the portion is fixed. For this purpose, if the requirements of paragraph 
(c)(2)(iii)(B) of this section are satisfied, the present value is 
determined by assuming that payments are made in the normal form of 
benefit commencing at normal commencement date. In addition, if the 
employer demonstrates that the amount deferred was determined using 
reasonable actuarial assumptions as determined by the Commissioner, the 
present value of the future benefit payments attributable to the amount 
deferred is determined using those assumptions. In any other case, see 
paragraph (d)(2)(iii) of this section.
    (2) Income attributable to the amount taken into account--(i) 
Account balance plans--(A) In general. For purposes of the 
nonduplication rule of paragraph (a)(2)(iii) of this section, in the 
case of an account balance plan, the income attributable to the amount 
taken into account means any amount credited on behalf of an employee 
under the terms of the plan that is income (within the meaning of 
paragraph (c)(1)(ii)(B) of this section) attributable to an amount 
previously taken into account (within the meaning of paragraph (d)(1) of 
this section), but only if the income reflects a rate of return that 
does not exceed either the rate of return on a predetermined actual 
investment (as determined in accordance with paragraph (d)(2)(i)(B) of 
this section) or, if the income does not reflect the rate of return on a 
predetermined actual investment (as so determined), a reasonable rate of 
interest (as determined in accordance with paragraph (d)(2)(i)(C) of 
this section).
    (B) Rules relating to actual investment--(1) In general. For 
purposes of this paragraph (d)(2)(i), the rate of return on a 
predetermined actual investment for any period means the rate of total 
return (including increases or decreases in fair market value) that 
would apply if the account balance were, during the applicable period, 
actually invested in one or more investments that are identified in 
accordance with the plan before the beginning of the period. For this 
purpose, an account balance plan can determine income based on the rate 
of return of a predetermined actual investment regardless of whether 
assets associated with the plan or the employer are actually invested 
therein and regardless of whether that investment is generally available 
to the public. For example, an account balance plan could provide that 
income on the account balance is determined based on an employee's 
prospective election among various investment alternatives that are 
available under the employer's section 401(k) plan, even if one of those 
investment alternatives is not generally available to the public. In 
addition, an actual investment includes an investment identified by 
reference to any stock index with respect to which there are positions 
traded on a national securities exchange described in section 
1256(g)(7)(A).
    (2) Certain rates of return not based on predetermined actual 
investment. A rate of return will not be treated as the rate of return 
on a predetermined actual investment within the meaning of this 
paragraph (d)(2)(i)(B) if the rate of return (to any extent or under any 
conditions) is based on the greater of the rate of return of two or more 
actual investments, is based on the greater of the rate of return on an 
actual investment and a rate of interest (whether or not the rate of 
interest would otherwise be reasonable under paragraph (d)(2)(i)(C) of 
this section), or is based

[[Page 116]]

on the rate of return on an actual investment that is not predetermined. 
For example, if a plan bases the rate of return on the greater of the 
rate of return on a predetermined actual investment (such as the value 
of the employer's stock), and a 0 percent interest rate (i.e., without 
regard to decreases in the value of that investment), the plan is using 
a rate of return that is not a rate of return on a predetermined actual 
investment within the meaning of this paragraph (d)(2)(i)(B).
    (C) Rules relating to reasonable interest rates--(1) In general. If 
income for a period is credited to an account balance plan on a basis 
other than the rate of return on a predetermined actual investment (as 
determined in accordance with paragraph (d)(2)(i)(B) of this section), 
then, except as otherwise provided in this paragraph (d)(2)(i)(C), the 
determination of whether the income for the period is based on a 
reasonable rate of interest will be made at the time the amount deferred 
is required to be taken into account and annually thereafter.
    (2) Fixed rates permitted. If, with respect to an amount deferred 
for a period, an account balance plan provides for a fixed rate of 
interest to be credited, and the rate is to be reset under the plan at a 
specified future date that is not later than the end of the fifth 
calendar year that begins after the beginning of the period, the rate is 
reasonable at the beginning of the period, and the rate is not changed 
before the reset date, then the rate will be treated as reasonable in 
all future periods before the reset date.
    (ii) Nonaccount balance plans. For purposes of the nonduplication 
rule of paragraph (a)(2)(iii) of this section, in the case of a 
nonaccount balance plan, the income attributable to the amount taken 
into account means the increase, due solely to the passage of time, in 
the present value of the future payments to which the employee has 
obtained a legally binding right, the present value of which constituted 
the amount taken into account (determined as of the date such amount was 
taken into account), but only if the amount taken into account was 
determined using reasonable actuarial assumptions and methods. Thus, for 
each year, there will be an increase (determined using the same interest 
rate used to determine the amount taken into account) resulting from the 
shortening of the discount period before the future payments are made, 
plus, if applicable, an increase in the present value resulting from the 
employee's survivorship during the year. As a result, if the amount 
deferred for a period is determined using a reasonable interest rate and 
other reasonable actuarial assumptions and methods, and the amount is 
taken into account when required under paragraph (e) of this section, 
then, under the nonduplication rule of paragraph (a)(2)(iii) of this 
section, none of the future payments attributable to that amount will be 
subject to FICA tax when paid.
    (iii) Unreasonable rates of return--(A) Account balance plans. This 
paragraph (d)(2)(iii)(A) applies to an account balance plan under which 
the income credited is based on neither a predetermined actual 
investment, within the meaning of paragraph (d)(2)(i)(B) of this 
section, nor a rate of interest that is reasonable, within the meaning 
of paragraph (d)(2)(i)(C) of this section, as determined by the 
Commissioner. In that event, the employer must calculate the amount that 
would be credited as income under a reasonable rate of interest, 
determine the excess (if any) of the amount credited under the plan over 
the income that would be credited using the reasonable rate of interest, 
and take that excess into account as an additional amount deferred in 
the year the income is credited. If the employer fails to calculate the 
amount that would be credited as income under a reasonable rate of 
interest and to take the excess into account as an additional amount 
deferred in the year the income is credited, or the employer otherwise 
fails to take the full amount deferred into account, then the excess of 
the income credited under the plan over the income that would be 
credited using AFR will be treated as an amount deferred in the year the 
income is credited. For purposes of this section, AFR means the mid-term 
applicable federal rate (as defined pursuant to section 1274(d)) for 
January 1 of

[[Page 117]]

the calendar year, compounded annually. In addition, pursuant to 
paragraph (d)(1)(ii) of this section, the excess over the income that 
would result from the application of AFR and any income attributable to 
that excess are subject to the general timing rule of paragraph (a)(1) 
of this section.
    (B) Nonaccount balance plans. If any actuarial assumption or method 
used to determine the amount taken into account under a nonaccount 
balance plan is not reasonable, as determined by the Commissioner, then 
the income attributable to the amount taken into account is limited to 
the income that would result from the application of the AFR and, if 
applicable, the applicable mortality table under section 
417(e)(3)(A)(ii)(I) (the 417(e) mortality table), both determined as of 
the January 1 of the calendar year in which the amount was taken into 
account. In addition, paragraph (d)(1)(ii)(B) of this section applies 
and, in calculating the fraction described in paragraph (d)(1)(ii)(B) of 
this section (at the date specified in paragraph (d)(1)(ii)(B) of this 
section), the numerator is the amount taken into account plus income (as 
limited under this paragraph (d)(2)(iii)(B)), and the present value in 
the denominator is determined using the AFR, the 417(e) mortality table, 
and reasonable assumptions as to cost of living, each determined as of 
the time the amount deferred was required to be taken into account.
    (3) Examples. This paragraph (d) is illustrated by the following 
examples:

    Example 1: (i) In 2001, Employer M establishes a nonqualified 
deferred compensation plan for Employee A under which all benefits are 
100 percent vested. In 2002, Employee A has $200,000 of current annual 
compensation from Employer M that is subject to FICA tax. The amount 
deferred under the plan on behalf of Employee A for 2002 is $20,000. 
Thus, Employee A has total wages for FICA tax purposes of $220,000. 
Because Employee A has other wages that exceed the OASDI wage base for 
2002, no additional OASDI tax is due as a result of the $20,000 amount 
deferred. Because there is no wage base limitation for the HI portion of 
FICA, additional HI tax liability results from the $20,000 amount 
deferred. However, Employer M fails to pay the additional HI tax.
    (ii) Under paragraph (d)(1)(i) of this section, an amount deferred 
is considered taken into account as wages for FICA tax purposes as of 
the date it is included in computing FICA wages, but only if any 
additional FICA tax liability that results from inclusion of the amount 
deferred is actually paid. Because the HI tax resulting from the $20,000 
amount deferred was not paid, that amount deferred was not taken into 
account within the meaning of paragraph (d)(1) of this section. Thus, 
pursuant to paragraph (d)(1)(ii) of this section, benefit payments 
attributable to the $20,000 amount deferred will be included as wages in 
accordance with the general timing rule of paragraph (a)(1) of this 
section and will be subject to the HI portion of FICA tax when actually 
or constructively paid (and the OASDI portion of FICA tax to the extent 
Employee A's wages do not exceed the OASDI wage base limitation).
    Example 2: (i) The facts are the same as in Example 1, except that 
Employer M takes all actions necessary to correct its failure to pay the 
additional tax before the applicable period of limitations expires for 
2002 (including payment of any applicable interest and penalties).
    (ii) Because the HI tax resulting from the $20,000 amount deferred 
is paid, that amount deferred is considered taken into account for 2002. 
Thus, in accordance with paragraph (a)(2)(iii) of this section, neither 
the amount deferred nor the income attributable to the amount taken into 
account will be treated as wages for FICA tax purposes at any time 
thereafter.
    Example 3: (i) Employer N establishes a nonqualified deferred 
compensation plan under which all benefits are 100 percent vested. Under 
the plan, an employee's account is credited with a contribution equal to 
10 percent of salary on December 31 of each year. The employee's account 
balance also is increased each December 31 by interest on the total 
amounts credited to the employee's account as of the preceding December 
31. The interest rate specified in the plan results in income credits 
that are not based on the rate of return on a predetermined actual 
investment within the meaning of paragraph (d)(2)(i)(B) of this section, 
and that are greater than the income that would result from application 
of a reasonable rate of interest within the meaning of paragraph 
(d)(2)(i)(C) of this section. Employer N fails to take into account an 
additional amount for the excess of the income credited under the plan 
over a reasonable rate of interest.
    (ii) Pursuant to paragraph (d)(2)(iii)(A) of this section, the 
income credits in excess of the income that would be credited using the 
AFR are considered additional amounts deferred in the year credited.
    Example 4: (i) The facts are the same as in Example 3, except that 
the annual increase is based on Moody's Average Corporate Bond Yield.
    (ii) Because this index reflects a reasonable rate of interest, the 
income credited under

[[Page 118]]

the plan is considered income attributable to the amount taken into 
account within the meaning of paragraph (d)(2)(i) of this section.
    Example 5: (i) The facts are the same as in Example 3, except that 
the annual increase (or decrease) is based on the rate of total return 
on Employer N's publicly traded common stock.
    (ii) Because the income credited under the plan does not exceed the 
actual rate of return on a predetermined actual investment, the income 
credited is considered income attributable to the amount taken into 
account within the meaning of paragraph (d)(2)(i) of this section.
    Example 6: (i) The facts are the same as in Example 3, except that 
the annual rate of increase or decrease is equal to the greater of the 
rate of total return on a specified aggressive growth mutual fund or the 
rate of return on a specified income-oriented mutual fund. Employer N 
fails to take into account an additional amount for the excess of the 
income credited under the plan over a reasonable rate of interest.
    (ii) Because the rate of increase or decrease is based on the 
greater of two rates of returns, the increase is not based on the return 
on a predetermined actual investment within the meaning of paragraph 
(d)(2)(i)(B) of this section. Thus, if the rate of return credited under 
the plan (i.e., the greater of the rates of return of the two mutual 
funds) exceeds the income that would be credited using the AFR, the 
excess is not considered income attributable to the amount taken into 
account within the meaning of paragraph (d)(2)(i) of this section and, 
pursuant to paragraph (d)(2)(iii)(A) of this section, is considered an 
additional amount deferred.
    Example 7: (i) The facts are the same as in Example 6, except that 
the annual increase or decrease with respect to 50 percent of the 
employee's account is equal to the rate of total return on the specified 
aggressive growth mutual fund and the annual increase or decrease with 
respect to the other 50 percent of the employee's account is equal to 
the increase or decrease in the Standard & Poor's 500 Index.
    (ii) Because the increase or decrease attributable to any portion of 
the employee's account is based on the return on a predetermined actual 
investment, the entire increase or decrease is considered income 
attributable to the amount taken into account within the meaning of 
paragraph (d)(2)(i) of this section.
    Example 8: (i) The facts are the same as in Example 3, except that, 
pursuant to the terms of the plan, before the beginning of each year, 
the board of directors of Employer N designates a specific investment on 
which the following year's annual increase or decrease will be based. 
The board is authorized to switch investments more frequently on a 
prospective basis. Before the beginning of 2004, the board designates 
Company A stock as the investment for 2004. Before the beginning of 
2005, the board designates Company B stock as the investment for 2005. 
At the end of 2005, the board determines that the return on Company B 
stock was lower than expected and changes its designation for 2005 to 
the rate of return on Company C stock, which had a higher return during 
2005. Employer N fails to take into account an additional amount for the 
excess of the income credited under the plan over a reasonable rate of 
interest.
    (ii) The annual increase or decrease for 2004 is based on the return 
of a predetermined actual investment. Although the annual increase or 
decrease for 2005 is based on an actual investment, the actual 
investment is not predetermined since it was not designated before the 
beginning of 2005. Pursuant to paragraph (d)(2)(iii)(A) of this section, 
the excess of the income credited under the plan over the income 
determined using AFR is an additional amount deferred for 2005.
    Example 9: (i) Employer O establishes a nonqualified deferred 
compensation plan for Employee B. Under the plan, if Employee B survives 
until age 65, he has a fully vested right to receive a lump sum payment 
at that age, equal to the product of 10 percent per year of service and 
Employee B's highest average annual compensation for any 3-year period, 
but no benefits are payable in the event Employee B dies prior to age 
65. As permitted under paragraph (e)(5) of this section, any amount 
deferred under the plan for the calendar year is taken into account as 
wages as of the last day of the year. As of December 31, 2002, Employee 
B has 25 years of service and Employee B's high 3-year average 
compensation is $100,000 (the average for the years 2000 through 2002). 
As of December 31, 2002, Employee B has a legally binding right to 
receive a payment at age 65 of $250,000 (10 percent x 25 years x 
$100,000). As of December 31, 2003, Employee B is age 63, has 26 years 
of service, and has high 3-year average compensation of $104,000. As of 
December 31, 2003, Employee B has a legally binding right to receive a 
payment at age 65 of $270,400 (10 percent x 26 years x $104,000). Thus, 
during 2003, Employee B has earned a legally binding right to an 
additional payment at age 65 of $20,400 ($270,400-$250,000). The 
assumptions that Employer O uses to determine the amount deferred for 
2003 are a 7 percent interest rate and the GAM 83 (male) mortality 
table, which, solely for purposes of this example, are assumed to be 
reasonable actuarial assumptions. The amount deferred for 2003 is the 
present value, as of December 31, 2003, of the $20,400 payment, which is 
$17,353. Employer O takes this amount into account by including it in 
Employee B's FICA wages for 2003 and paying the additional FICA tax.

[[Page 119]]

    (ii) Under paragraph (d)(2)(ii) of this section, the income 
attributable to the amount that was taken into account is the increase 
in the present value of the future payment due solely to the passage of 
time, because the amount deferred was determined using reasonable 
actuarial assumptions and methods. As of the payment date at age 65, the 
present value of the future payment earned during 2003 is $20,400. The 
entire difference between the $20,400 and the $17,353 amount deferred 
($3,047) is the increase in the present value of the future payment due 
solely to the passage of time, and thus constitutes income attributable 
to the amount taken into account. Because the amount deferred was taken 
into account, the entire payment of $20,400 represents either an amount 
deferred that was previously taken into account ($17,353) or income 
attributable to that amount ($3,047). Accordingly, pursuant to the 
nonduplication rule of paragraph (a)(2)(iii) of this section, none of 
the payment is included in wages.
    Example 10: (i) The facts are the same as in Example 9, except that, 
instead of providing a lump sum equal to 10 percent of average 
compensation per year of service, the plan provides Employee B with a 
fully vested right to receive a life annuity, payable monthly beginning 
at age 65, equal to the product of 2 percent for each year of service 
and Employee B's highest average annual compensation for any 3-year 
period. The plan also provides that, if Employee B dies before age 65, 
the present value of the future payments will be paid to his or her 
beneficiary. As of December 31, 2002, Employee B has a legally binding 
right to receive lifetime payments of $50,000 (2 percent x 25 years x 
$100,000) per year. As of December 31, 2003, Employee B has a legally 
binding right to receive lifetime payments of $54,080 (2 percent x 26 
years x $104,000) per year. Thus, during 2003, Employee B has earned a 
legally binding right to additional lifetime payments of $4,080 
($54,080-$50,000) per year beginning at age 65. The amount deferred for 
2003 is $32,935, which is the present value, as of December 31, 2003, of 
these additional payments, determined using the same actuarial 
assumptions and methods used in Example 9, except that there is no 
discount for the probability of death prior to age 65. Employer O takes 
this amount into account by including it in Employee B's FICA wages for 
2003 and paying the additional FICA tax.
    (ii) Under paragraph (d)(2)(ii) of this section, the income 
attributable to the amount that was taken into account is the increase 
in the present value of the future payments due solely to the passage of 
time, because the amount deferred was determined using reasonable 
actuarial assumptions and methods. Because the amount deferred was taken 
into account, each annual payment of $4,080 attributable to the amount 
deferred in 2003 represents either an amount deferred that was 
previously taken into account or income attributable to that amount. 
Accordingly, pursuant to the nonduplication rule of paragraph 
(a)(2)(iii) of this section, none of the payments are included in wages.
    Example 11: (i) The facts are the same as in Example 10, except that 
no amount is taken into account for 2003 because Employer O fails to pay 
the additional FICA tax.
    (ii) Under paragraph (d)(1)(ii)(A) of this section, if an amount 
deferred for a period is not taken into account, then the benefit 
payments attributable to that amount deferred are included as wages in 
accordance with the general timing rule of paragraph (a)(1) of this 
section. In this case, assuming that the amounts deferred in other 
periods were taken into account, $4,080 of each year's total benefit 
payments will be included in wages when actually or constructively paid, 
in accordance with the general timing rule.
    Example 12: (i) Employer P establishes an account balance plan on 
January 1, 2002, under which all benefits are 100 percent vested. The 
plan provides that amounts deferred will be credited annually with 
interest beginning in 2002 at a rate that is greater than a reasonable 
rate of interest. Employer P treats the excess over the applicable 
interest rate in section 417(e) as an additional amount deferred for 
2002 and in each year thereafter, and takes the additional amount into 
account by including it in FICA wages and paying the additional FICA tax 
for the year.
    (ii) Under the nonduplication rule in paragraph (a)(2)(iii) of this 
section, the benefits paid under the plan will be excluded from wages 
for FICA tax purposes.
    Example 13: (i) The facts are the same as in Example 9, except that, 
in determining the amount deferred, Employer O uses a 15 percent 
interest rate, which, solely for purposes of this example, is assumed 
not to be a reasonable interest rate. Employer O determines that the 
amount deferred for 2003 is the present value, as of December 31, 2003, 
of the $20,400 payment, which is $15,023. Employer O includes $15,023 in 
wages and pays any resulting FICA tax. Solely for purposes of this 
example, it is assumed that the AFR as of January 1, 2003, is 7 percent.
    (ii) Under paragraph (d)(2)(iii)(B) of this section, if any 
actuarial assumption or method is not reasonable, then the income 
attributable to the amount taken into account is limited to the income 
that would result from application of the AFR and, if applicable, the 
417(e) mortality table. Because the 15 percent interest rate is 
unreasonable, the income attributable to the amount taken into account 
is limited to the income that would result from using a 7 percent 
interest rate and, in this case, an increase for survivorship using the 
417(e) mortality table.

[[Page 120]]

Under these assumptions, the income attributable to the $15,023 amount 
taken into account for 2003 is $1,199 in 2004 and $1,313 in 2005. Under 
paragraph (d)(1)(ii) of this section, the sum of these amounts ($17,535) 
is excluded from Employee B's wages pursuant to the nonduplication rule 
of paragraph (a)(2)(iii) of this section, and the balance of the payment 
($2,865) is subject to the general timing rule of paragraph (a)(1) of 
this section and, thus, is included in Employee B's wages when actually 
or constructively paid.
    (iii) The same result can be reached by multiplying the attributable 
benefit payments by a fraction, the numerator of which is the amount 
taken into account, and the denominator of which is the amount deferred 
that would have been taken into account at the same time had the amount 
deferred been calculated using the AFR and the 417(e) mortality table. 
These assumptions are determined as of January 1 of the calendar year in 
which the amount was taken into account. In this Example 13, the 
fraction would be $15,023 divided by $17,478, which equals .85954. The 
$20,400 payment is multiplied by this fraction to determine the amount 
of the payment that is excluded from wages pursuant to the 
nonduplication rule of paragraph (a)(2)(iii) of this section. Thus, 
$17,535 ($20,400x.85954) is excluded from wages and the balance ($2,865) 
is subject to FICA tax when actually or constructively paid.
    Example 14: (i) The facts are the same as Example 10, except that 
Employer O calculates the amount deferred for 2003 as $18,252 and takes 
that amount into account by including that amount in wages and paying 
any resulting FICA tax. The assumptions that Employer O uses to 
determine the amount deferred are a 15 percent interest rate and, for 
the period after commencement of benefit payments, the GAM 83 (male) 
mortality table. The 15 percent interest rate is assumed, solely for 
purposes of this example, not to be a reasonable actuarial assumption. 
Solely for purposes of this example, it is assumed that the AFR as of 
January 1, 2003, is 7 percent.
    (ii) Under paragraph (d)(2)(iii)(B) of this section, if any 
actuarial assumption or method used is not reasonable, then the income 
attributable to the amount taken into account is limited to the income 
that would result from application of the AFR and, if applicable, the 
417(e) mortality table. Because the 15 percent interest rate is not 
reasonable, the income attributable to the amount taken into account is 
equal to the income that would result from using a 7 percent interest 
rate and the amount taken into account is treated as if it represented a 
portion of the amount deferred for purposes of applying paragraph 
(d)(1)(ii)(B) of this section. Under these assumptions, the income 
attributable to the $18,252 amount taken into account for 2003 is $1,278 
in 2004 and $1,367 in 2005. Under paragraph (d)(1)(ii)(B) of this 
section, the portion of each benefit payment attributable to the amount 
deferred that is excluded from wages pursuant to the nonduplication rule 
of paragraph (a)(2)(iii) of this section is determined at benefit 
commencement by multiplying each benefit payment by a fraction, the 
numerator of which is the amount taken into account (plus income 
attributable to that amount) and the denominator of which is the present 
value of future benefit payments attributable to the amount deferred. 
Because the interest rate assumption is not reasonable, not only is the 
income limited to the application of the AFR, but the present value in 
the denominator must be determined using the AFR and (if applicable) the 
417(e) mortality table. In this case, the present value is $40,283 and 
thus the fraction is $20,897 divided by $40,283, or .51875. Thus, $2,116 
(.51875 x $4,080) of each year's benefit payment is excluded from wages 
and the balance of each year's payment ($1,964) is subject to the 
general timing rule of paragraph (a)(1) of this section and is included 
in wages when actually or constructively paid.
    (iii) The same result can be reached by multiplying the attributable 
benefit payments by a fraction the numerator of which is the amount 
taken into account, and the denominator of which is the amount deferred 
that would have been taken into account at the same time had the amount 
deferred been calculated using the AFR and the 417(e) mortality table. 
These assumptions are determined as of January 1 of the calendar year in 
which the amount was taken into account. In this Example 14, the 
fraction would be $18,252 divided by $35,185, which equals .51875. The 
$4,080 annual payment is multiplied by this fraction to determine the 
amount of the payment that is excluded from wages pursuant to the 
nonduplication rule of paragraph (a)(2)(iii) of this section. Thus, 
$2,116 ($4,080 x .51875) is excluded from wages and the balance ($1,964) 
is subject to FICA tax when actually or constructively paid.

    (e) Time amounts deferred are required to be taken into account--(1) 
In general. Except as otherwise provided in this paragraph (e), an 
amount deferred under a nonqualified deferred compensation plan must be 
taken into account as wages for FICA tax purposes as of the later of the 
date on which services creating the right to the amount deferred are 
performed (within the meaning of paragraph (e)(2) of this section) or 
the date on which the right to the amount deferred is no longer subject 
to a substantial risk of forfeiture (within the meaning of paragraph 
(e)(3) of this section). However,

[[Page 121]]

in no event may any amount deferred under a nonqualified deferred 
compensation plan be taken into account as wages for FICA tax purposes 
prior to the establishment of the plan providing for the amount deferred 
(or, if later, the plan amendment providing for the amount deferred). 
Therefore, if an amount is deferred pursuant to the terms of a legally 
binding agreement that is not put in writing until after the amount 
would otherwise be taken into account under this paragraph (e)(1), the 
amount deferred (including any attributable income) must be taken into 
account as wages for FICA tax purposes as of the date the material terms 
of the plan are put in writing.
    (2) Services creating the right to an amount deferred. For purposes 
of this section, services creating the right to an amount deferred under 
a nonqualified deferred compensation plan are considered to be performed 
as of the date on which, under the terms of the plan and all the facts 
and circumstances, the employee has performed all of the services 
necessary to obtain a legally binding right (as described in paragraph 
(b)(3)(i) of this section) to the amount deferred.
    (3) Substantial risk of forfeiture. For purposes of this section, 
the determination of whether a substantial risk of forfeiture exists 
must be made in accordance with the principles of section 83 and the 
regulations thereunder.
    (4) Amount deferred that is not reasonably ascertainable under a 
nonaccount balance plan--(i) In general--(A) Date required to be taken 
into account. Notwithstanding any other provision of this paragraph (e), 
an amount deferred under a nonaccount balance plan is not required to be 
taken into account as wages under the special timing rule of paragraph 
(a)(2) of this section until the first date on which all of the amount 
deferred is reasonably ascertainable (the resolution date). In this 
case, the amount required to be taken into account as of the resolution 
date is determined in accordance with paragraph (c)(2) of this section.
    (B) Definition of reasonably ascertainable. For purposes of this 
paragraph (e)(4), an amount deferred is considered reasonably 
ascertainable on the first date on which the amount, form, and 
commencement date of the benefit payments attributable to the amount 
deferred are known, and the only actuarial or other assumptions 
regarding future events or circumstances needed to determine the amount 
deferred are interest and mortality. For this purpose, the form and 
commencement date of the benefit payments attributable to the amount 
deferred are treated as known if the requirements of paragraph 
(c)(2)(iii)(B) of this section (under which payments are treated as 
being made in the normal form of benefit commencing at normal 
commencement date) are satisfied. In addition, an amount deferred does 
not fail to be reasonably ascertainable on a date merely because the 
exact amount of the benefit payable cannot readily be calculated on that 
date or merely because the exact amount of the benefit payable depends 
on future changes in the cost of living. If the exact amount of the 
benefit payable depends on future changes in the cost of living, the 
amount deferred must be determined using a reasonable assumption as to 
the future changes in the cost of living. For example, the amount of a 
benefit is treated as known even if the exact amount of the benefit 
payable cannot be determined until future changes in the cost of living 
are reflected in the section 415 limitation on benefits payable under a 
qualified retirement plan.
    (ii) Earlier inclusion permitted--(A) In general. With respect to an 
amount deferred that is not reasonably ascertainable, an employer may 
choose to take an amount into account at any date or dates (an early 
inclusion date or dates) before the resolution date (but not before the 
date described in paragraph (e)(1) of this section with respect to the 
amount deferred). Thus, for example, with respect to an amount deferred 
under a nonaccount balance plan that is not reasonably ascertainable 
because the plan permits employees to receive their benefits in more 
than one form or commencing at more than one date (and the requirements 
of paragraph (c)(2)(iii) of this section are not satisfied), an employer 
may choose to take an amount into account on the date otherwise 
described in paragraph (e)(1)

[[Page 122]]

of this section before the form and commencement date are selected 
(based on assumptions as to the form and commencement date for the 
benefit payments) or may choose to wait until the form and commencement 
date of the benefit payments are selected. An employer that chooses to 
take an amount into account at an early inclusion date under this 
paragraph (e)(4)(ii) for an employee under a plan is not required until 
the resolution date to identify the period to which the amount taken 
into account relates.
    (B) True-up at resolution date. If, with respect to an amount 
deferred for a period, an employer chooses to take an amount into 
account as of an early inclusion date in accordance with this paragraph 
(e)(4)(ii) and the benefit payments attributable to the amount deferred 
exceed the benefit payments that are actuarially equivalent to the 
amount taken into account at the early inclusion date (payable in the 
same form and using the same commencement date as the benefit payments 
attributable to the amount deferred), then the present value of the 
difference in the benefits, determined in accordance with paragraph 
(c)(2) of this section, must be taken into account as of the resolution 
date.
    (C) Actuarial assumptions. For purposes of determining the benefits 
that are actuarially equivalent to the amount taken into account as of 
an early inclusion date, the amount taken into account is converted to 
an actuarially equivalent benefit payable in the same form and 
commencing on the same date as the actual benefit payments attributable 
to the amount deferred using an interest rate, and, if applicable, 
mortality and cost-of-living assumptions, that were reasonable as of the 
early inclusion date. Thus, with respect to an amount deferred for a 
period, the amount required to be taken into account as of the 
resolution date is the present value (determined using an interest rate, 
and, if applicable, mortality and cost-of-living assumptions, that are 
reasonable as of the resolution date) of the excess, if any, of the 
future benefit payments attributable to the amount deferred over the 
future benefits payable in the same form and commencing on the same date 
that are actuarially equivalent to the portion of the amount deferred 
that was taken into account as of the early inclusion date (where 
actuarial equivalence is determined using an interest rate, and, if 
applicable, mortality and cost-of-living assumptions, that were 
reasonable as of the early inclusion date).
    (D) Allocation rules for amounts deferred over more than one 
period--(1) General rule. The rules of this paragraph (e)(4)(ii)(D) 
apply for purposes of determining whether an amount has been included 
under this paragraph (e)(4) before the earliest date permitted under 
paragraph (e)(1) of this section.
    (2) Future compensation increases. Increases in an employee's 
compensation after the early inclusion date must be disregarded.
    (3) Early retirement subsidies. An early retirement subsidy that the 
employee ultimately receives may be taken into account at an early 
inclusion date if the employee would have a legally binding right to the 
subsidy at the early inclusion date but for any condition that the 
employee continue to render services. Accordingly, an employer may take 
into account at an early inclusion date any early retirement subsidy 
that the employee ultimately receives to the extent that elimination or 
reduction of that subsidy would violate section 411(d)(6)(B)(i) if that 
section applied to the plan.
    (4) Allocation with respect to offsets. In any case in which a 
series of amounts are deferred over more than one period, the amounts 
deferred are not reasonably ascertainable until a single resolution date 
and the benefit payments attributable to the entire series are 
determined under a formula that provides a gross benefit that in the 
aggregate is subject to an objective reduction for future events under 
the terms of the plan, such as an offset for the aggregate benefits 
payable under a plan qualified under section 401(a), the attribution of 
benefit payments to the amount deferred in each period is determined 
under the rules of this paragraph (e)(4)(ii)(D)(4). In a case described 
in the preceding sentence, the benefit payments made as a result of

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the series of amounts deferred may be treated as attributable to the 
amount deferred as of the earliest period in which the employee obtained 
a legally binding right to a benefit under the plan equal to the excess, 
if any, of the amount of the gross benefit attributable to that period 
(determined at the resolution date), over the amount of the reduction 
determined as of the end of that period. Thus, for example, if an 
employee obtains a legally binding right in each of several years to 
benefit payments from a nonqualified deferred compensation plan that 
provides for a specified gross benefit for the years to be offset by the 
benefits payable under a qualified plan, the amount deferred in the 
first year may be treated as equal to the gross benefit for the year, 
reduced by the offset applicable at the end of the year (even if the 
offset increases after the end of the year).
    (E) Treatment of benefits paid before the resolution date. If a 
benefit payment is attributable to an amount deferred that is not 
reasonably ascertainable at the time of payment (or is paid before the 
date selected under paragraph (e)(5) of this section), and the employer 
has previously taken an amount into account with respect to the amount 
deferred under the early inclusion rule of this paragraph (e)(4), then, 
in lieu of the pro rata rule provided in paragraph (d)(1)(ii)(B) of this 
section, a first-in-first-out rule applies in determining the portion of 
the benefit payment attributable to the amount taken into account. Under 
this first-in-first-out rule, the benefit payment is compared to the sum 
of the amount taken into account at the early inclusion date and the 
income attributable to that amount. If the benefit payment equals or 
exceeds the amount taken into account at the early inclusion date and 
the income attributable to that amount as of the date of the benefit 
payment, the benefit payment is included as wages under the general 
timing rule of paragraph (a)(1) of this section to the extent of any 
excess, and the amount taken into account at the early inclusion date 
(and income attributable to that amount) is disregarded thereafter with 
respect to the amount deferred. If the amount taken into account at the 
early inclusion date and the income attributable to that amount as of 
the date of the benefit payment exceeds the benefit payment, the benefit 
payment is not included as wages under the general timing rule of 
paragraph (a)(1) of this section and, in determining the amount that 
must be taken into account thereafter with respect to the amount 
deferred, the amount taken into account at the early inclusion date, 
plus attributable income as of the date of the benefit payment, is 
reduced by the amount of the benefit payment, and only the excess plus 
future income attributable to the excess (credited using assumptions 
that were reasonable on the early inclusion date) is taken into 
consideration. If amounts have been taken into account at more than one 
early inclusion date, this paragraph (e)(4)(ii)(E) applies on a first-
in-first-out basis, beginning with the amount taken into account at the 
earliest early inclusion date (including income attributable thereto).
    (5) Rule of administrative convenience. For purposes of this 
section, an employer may treat an amount deferred as required to be 
taken into account under this paragraph (e) on any date that is later 
than, but within the same calendar year as, the actual date on which the 
amount deferred is otherwise required to be taken into account under 
this paragraph (e). For example, if services creating the right to an 
amount deferred are considered performed under paragraph (e)(2) of this 
section periodically throughout a year, the employer may nevertheless 
treat the services creating the right to that amount deferred as 
performed on December 31 of that year. If an employer uses the rule of 
administrative convenience described in this paragraph (e)(5), any 
determination of whether the income attributable to an amount deferred 
under an account balance plan is based on a reasonable rate of interest 
or whether the actuarial assumptions used to determine the present value 
of an amount deferred in a nonaccount balance plan are reasonable will 
be made as of the date the employer selects to take the amount into 
account.
    (6) Portions of an amount deferred required to be taken into account 
on more

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than one date. If different portions of an amount deferred are required 
to be taken into account under paragraph (e)(1) of this section on more 
than one date (e.g., on account of a graded vesting schedule), then each 
such portion is considered a separate amount deferred for purposes of 
this section.
    (7) Examples. This paragraph (e) is illustrated by the following 
examples:

    Example 1: (i) Employer M establishes a nonqualified deferred 
compensation plan for Employee A on November 1, 2005. Under the plan, 
which is an account balance plan, Employee A obtains a legally binding 
right on the last day of each calendar year (if Employee A is employed 
on that date) to be credited with a principal amount equal to 5 percent 
of compensation for the year. In addition, a reasonable rate of interest 
is credited quarterly. Employee A's account balance is nonforfeitable 
and is payable upon Employee A's termination of employment. For 2006, 
the principal amount credited to Employee A under the plan (which, in 
this case, is also the amount deferred within the meaning of paragraph 
(c) of this section) is $25,000.
    (ii) Under paragraph (e)(2) of this section, the services creating 
the right to the $25,000 amount deferred are considered performed as of 
December 31, 2006, the date on which Employee A has performed all of the 
services necessary to obtain a legally binding right to the amount 
deferred. Thus, in accordance with paragraph (e)(1) of this section, the 
$25,000 amount deferred must be taken into account as of December 31, 
2006, which is the later of the date on which services creating the 
right to the amount deferred are performed or the date on which the 
right to the amount deferred is no longer subject to a substantial risk 
of forfeiture.
    Example 2: (i) The facts are the same as in Example 1, except that 
the principal amount credited under the plan on the last day of each 
year (and attributable interest) is forfeited if the employee terminates 
employment within five years of that date.
    (ii) Under paragraph (e)(3) of this section, the determination of 
whether the right to an amount deferred is subject to a substantial risk 
of forfeiture is made in accordance with the principles of section 83. 
Under Sec. 1.83-3(c) of this chapter, a substantial risk of forfeiture 
generally exists where rights in property that are transferred are 
conditioned, directly or indirectly, upon the future performance of 
substantial services. Because Employee A's right to receive the $25,000 
principal amount (and attributable interest) is conditioned on the 
performance of services for five years, a substantial risk of forfeiture 
exists with respect to that amount deferred until December 31, 2011.
    (iii) December 31, 2011, is the later of the date on which services 
creating the right to the amount deferred are performed or the date on 
which the right to the amount deferred is no longer subject to a 
substantial risk of forfeiture. Thus, in accordance with paragraph 
(e)(1) of this section, the amount deferred (which, pursuant to 
paragraph (c)(1) of this section, is equal to the $25,000 principal 
amount credited to Employee A's account on December 31, 2006, plus the 
interest credited with respect to that principal amount through December 
31, 2011) must be taken into account as of December 31, 2011.
    Example 3: (i) The facts are the same as in Example 2, except that 
the principal amount credited under the plan on the last day of each 
year (and attributable interest) becomes nonforfeitable according to a 
graded vesting schedule under which 20 percent is vested as of December 
31, 2007; 40 percent is vested as of December 31, 2008; 60 percent is 
vested as of December 31, 2009; 80 percent is vested as of December 31, 
2010; and 100 percent is vested as of December 31, 2011. Because these 
dates are later than the date on which the services creating the right 
to the amount deferred are considered performed (December 31, 2006), the 
amount deferred is required to be taken into account as of these dates 
that fall in five different years.
    (ii) Paragraph (e)(6) of this section provides that, if different 
portions of an amount deferred are required to be taken into account 
under paragraph (e)(1) of this section on more than one date, then each 
such portion is considered a separate amount deferred for purposes of 
this section. Thus, $5,000 of the principal amount, plus interest 
credited through December 31, 2007, is taken into account as an amount 
deferred on December 31, 2007; $5,000 of the principal amount, plus 
interest credited through December 31, 2008, is taken into account as a 
separate amount deferred on December 31, 2008; etc.
    Example 4: (i) On November 21, 2001, Employer N establishes a 
nonqualified deferred compensation plan under which all benefits are 100 
percent vested. The plan provides for Employee B (who is age 45) to 
receive a lump sum benefit of $500,000 at age 65. This benefit will be 
forfeited if Employee B dies before age 65.
    (ii) Because the amount, form, and commencement date of the benefit 
are known, and the only assumptions needed to determine the amount 
deferred are interest and mortality, the amount deferred is reasonably 
ascertainable within the meaning of paragraph (e)(4)(i) of this section 
on November 21, 2001.
    Example 5: (i) The facts are the same as in Example 4, except that 
plan provides that the lump sum will be paid at the later of age 65 or 
termination of employment and provides that the $500,000 payable to 
Employee B is

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increased by 5 percent per year for each year that payment is deferred 
beyond age 65.
    (ii) Because the commencement date of the benefit payment is 
contingent on when Employee B terminates employment, the commencement 
date of the benefit payment is not known. Thus, the amount deferred is 
not reasonably ascertainable within the meaning of paragraph (e)(4)(i) 
of this section, unless the plan satisfies the requirements of paragraph 
(c)(2)(iii)(B) of this section. Because the fixed 5 percent factor may 
not be reasonable at the time benefit payments commence (i.e., 5 percent 
might be higher or lower than a reasonable interest rate when payments 
commence), the plan fails to satisfy paragraph (c)(2)(iii)(B) of this 
section and accordingly the amount deferred is not reasonably 
ascertainable until termination of employment.
    Example 6: (i) The facts are the same as in Example 4, except that 
the $500,000 is payable to Employee B at the later of age 55 or 
termination of employment.
    (ii) Because the commencement date of the benefit payment is 
contingent on when Employee B terminates employment, the commencement 
date of the benefit payment is not known. Thus, the amount deferred is 
not reasonably ascertainable until termination of employment.
    Example 7: (i) The facts are the same as in Example 4, except that 
Employee B may elect to take the benefit in the form of a life annuity 
of $50,000 per year (commencing at age 65).
    (ii) Because the plan permits employees to elect to receive benefits 
in more than one form and the alternative forms may not have the same 
value when Employee B makes his election, the plan fails to satisfy the 
requirements of paragraph (c)(2)(iii)(B) of this section until a form of 
benefit is selected. Thus, the amount deferred is not reasonably 
ascertainable until then.
    Example 8: (i) Employer O establishes a nonqualified deferred 
compensation plan. The plan is a supplemental executive retirement plan 
(SERP) that provides Employee C with a fully vested right to receive a 
pension, in the form of a life annuity payable monthly, beginning at age 
65, equal to the excess of 3 percent of Employee C's final 3-year 
average pay for each year of participation up to 15 years, over the 
amount payable to Employee C from Employer O's qualified pension plan. 
The amount payable under the qualified pension plan is a life annuity 
payable monthly, beginning at age 65, equal to 1.5 percent of final 3-
year average pay for each year of employment, excluding pay in excess of 
the section 401(a)(17) compensation limit. No benefits are payable under 
the SERP if Employee C dies before age 65. Employee C becomes a 
participant in the SERP on January 1, 2001, at age 44. The amount 
deferred under the SERP for any year is not reasonably ascertainable 
prior to termination of employment because the amount of the benefit is 
not known and the determination of the amount deferred requires 
assumptions other than interest and mortality (e.g., an assumption as to 
Employee C's average pay for the final three years of employment). As 
permitted by paragraph (e)(4)(i) of this section, Employer O chooses not 
to take any amount into account for any year before the resolution date. 
Employee C terminates employment on December 31, 2018 when he is age 62.
    (ii) As of the date Employee C terminates employment, the amount of 
the benefit is known and the only actuarial or other assumptions needed 
to determine the amount deferred are an interest rate assumption and a 
mortality assumption. At that time, the amount deferred in each past 
year becomes reasonably ascertainable, and Employer O is able to 
determine that during 2001 Employee C earned a legally binding right to 
a life annuity of $4,000 per year beginning in 2021 when Employee C is 
age 65. Employer O determines the present value of Employee C's future 
benefit payments under the SERP as of this resolution date (December 31, 
2018), using a 7 percent interest rate and the UP-84 mortality table, 
which, solely for purposes of this example, are assumed to be reasonable 
actuarial assumptions for December 31, 2018. The special timing rule 
will be satisfied if the resulting present value, $26,950, is taken into 
account on that date in accordance with paragraph (d)(1) of this 
section.
    Example 9: (i) The facts are the same as in Example 8, except that 
the plan provides that Employee C may choose to receive early retirement 
benefits on an unreduced basis at any time after age 60 if Employee C 
has completed 15 years of service by that date.
    (ii) As of the date Employee C terminates employment, the amount of 
the benefit is known and the only actuarial or other assumptions needed 
to determine the amount deferred are an interest rate assumption and a 
mortality assumption. At that time, the amount deferred in each past 
year becomes reasonably ascertainable, and Employer O is able to 
determine that during 2001 Employee C earned a legally binding right to 
a life annuity of $4,000 per year beginning on December 31, 2018 when 
Employee C is age 62. Employer O determines the present value of 
Employee C's future benefit payments under the SERP as of this 
resolution date (December 31, 2018), using a 7 percent interest rate and 
the UP-84 mortality table, which, solely for purposes of this example, 
are assumed to be reasonable actuarial assumptions for December 31, 
2018. The special timing rule will be satisfied if the resulting present 
value, $37,576, is taken into account on that date in accordance with 
paragraph (d)(1) of this section.

[[Page 126]]

    Example 10: (i) The facts are the same as in Example 9, except that, 
as permitted under paragraph (e)(4)(ii) of this section, Employer O 
chooses to take an amount into account before the amount deferred for 
2001 is reasonably ascertainable. The amount that Employer O takes into 
account on December 31, 2001, is $13,043 (the present value of a life 
annuity of $4,000 per year, payable at age 62, using a 6 percent 
interest rate and the UP-84 mortality table). Employer O does not take 
any other amount into account before the resolution date.
    (ii) In accordance with paragraph (e)(4)(ii)(B) of this section, 
Employer O must determine any additional amount required to be taken 
into account in 2018. If the $4,000 payable in the form of a life 
annuity beginning at age 62 exceeds the life annuity which is 
actuarially equivalent to the $13,043 previously taken into account, the 
present value of the excess must be taken into account. In this Example 
10, the $13,043 previously taken into account is actuarially equivalent 
to a $4,000 annuity commencing at age 62 using a 6 percent interest rate 
and the UP-84 mortality table ( which, solely for purposes of this 
example, are assumed to be reasonable actuarial assumptions for December 
31, 2001). Accordingly, no additional amount need be taken into account 
in 2018, regardless of any changes in market rates of interest between 
2001 and 2018.
    Example 11: (i) The facts are the same as in Example 9, except that, 
as permitted under paragraph (e)(4)(ii) of this section, Employer O 
chooses to take an amount into account before the amount deferred for 
2001 is reasonably ascertainable. The amount that Employer O takes into 
account on December 31, 2001, is $9,569 (the present value of a life 
annuity of $4,000 per year, payable at age 65, using a 6 percent 
interest rate and the UP-84 mortality table). Employer O does not take 
any other amount into account before the resolution date.
    (ii) In accordance with paragraph (e)(4)(ii)(B) of this section, 
Employer O must determine any additional amount required to be taken 
into account in 2018. If the $4,000 payable in the form of a life 
annuity beginning in 2018 at age 62 exceeds the life annuity which is 
actuarially equivalent to the $9,569 previously taken into account, the 
present value of the excess must be taken into account. In this case, 
the $9,569 previously taken into account is actuarially equivalent to a 
$2,935 annuity commencing at age 62 using a 6 percent interest rate and 
the UP-84 mortality table (which, solely for purposes of this example, 
are assumed to be reasonable actuarial assumptions for December 31, 
2001). Accordingly, an additional amount needs to be taken into account 
in 2018 equal to the present value of the excess of the $4,000 annual 
stream of benefit payments to which Employee C obtained a legally 
binding right during 2001 over the $2,935 annual stream of benefit 
payments which is actuarially equivalent to the amount previously taken 
into account. This present value (i.e., the present value of a life 
annuity equal to $4,000 minus $2,935, or $1,065 annually) is determined 
by Employer O to be $10,005 as of the resolution date using a 7 percent 
interest rate and the UP-84 mortality table (which, solely for purposes 
of this example, are assumed to be reasonable actuarial assumptions for 
December 31, 2018).
    Example 12: (i) The facts are the same as in Example 9, except that 
the amount that Employer O takes into account on December 31, 2001, is 
$15,834 (the present value of $4,000, payable at age 60, using a 6 
percent interest rate and the UP-84 mortality table). Employer O does 
not take any other amount into account before the resolution date.
    (ii) In accordance with paragraph (e)(4)(ii)(B) of this section, 
Employer O must determine any additional amount required to be taken 
into account in 2018. If the $4,000 payable in the form of a life 
annuity beginning at age 62 exceeds the life annuity which is 
actuarially equivalent to the $15,834 previously taken into account, the 
present value of the excess must be taken into account. In this case, 
the $15,834 previously taken into account is actuarially equivalent to a 
$4,856 annuity commencing at age 62 using a 6 percent interest rate and 
the UP-84 mortality table (which, solely for purposes of this example, 
are assumed to be reasonable actuarial assumptions for December 31, 
2001). Because the life annuity of $4,856 per year (which is equivalent 
to the amount taken into account at the early inclusion date) exceeds 
the $4,000 annuity attributable to the amount deferred in 2001, no 
additional amount is required to be taken into account for that amount 
deferred as of the resolution date. Employer O may claim a refund or 
credit for the overpayment of FICA tax with respect to amounts taken 
into account prior to the resolution date to the extent permitted by 
sections 6402, 6413, and 6511.
    Example 13: (i) The facts are the same as in Example 12, except that 
Employee C became a participant in the SERP on January 1, 2000. In 
addition, Employer O determines in 2018 that during 2000 Employee C 
earned a legally binding right to a life annuity of $1,500 per year 
beginning on December 31, 2018.
    (ii) Employer O may allocate the $15,834 previously taken into 
account among any amounts deferred on or before the early inclusion 
date. At the resolution date, Employer O will have to take into account 
the present value of an annuity equal to the excess of the life annuity 
attributable to the amounts deferred for 2000 and 2001 over a life 
annuity of $4,856 per year.
    Example 14: (i) In 2003, Employer P establishes a nonqualified 
deferred compensation plan for Employee D. The plan provides that,

[[Page 127]]

in consideration of Employee D's services to be performed on Project X 
in 2004, Employee D will have a nonforfeitable right to receive 1 
percent per year of Employer P's net profits associated with Project X 
for each of the immediately succeeding three years. No services beyond 
2004 are required. The 1 percent of net profits payable each year will 
be paid on March 31 of the immediately succeeding year. One percent of 
net profits associated with Project X is $750,000 in 2005, $400,000 in 
2006, and $90,000 in 2007. Employee D receives $750,000 on March 31, 
2006, $400,000 on March 31, 2007, and $90,000 on March 31, 2008.
    (ii) Because the services creating the right to all of the amount 
deferred are performed in 2004, the benefit payments based on the 2005, 
2006, and 2007 net profits are all attributable to the amount deferred 
in 2004. However, because the present value of Employee D's future 
benefit is contingent on future profits, the determination of the amount 
deferred requires the use of assumptions other than interest, mortality, 
and cost of living. Thus, all of the amount deferred in 2004 will not be 
reasonably ascertainable within the meaning of paragraph (e)(4)(i) of 
this section until December 31, 2007 (which is the resolution date). 
Employer P does not choose to take any amount into account prior to the 
amount deferred becoming reasonably ascertainable.
    (iii) However, paragraph (d)(1)(ii)(A) of this section provides that 
a benefit payment attributable to an amount deferred under a 
nonqualified deferred compensation plan must be included as wages when 
actually or constructively paid if the amount deferred has not been 
taken into account as wages under the special timing rule of paragraph 
(a)(2) of this section. Thus, the benefit payments in 2006 and 2007 must 
be included as wages when paid.
    (iv) As of December 31, 2007, all of the amount deferred under the 
plan becomes reasonably ascertainable because the amount of the benefit 
payable attributable to the amount deferred is treated as known under 
paragraph (e)(4)(i)(B) of this section, and the only assumption needed 
to determine the present value of the future benefits is interest. 
However, since Employer P was required to treat the payments in 2006 and 
2007 as wages when paid under the general timing rule of paragraph 
(a)(1) of this section, only the present value of the payment to be made 
in 2008 is required to be taken into account as of the resolution date 
(December 31, 2007) under the special timing rule of paragraph (a)(2) of 
this section. Using an interest rate of 10 percent per year (which, 
solely for purposes of this Example 14, is assumed to be reasonable), 
Employer P determines that on December 31, 2007, the present value of 
the future benefits is $87,881, and Employer P includes that additional 
amount in wages for 2007. (Note that Employer P can choose to use the 
lag method of withholding described in paragraph (f)(3) of this section, 
which allows the resolution date amount to be taken into account no 
later than March 31, 2008, provided that the amount deferred is 
increased by interest using the AFR for January of 2008.)
    Example 15: (i) The facts are the same as in Example 14, except that 
Employer P chooses the early inclusion option permitted by paragraph 
(e)(4)(ii) of this section to take $1,000,000 into account on December 
31, 2004, before the amount deferred for 2004 is reasonably 
ascertainable.
    (ii) Pursuant to paragraph (e)(4)(ii)(E) of this section, in 
applying the nonduplication rule of paragraph (a)(2)(iii) of this 
section, a first-in-first-out rule applies in determining the benefit 
payments that are attributable to amounts previously taken into account. 
Using the 10 percent interest rate, Employer P determines that the 
$750,000 benefit payment on March 31, 2006, and the March 31, 2007, 
benefit payment of $400,000 are less than the $1,000,000 taken into 
account at the early inclusion date, plus attributable income, and, 
therefore, are not included in wages when paid.
    (iii) Under paragraph (e)(4)(ii)(E) of this section, if an employer 
chooses to take an amount into account before the resolution date, the 
amount taken into account (plus income attributable to that amount) is 
disregarded to the extent the amount is attributed to benefit payments 
made before the resolution date. Thus, Employer P must reduce the 
$1,000,000 taken into account in 2004 (plus income attributable to that 
amount) based upon the two benefit payments ($750,000 and $400,000) that 
were excluded from wages. Using an interest rate of 10 percent, Employer 
P determines that the amount taken into account in 2004 plus interest to 
the resolution date and reduced based upon the two benefit payments is 
$15,228 and the additional amount that is required to be taken into 
account as of December 31, 2007, is $72,653 ($87,881-$15,228).
    Example 16: (i) Employee E obtains a fully vested, legally binding 
right during 2002, 2003, and 2004 to payments from a nonqualified 
deferred compensation plan of Employer Q under which the benefits are 
based on a formula that includes an actuarial offset by the account 
balance under a qualified defined contribution plan of Employer Q as of 
December 31, 2004. The payments from the nonqualified deferred 
compensation plan are to commence on December 31, 2005. At the 
resolution date for the amounts earned during 2002, 2003, and 2004, 
which is December 31, 2004, Employee E has a legally binding right to a 
net annual benefit of $100,000 payable for life to commence on December 
31, 2005. On the resolution date, Employer Q determines that on December 
31, 2002, Employee E had a

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legally binding right to receive $100,000 annually for life beginning on 
December 31, 2005 (as a result of the gross benefit under the 
nonqualified plan being $120,000 annually for life, and the offset being 
$20,000 annually for life, as of December 31, 2002). On December 31, 
2003, Employee E had a legally binding right to receive $95,000 annually 
for life beginning on December 31, 2005 (as a result of the gross 
benefit under the nonqualified plan being $135,000 annually for life, 
and the offset being $40,000 annually for life, as of December 31, 
2003). On December 31, 2004, Employee E had a legally binding right to 
receive $100,000 annually for life beginning on December 31, 2005 (as a 
result of the gross benefit under the nonqualified plan being $145,000 
annually for life, and the offset being $45,000 annually for life, as of 
December 31, 2004).
    (ii) In this case, pursuant to paragraph (e)(4)(ii)(D)(4) of this 
section, Employer Q can attribute the entire $100,000 life annuity to 
the amount deferred for 2002, even though Employee E's benefit under the 
nonqualified deferred compensation plan is reduced to $95,000 in 2003.
    Example 17: (i) In 2010, Employee F performs services for which she 
earns a right to 10 percent of the proceeds from the sale of a motion 
picture. In 2011, Employee F performs services for which she earns a 
right to 10 percent of the proceeds from the sale of another motion 
picture. These proceeds are calculated by subtracting the total 
advertising expenses for both movies. Payment is to be made in the year 
following the date on which both pictures have been sold, but not later 
than 2018. At the end of 2010, the advertising expenses for both 
pictures totaled $300,000. The first motion picture is sold for 
$10,000,000 in 2014. The second motion picture is sold for $17,000,000 
in 2017. At the end of 2017, the advertising expenses totaled 
$1,700,000. In 2018, Employee F is paid $2,530,000 (10 percent of the 
sum of $10,000,000 and $17,000,000 minus $1,700,000).
    (ii) Pursuant to paragraph (e)(4)(ii)(D)(4) of this section, 
$970,000 (10 percent of the excess of the gross proceeds from the sale 
of the first motion picture at the resolution date in 2017 over the 
advertising expenses incurred at the end of 2010) of the payment made in 
2018 can be attributed to the amount deferred in 2010 (and with the 
remaining payment of $1,560,000 to be attributed to the amount deferred 
in 2011).

    (f) Withholding--(1) In general. Unless an employer applies an 
alternative method described in paragraph (f)(2) or (3) of this section, 
an amount deferred under a nonqualified deferred compensation plan for 
any employee is treated, for purposes of withholding and depositing FICA 
tax, as wages paid by the employer and received by the employee at the 
time it is taken into account in accordance with paragraph (e) of this 
section. However, paragraphs (f)(2) and (3) of this section provide 
alternative methods which may be used with respect to an amount deferred 
for an employee. An employer is not required to be consistent in 
applying the alternatives described in this paragraph (f) with respect 
to different employees or amounts deferred.
    (2) Estimated method--(i) In general. Under the alternative method 
provided in this paragraph (f)(2), the employer may make a reasonable 
estimate of the amount deferred on the date on which the amount is taken 
into account in accordance with paragraph (e) of this section and take 
that estimated amount into account as wages paid by the employer and 
received by the employee on that date (the estimate date), for purposes 
of withholding and depositing FICA tax.
    (ii) Underestimate of the amount deferred--(A) General rule. If the 
employer underestimates the amount deferred (as determined after 
calculating the actual amount deferred that should have been taken into 
account as of the date on which the amount was taken into account in 
accordance with paragraph (e) of this section, using an interest rate 
and other actuarial assumptions that are reasonable as of that date), 
the employer may treat the shortfall as wages paid as of the estimate 
date or as of any date that is no later than three months after the 
estimate date. In either case, the shortfall does not include the income 
credited to the amount deferred after the amount is taken into account 
in accordance with paragraph (e) of this section.
    (B) Shortfall is treated as wages paid on a date after the estimate 
date. If the employer chooses to treat the shortfall as wages paid on a 
date that is no later than three months after the estimate date, the 
employer must take that shortfall into account as wages paid by the 
employer and received by the employee on that date, for purposes of 
withholding and depositing FICA tax.
    (C) Shortfall is treated as wages paid on the estimate date. If the 
employer chooses to treat the shortfall as wages paid as of the estimate 
date, the shortfall is

[[Page 129]]

treated as an error for purposes of withholding and depositing FICA tax. 
Appropriate adjustments may be made in accordance with section 6205(a) 
and the regulations thereunder; however, for purposes of Sec. 31.6205-
1(b), the error need not be treated as ascertained before the date that 
is three months after the estimate date.
    (D) Reporting. The employer must report the shortfall as wages on 
Form 941, Employer's Quarterly Federal Tax Return (and, if applicable, 
Form 941c, Supporting Statement to Correct Information) and Form W-2, 
Wage and Tax Statement (or, if applicable, Form W-2c, Corrected Wage and 
Tax Statement) in accordance with its treatment of the shortfall under 
paragraph (f)(2)(ii) (B) or (C) of this section.
    (iii) Overestimate of the amount deferred. If the employer 
overestimates the amount deferred (as determined after calculating the 
actual amount deferred that should have been taken into account as of 
the date on which the amount was taken into account in accordance with 
paragraph (e) of this section, using an interest rate and actuarial 
assumptions that are reasonable as of that date) and deposits more than 
the amount required, the employer may claim a refund or credit in 
accordance with sections 6402, 6413, and 6511. A Form 941c, or an 
equivalent statement, must accompany each claim for refund. In addition, 
Form W-2 or, if applicable, Form W-2c must also reflect the actual 
amount deferred that should have been taken into account.
    (3) Lag method. Under the alternative method provided in this 
paragraph (f)(3), an amount deferred, plus interest, may be treated as 
wages paid by the employer and received by the employee, for purposes of 
withholding and depositing FICA tax, on any date that is no later than 
three months after the date the amount is required to be taken into 
account in accordance with paragraph (e) of this section. For purposes 
of this paragraph (f)(3), the amount deferred must be increased by 
interest through the date on which the wages are treated as paid, at a 
rate that is not less than AFR. If the employer withholds and deposits 
FICA tax in accordance with this paragraph (f)(3), the employer will be 
treated as having taken into account the amount deferred plus income to 
the date on which the wages are treated as paid.
    (4) Examples. This paragraph (f) is illustrated by the following 
examples:

    Example 1: (i) Employer M maintains a nonqualified deferred 
compensation plan that is an account balance plan. The plan provides for 
annual bonuses based on current year profits to be deferred until 
termination of employment. Employer M's profits for 2003, and thus the 
amount deferred, is reasonably ascertainable, but Employer M calculates 
the amount deferred on March 3, 2004, when the relevant data is 
available.
    (ii) In accordance with the alternative method described in 
paragraph (f)(2) of this section, Employer M makes a reasonable estimate 
that the amount deferred that must be taken into account as of December 
31, 2003, for Employee A is $20,000, and withholds and deposits FICA tax 
on that amount as if it were wages paid by Employer M and received by 
Employee A on that date. In January of 2004, Employer M files and 
furnishes Form W-2 for Employee A including the $20,000 in FICA wages. 
On March 3, 2004, Employer M determines that the actual amount deferred 
that should have been taken into account on December 31, 2003, was 
$22,000.
    (iii) In accordance with the alternative method described in 
paragraph (f)(2)(ii) of this section, Employer M may treat the 
additional $2,000 as wages paid to and received by Employee A on 
December 31, 2003, the estimate date. Employer M may treat the $2,000 
shortfall as an error ascertained on March 3, 2004, and withhold and 
deposit FICA tax on that amount. Form W-2c for Employee A for 2003 must 
include the $2,000 shortfall in FICA wages. Employer M must also correct 
the information on Form 941 for the last quarter of 2003, reporting the 
adjustment on Form 941 for the first quarter of 2004, accompanied by 
Form 941c for the last quarter of 2003.
    (iv) Instead, Employer M may treat the $2,000 shortfall as wages 
paid on March 31, 2004, and withhold and deposit FICA tax on that amount 
as if it were wages paid by Employer M and received by Employee A on 
that date. Form W-2 for Employee A for 2004 and Form 941 for the first 
quarter of 2004 must include the $2,000 shortfall in FICA wages.
    Example 2: (i) The facts are the same as in Example 1, except that 
on March 3, 2004, Employer M determines that the actual amount deferred 
that should have been taken into account on December 31, 2003, was 
$19,000.
    (ii) Under paragraph (f)(2)(iii) of this section, Employer M may, in 
accordance with sections 6402, 6413, and 6511, claim a refund or credit 
for the overpayment of tax resulting from the overestimate. In addition, 
Employer M must file and furnish a Form W-2c

[[Page 130]]

for Employee A and must correct the information on Form 941 for the last 
quarter of 2003.
    Example 3: (i) The facts are the same as in Example 1, except that 
Employer M does not make a reasonable estimate of the amount deferred 
that must be taken into account as of December 31, 2003. Instead, 
Employer M withholds and deposits FICA tax on the amount deferred plus 
interest on that amount using AFR (for January 2004) as if it were wages 
paid by Employer M and received by Employee A on March 15, 2004.
    (ii) Under the alternative method described in paragraph (f)(3) of 
this section, the amount taken into account on March 15, 2004 (including 
the interest), will be treated as FICA wages paid to and received by 
Employee A on March 15, 2004.
    Example 4: (i) The facts are the same as in Example 1, except that 
an amount is also deferred for Employee B which is required to be taken 
into account on October 15, 2003, and Employer M chooses to use the lag 
method in paragraph (f)(3) of this section in order to provide time to 
calculate the amount deferred.
    (ii) Employer M may use any date not later than January 15, 2004, to 
take the amount deferred into account (provided that the amount deferred 
includes interest, at AFR for January 1, 2003, through December 31, 
2003, and at AFR for January 1, 2004, through January 15, 2004).

    (g) Effective date and transition rules--(1) General effective date. 
Except for paragraphs (g)(2) through (4) of this section, this section 
is applicable on and after January 1, 2000. Thus, paragraphs (a) through 
(f) of this section apply to amounts deferred on or after January 1, 
2000; to amounts deferred before January 1, 2000, which cease to be 
subject to a substantial risk of forfeiture on or after January 1, 2000, 
or for which a resolution date occurs on or after January 1, 2000; and 
to benefits actually or constructively paid on or after January 1, 2000.
    (2) Reasonable, good faith interpretation for amounts deferred and 
benefits paid before January 1, 2000--(i) In general. For periods before 
January 1, 2000 (including amounts deferred before January 1, 2000, and 
any benefits actually or constructively paid before January 1, 2000, 
that are attributable to those amounts deferred), an employer may rely 
on a reasonable, good faith interpretation of section 3121(v)(2), taking 
into account pre-existing guidance. An employer will be deemed to have 
determined FICA tax liability and satisfied FICA withholding 
requirements in accordance with a reasonable, good faith interpretation 
of section 3121(v)(2) if the employer has complied with paragraphs (a) 
through (f) of this section. For purposes of paragraphs (g)(2) through 
(4) of this section, and subject to paragraphs (g)(2)(ii) and (iii) of 
this section, whether an employer that has not complied with paragraphs 
(a) through (f) of this section has determined FICA tax liability and 
satisfied FICA withholding requirements in accordance with a reasonable, 
good faith interpretation of section 3121(v)(2) will be determined based 
on the relevant facts and circumstances, including consistency of 
treatment by the employer and the extent to which the employer has 
resolved unclear issues in its favor.
    (ii) Plan must be established or adopted. If an amount is deferred 
under a plan before January 1, 2000, and benefit payments attributable 
to that amount are actually or constructively paid on or after January 
1, 2000, then in no event will an employer's treatment of the amount 
deferred be considered to be in accordance with a reasonable, good faith 
interpretation of section 3121(v)(2) if the employer treats that amount 
as taken into account as wages for FICA tax purposes prior to the 
establishment of the plan (within the meaning of paragraph (b)(2) of 
this section) providing for the deferred compensation (or, if later, the 
establishment of the plan as amended to provide for the deferred 
compensation, as provided in paragraph (b)(2)(ii) of this section). If 
an amount is deferred under a plan before January 1, 2000, and benefit 
payments attributable to that amount are actually or constructively paid 
before January 1, 2000, then in no event will the employer's treatment 
of that amount deferred be considered to be in accordance with a 
reasonable, good faith interpretation of section 3121(v)(2) if the 
employer treats that amount as taken into account as wages for FICA tax 
purposes prior to the adoption of the plan providing for the deferred 
compensation (or, if later, the adoption of the plan amendment providing 
the deferred compensation). For example, awards, bonuses, raises, 
incentive payments, and other similar amounts granted under a plan as 
compensation

[[Page 131]]

for past services may not be taken into account under section 3121(v)(2) 
prior to the establishment (or, if applicable, the adoption) of the 
plan.
    (iii) Certain changes in position for stock options, stock 
appreciation rights, and other stock value rights not reasonable, good 
faith interpretation. In the case of a stock option, stock appreciation 
right, or other stock value right (as defined in paragraph (b)(4)(ii) of 
this section) that is exercised before January 1, 2000, an employer that 
treats the exercise as not subject to FICA tax as a result of the 
nonduplication rule of section 3121(v)(2)(B) is not acting in accordance 
with a reasonable, good faith interpretation of section 3121(v)(2) if 
the employer has not treated that grant and all earlier grants as 
subject to section 3121(v)(2) by reporting the current value of such 
options and rights as FICA wages on Form 941 filed for the quarter 
during which each grant was made (or, if later, for the quarter during 
which each grant ceased to be subject to a substantial risk of 
forfeiture).
    (3) Optional adjustments to conform with this section for pre-
effective-date open periods--(i) General rule. If an employer determined 
FICA tax liability with respect to section 3121(v)(2) in any period 
ending before January 1, 2000, for which the applicable period of 
limitations has not expired on January 1, 2000 (pre-effective-date open 
periods), in a manner that was not in accordance with this section, the 
employer may adjust its FICA tax determination for that period to 
conform to this section. Thus, if an amount deferred was taken into 
account in a pre-effective-date open period when it was not required to 
be taken into account (e.g., an amount taken into account before it 
became reasonably ascertainable), the employer may claim a refund or 
credit for any FICA tax paid on that amount to the extent permitted by 
sections 6402, 6413, and 6511.
    (ii) Consistency required. In the case of a plan that is not a 
nonqualified deferred compensation plan (within the meaning of paragraph 
(b)(1) of this section), if any payment was actually or constructively 
paid to an employee under the plan in a pre-effective-date open period 
and that payment was not included in FICA wages by reason of the 
employer's treatment of the plan as a nonqualified deferred compensation 
plan, then the employer may claim a refund or credit for FICA tax paid 
on amounts treated as amounts deferred under the plan (in accordance 
with the employer's treatment of the plan as a nonqualified deferred 
compensation plan) for that employee for pre-effective-date open periods 
only to the extent that the FICA tax paid on all amounts treated as 
amounts deferred for the employee in all pre-effective-date open periods 
under the plan exceeds the FICA tax that would have been due on the 
benefits actually or constructively paid to the employee in those 
periods under the plan if those benefits were included in FICA wages 
when paid. If any benefit payments attributable to amounts deferred 
after December 31, 1993, were actually or constructively paid to an 
employee under a nonqualified deferred compensation plan (within the 
meaning of paragraph (b)(1) of this section) in a pre-effective-date 
open period, but these payments were treated as subject to FICA tax 
because the employer treated the plan as not being a nonqualified 
deferred compensation plan, then the employer may claim a refund or 
credit for the FICA tax paid on those benefit payments only to the 
extent that the FICA tax paid on those benefit payments exceeds the FICA 
tax that would have been due on the amounts deferred to which those 
benefit payments are attributable if those amounts deferred had been 
taken into account when they would have been required to have been taken 
into account under this section (if this section had been in effect 
then).
    (iii) Reporting. Any employer that adjusts its FICA tax 
determination in accordance with paragraphs (g)(3)(i) and (ii) of this 
section must make appropriate adjustments on Form 941 and Form 941c for 
the affected periods, and, in addition, must file and furnish Form W-2, 
or, if applicable, Form W-2c, for any affected employee so that the 
Social Security Administration may correctly post the amount deferred to 
the employee's earnings record. The adjustments may be made in 
accordance with section 6205(a) and the regulations

[[Page 132]]

thereunder; however, for purposes of Sec. 31.6205-1(b), the error is 
not required to be treated as ascertained before March 31, 2000.
    (4) Application of reasonable, good faith standard--(i) Plans that 
are not subject to section 3121(v)(2). If a plan is not a nonqualified 
deferred compensation plan within the meaning of paragraph (b)(1) of 
this section, but, for a period ending prior to January 1, 2000, and, 
pursuant to a reasonable, good faith interpretation of section 
3121(v)(2), an amount under the plan was taken into account (within the 
meaning of paragraph (d)(1) of this section) as an amount deferred under 
a nonqualified deferred compensation plan, then, pursuant to paragraph 
(g)(2) of this section, the following rules shall apply--
    (A) With respect to benefit payments actually or constructively paid 
before January 1, 2000, that are attributable to amounts previously 
taken into account under the plan, no additional FICA tax will be due;
    (B) On or after January 1, 2000, benefit payments under the plan 
must be taken into account as wages when actually or constructively paid 
in accordance with paragraph (a)(1) of this section; and
    (C) To the extent permitted by paragraph (g)(3) of this section, the 
employer may claim a refund or credit for FICA tax actually paid on 
amounts taken into account prior to January 1, 2000.
    (ii) Plans that are subject to section 3121(v)(2) for which the 
amount deferred has not been fully taken into account--(A) In general. 
The rules of paragraphs (g)(4)(ii)(B) through (E) of this section apply 
if a plan is a nonqualified deferred compensation plan (within the 
meaning of paragraph (b)(1) of this section) and, with respect to an 
amount deferred under the plan for an employee prior to January 1, 2000, 
the employer, in accordance with a reasonable, good faith interpretation 
of section 3121(v)(2), either took into account an amount that is less 
than the amount that would have been required to be taken into account 
if paragraphs (a) through (f) of this section had been in effect for 
that period or took no amount into account. Thus, paragraphs 
(g)(4)(ii)(B) through (E) of this section apply both to an employer that 
treated the plan as if it were not a nonqualified deferred compensation 
plan within the meaning of section 3121(v)(2) (by withholding and paying 
FICA tax due on benefits actually or constructively paid under the plan 
during that period, if any) and to an employer that treated the plan as 
a nonqualified deferred compensation plan within the meaning of section 
3121(v)(2).
    (B) No additional tax required. Pursuant to paragraph (g)(2) of this 
section, no additional FICA tax will be due for any period ending prior 
to January 1, 2000.
    (C) General timing rule applicable. In accordance with paragraph 
(d)(1)(ii) of this section, except as provided in paragraphs (g)(4)(ii) 
(D) and (E), the general timing rule described in paragraph (a)(1) of 
this section applies to benefits actually or constructively paid on or 
after January 1, 2000, attributable to an amount deferred in a period 
before January 1, 2000, to the extent the amount taken into account was 
less than the amount that would have been required to be taken into 
account if paragraphs (a) through (f) of this section had been in effect 
before January 1, 2000.
    (D) Special rule for amounts deferred before 1994. The difference 
between the amount that was taken into account in any period ending 
prior to January 1, 1994, and the amount that would have been required 
or permitted to be taken into account in that period if paragraphs (a) 
through (f) of this section had been in effect is treated as if it had 
been taken into account within the meaning of paragraph (d)(1) of this 
section. For example, in the case of an amount deferred before 1994 that 
was not reasonably ascertainable (and which was not subject to a 
substantial risk of forfeiture), the employer is treated as if it had 
anticipated the actual amount, form, and commencement date for the 
benefit payments attributable to the amount deferred and had taken the 
amount deferred into account at an early inclusion date before 1994 
using a method permitted under this section. Thus, with respect to such 
an amount deferred, the employer is not required to take any additional 
amount into account when the amount

[[Page 133]]

deferred becomes reasonably ascertainable, and no additional FICA tax 
will be due when the benefit payments attributable to the amount 
deferred are actually or constructively paid.
    (E) Special rule for amounts required to be taken into account in 
1994 or 1995. In the case of an amount deferred that would have been 
required to be taken into account in 1994 or 1995 if paragraphs (a) 
through (f) of this section had been in effect, an employer will be 
treated as taking the amount deferred into account under paragraph 
(d)(1) of this section to the extent the employer takes the amount into 
account by treating it as wages paid by the employer and received by the 
employee as of any date prior to April 1, 2000.
    (iii) Plans that are subject to section 3121(v)(2) for which more 
than the amount deferred has been taken into account. If a plan is a 
nonqualified deferred compensation plan (within the meaning of paragraph 
(b)(1) of this section) and an amount was taken into account under the 
plan for an employee before January 1, 2000, in accordance with a 
reasonable, good faith interpretation of section 3121(v)(2), but that 
amount could not have been taken into account before January 1, 2000, if 
paragraphs (a) through (f) of this section had been in effect then, the 
following rules apply--
    (A) The determination of the amount deferred for any period 
beginning on or after January 1, 2000, must be made in accordance with 
paragraph (c) of this section, and the time when amounts deferred under 
the plan are required to be taken into account must be determined in 
accordance with paragraph (e) of this section, without regard to any 
such amount that was taken into account for any period ending before 
January 1, 2000; and
    (B) To the extent permitted by sections 6402, 6413, and 6511, the 
employer may claim a refund or credit for an overpayment of tax caused 
by the overinclusion of wages that occurred before January 1, 2000.
    (5) Examples. This paragraph (g) is illustrated by the following 
examples:

    Example 1: (i) In 1996, Employer M establishes a nonqualified 
deferred compensation plan that is a nonaccount balance plan for 
Employee A. All benefits under the plan are 100 percent vested. In order 
to determine the amount deferred on behalf of Employee A under the plan 
for 1996 and 1997, Employer M must make assumptions as to the date on 
which Employee A will retire and the form of benefit Employee A will 
elect, in addition to interest, mortality, and cost-of-living 
assumptions. Based on assumptions made with respect to all of these 
contingencies, Employer M determines that the amount deferred for 1996 
is $50,000 and the amount deferred for 1997 is $55,000. In 1996 and 
1997, Employee A's total wages (without regard to the amounts deferred) 
exceed the OASDI wage bases. Employer M withholds and deposits HI tax on 
the $50,000 and $55,000 amounts. Employee A does not retire before 
January 1, 2000. Employer M chooses under paragraph (g)(3) of this 
section to apply this section to 1996 and 1997 before the January 1, 
2000, general effective date.
    (ii) Under this section, the amounts deferred in 1996 and 1997 are 
not reasonably ascertainable (within the meaning of paragraph (e)(4)(i) 
of this section) before January 1, 2000. Thus, as long as the applicable 
period of limitations has not expired for the periods in 1996 and 1997, 
Employer M may, to the extent permitted under paragraph (g)(3) of this 
section, apply for a refund or credit for the HI tax paid on the amounts 
deferred for 1996 and 1997 and, in accordance with paragraph (e)(4) of 
this section, take into account the amounts deferred when they become 
reasonably ascertainable.
    Example 2: (i) Employer N adopts a plan on January 1, 1994, that 
covers Employee B, who has 10 years of service as of that date. The plan 
provides that, in consideration of Employee B's outstanding services 
over the past 10 years, Employee B will be paid a $500,000 lump sum 
distribution upon termination of employment at any time. On January 15, 
1996, Employee B terminates employment with Employer N. Employer N 
determines, based on a reasonable, good faith interpretation of section 
3121(v)(2), that the plan is a nonqualified deferred compensation plan 
under that section. Employer N treats the $500,000 as having been taken 
into account as an amount deferred in 1993 and earlier years.
    (ii) Under paragraph (g)(2)(ii) of this section, if all amounts are 
deferred and all benefits are paid under a plan before January 1, 2000, 
then in no event will an employer's treatment of amounts deferred under 
the plan be considered to be in accordance with a reasonable, good faith 
interpretation of section 3121(v)(2) if the employer treats these 
amounts as taken into account as wages for FICA tax purposes prior to 
the adoption of the plan. Accordingly, Employer N's treatment is not in 
accordance with a reasonable, good faith interpretation of section 
3121(v)(2) because Employer N treated amounts as taken into account in 
years before the adoption of the plan. As a result, the payment

[[Page 134]]

made to Employee B in 1996 was subject to both the OASDI and HI portions 
of FICA tax when paid.
    Example 3: (i) Employer O adopts a bonus plan on December 1, 1993, 
that becomes effective and legally binding on January 1, 1994. Under the 
plan, which is not set forth in writing, a specified bonus amount (which 
is 100 percent vested) is credited to Employee C's account each December 
31. A reasonable rate of interest on Employee C's account balance is 
credited quarterly. Employee C's account balance will begin to be paid 
in equal annual installments over 10 years beginning on January 1, 2000. 
Employer O determines, based on a reasonable, good faith interpretation 
of section 3121(v)(2), that the bonus plan is a nonqualified deferred 
compensation plan under that section and, therefore, treats the amounts 
credited from January 1, 1994, through December 31, 1999, as amounts 
deferred and, in accordance with a reasonable, good faith interpretation 
of section 3121(v)(2), takes those amounts deferred into account as 
wages for FICA tax purposes as of those dates. The bonus plan is set 
forth in writing on May 1, 1999, and, thus, is treated as established as 
of January 1, 1994.
    (ii) Under paragraph (g)(2)(ii) of this section, if an amount is 
deferred before January 1, 2000, and the attributable benefit is paid on 
or after January 1, 2000, then in no event will an employer's treatment 
of the amount deferred under a plan be considered to be in accordance 
with a reasonable, good faith interpretation of section 3121(v)(2) if 
the employer treats the amount deferred as taken into account as wages 
for FICA tax purposes prior to the establishment of the plan (within the 
meaning of paragraph (b)(2) of this section). Because the bonus plan is 
treated as established on January 1, 1994 (pursuant to the transition 
rule for unwritten plans in paragraph (b)(2)(iii) of this section), and 
because Employer O, in accordance with a reasonable, good faith 
interpretation of section 3121(v)(2), took amounts deferred into account 
in 1994 through 1999, the amounts paid to Employee C attributable to 
those amounts deferred will not be subject to FICA tax when paid.
    Example 4: (i) In 1985, Employer P establishes a compensation 
arrangement for Employee D that provides for a lump sum payment to be 
made after termination of employment but the arrangement is not a 
nonqualified deferred compensation plan (within the meaning of paragraph 
(b)(1) of this section). However, prior to January 1, 2000, and in 
accordance with a reasonable, good faith interpretation of section 
3121(v)(2), Employer P treats the arrangement as a nonqualified deferred 
compensation plan under section 3121(v)(2). Employer P determines that 
Employee D's total wages (without regard to the amount deferred) for 
each year from 1985 through 1993 exceed the applicable OASDI and HI wage 
bases for each of those years and, consequently, there is no FICA tax 
liability with respect to the amounts deferred for those years. In 1994, 
Employee D's total wages (without regard to the amount deferred) exceed 
the OASDI wage base. However, because there is no limit on the HI wage 
base, the amount deferred for 1994 results in additional HI tax 
liability of $290, which is timely paid by Employer P.
    (ii) Employee D terminates employment with Employer P in 1995 and 
receives a plan payment of $50,000. In that year, Employee D also 
receives wages of $60,000 from Employer P. In accordance with its 
treatment of the plan as a nonqualified deferred compensation plan under 
section 3121(v)(2), Employer P does not treat the $50,000 payment in 
1995 as wages for FICA tax purposes in that year.
    (iii) Because amounts under a plan were taken into account (within 
the meaning of paragraph (d)(1) of this section) as amounts deferred 
under a nonqualified deferred compensation plan pursuant to a 
reasonable, good faith interpretation of section 3121(v)(2)(A), but that 
plan is not a nonqualified deferred compensation plan within the meaning 
of paragraph (b)(1) of this section, the transition rules provided in 
paragraph (g)(4)(i) of this section apply. Thus, no additional FICA tax 
will be due on the benefits paid in 1995.
    (iv) Because $290 of HI tax was paid on the amount deferred in 1994, 
Employer P is entitled to a refund or credit for that amount to the 
extent permitted under sections 6402, 6413, and 6511--but only to the 
extent that $290 exceeds the FICA tax that would have been due on the 
$50,000 payment in 1995 if that payment had been subject to FICA tax 
when paid (i.e., if paragraphs (a) through (f) of this section had been 
effective for those years). In 1995, Employee D had other wages of 
$60,000. Thus, only $1,200 (the $61,200 OASDI wage base, less the 
$60,000 of other wages) of the $50,000 payment would have been subject 
to OASDI; the full $50,000 would have been subject to HI. This would 
have resulted in $148.80 of OASDI tax ($1,200 x 12.4 percent) and $1,450 
of HI tax ($50,000 x 2.9 percent). Employer P is not entitled to a 
refund or credit under the consistency rule of paragraph (g)(3)(ii) 
because the $290 of HI tax paid in 1994 is less than the total $1,598.80 
of FICA tax liability that would have resulted if this section had 
applied for 1995.
    (v) However, if the benefit payment is instead actually or 
constructively paid on or after January 1, 2000, the benefit payment 
must be taken into account as wages when actually or constructively paid 
in accordance with the general timing rule of paragraph (a)(1) of this 
section (and paragraph (g)(4)(i)(B) of this section).

[[Page 135]]

    Example 5: (i) In 1985, Employer Q establishes a compensation 
arrangement for Employee E that is a nonqualified deferred compensation 
plan within the meaning of paragraph (b)(1) of this section. However, 
prior to January 1, 2000, Employer Q determines, based on a reasonable, 
good faith interpretation of section 3121(v)(2), that the arrangement is 
not a nonqualified deferred compensation plan within the meaning of that 
section. Thus, when Employee E retires at the end of 1996 and benefit 
payments under the arrangement begin in 1997, Employer Q withholds and 
deposits FICA tax on the amounts paid to Employee E. Payments under the 
arrangement continue on or after January 1, 2000. Employer Q does not 
choose (under paragraph (g)(3) of this section) to adjust its FICA tax 
determination for a pre-effective-date open period by treating this 
section as in effect for all amounts deferred and benefits actually or 
constructively paid for any such period. The periods in 1994 and 1995 
are not pre-effective-date open periods for Employer Q.
    (ii) Under paragraph (g)(4)(ii) of this section, for purposes of 
determining whether benefits actually or constructively paid on or after 
January 1, 2000, were previously taken into account for purposes of 
applying the nonduplication rule of section 3121(v)(2)(B), any amount 
that would have been required to have been taken into account before 
1994 will be treated as if it had been taken into account within the 
meaning of paragraph (d)(1) of this section. Under the nonduplication 
rule, benefit payments attributable to an amount that has been so 
treated as taken into account is not treated as wages for FICA tax 
purposes at any later time (such as upon payment).
    (iii) Because Employer Q does not adjust its FICA tax determination 
by treating this section as in effect for all amounts deferred for 
periods ending after December 31, 1993, any benefit payments 
attributable to amounts deferred in periods ending after December 31, 
1993, will be included in wages when actually or constructively paid in 
accordance with the general timing rule of paragraph (a)(1) of this 
section.
    Example 6: (i) The facts are the same as in Example 5, except that 
Employer Q chooses (in accordance with paragraph (g)(3) of this section) 
to adjust its FICA tax determination for all pre-effective-date open 
periods by treating this section as in effect for all amounts deferred 
for those periods. In addition, Employer Q chooses (in accordance with 
paragraph (g)(4)(ii)(E) of this section) to take the amounts deferred 
for 1994 and 1995 into account by treating these amounts as FICA wages 
paid and received by Employee E on January 15, 2000.
    (ii) In accordance with the nonduplication rule of paragraph 
(a)(2)(iii) of this section, because all amounts deferred for Employee E 
under the plan were taken into account (or treated as taken into 
account), any benefit payments made to Employee E under the plan will 
not be included as FICA wages when actually or constructively paid.
    Example 7: (i) The facts are the same as in Example 5, except that 
Employer Q does not withhold and deposit the FICA tax due on benefits 
actually or constructively paid before January 1, 2000.
    (ii) Because Employer Q did not withhold and deposit the FICA tax 
due on benefits actually or constructively paid before January 1, 2000, 
Employer Q did not determine FICA tax liability and satisfy FICA tax 
withholding requirements in accordance with a reasonable, good faith 
interpretation of section 3121(v)(2). Thus, the transition rules 
provided in paragraphs (g)(3) and (4) of this section do not apply. As a 
result, any amount that would have been required to have been taken into 
account under this section before 1994 is not treated as if it had been 
so taken into account under paragraph (g)(4)(ii)(D) of this section, and 
benefit payments attributable to amounts deferred before January 1, 
2000, are treated as FICA wages when actually or constructively paid in 
accordance with the general timing rule of paragraph (a)(1) of this 
section.
    Example 8: (i) In 1993, Employer R establishes a nonqualified 
deferred compensation plan for Employee F under which Employee F will 
have a fully vested right to receive a lump sum payment in 2000 equal to 
50 percent of Employee F's highest rate of salary. On December 31, 1993, 
Employee F's highest salary is $1 million. In accordance with a 
reasonable, good faith interpretation of section 3121(v)(2), Employer R 
determines that, for 1993, there is an amount deferred that must be 
taken into account as wages for FICA tax purposes. Based on Employer R's 
estimate that Employee F's highest salary will be $3 million in 2000, 
Employer R determines that the amount deferred is equal to the present 
value in 1993 of $1.5 million payable in 2000. However, because Employee 
F has other wages in 1993 that exceed the applicable OASDI and HI wage 
bases for that year, no additional FICA tax is paid as a result of that 
amount deferred being taken into account for 1993. In addition, Employer 
R takes no amounts into account under the plan after 1993 for Employee 
F. Under paragraphs (e)(1) and (4)(ii)(D)(2) of this section, the 
largest amount that could have been taken into account in 1993 is the 
present value of a lump sum payment of $500,000, payable in 2000, 
because that is the maximum amount to which Employee F has a legally 
binding right as of December 31, 1993. Employee F's highest salary is, 
in fact, $3 million in 2000 and Employee F receives $1.5 million under 
the plan on December 31, 2000.

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    (ii) In accordance with paragraphs (g)(1) and (4)(iii)(A) of this 
section, the determination of the amount deferred under the plan for any 
period beginning on or after January 1, 2000, and the time when that 
amount deferred is required to be taken into account must be determined 
in accordance with this section. In addition, these determinations must 
be made without regard to any amount deferred that was taken into 
account for any period ending before January 1, 2000, that could not be 
taken into account before January 1, 2000, if paragraphs (a) through (f) 
of this section had been in effect. Because no FICA tax was actually 
paid on that $1 million in 1993, no overpayment of tax was caused by the 
overinclusion of wages in 1993 and, thus, Employer R is not entitled to 
a refund or credit (even assuming that the period of limitations has 
been kept open for periods in 1993). In addition, because the difference 
between the present value of the $1.5 million payment and the present 
value of a $500,000 payment was not taken into account for periods 
beginning on or after January 1, 1994, $1 million must be included in 
FICA wages under the general timing rule when paid.

[64 FR 4547, Jan. 29, 1999; 64 FR 15687, Apr. 1, 1999]