Qualified Plans Provide For More Than Retirement Benefits—Introducing "Pension-Linked Emergency Savings Accounts"

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Groom Law Group

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Groom Law is the nation’s preeminent benefits, retirement, and health care law firm. We built our success over decades of solving complex ERISA/employee benefits challenges in the public and private sectors, providing innovative legal solutions, value, and true partnership to our clients every step of the way.
Tax-favored retirement plans (qualified plans) have historically been designed to provide savings for retirement, and therefore have been focused on increasing savings and restricting withdrawals.
United States Employment and HR
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Tax-favored retirement plans (qualified plans) have historically been designed to provide savings for retirement, and therefore have been focused on increasing savings and restricting withdrawals. But as more and more employees feel the pressure of choosing between increasing their retirement savings or paying the bills, and being prepared for those emergency situations where access to funds is needed in the short term, there has been a growing need for qualified plans to provide some flexibility in accessing funds, while still encouraging retirement savings. The solution-here comes Pension-Linked Emergency Savings Accounts ("PLESA") under Section 127 of Setting Every Community Up for Retirement Enhancement Act ("SECURE") 2.0. This new financial wellness benefit brings us the best of both worlds-employees can continue to save for retirement (and even earn employer match on emergency savings), and have access to emergency savings when and if needed, which grows tax-free within the plan, and are available tax-free on distribution.

In this TAXES - The Tax Magazine article, "Qualified Plans Provide for More than Retirement Benefits-Introducing 'Pension-Linked Emergency Savings Accounts,'" Groom principals Elizabeth Dold and David Levine review how this all works. For sure, the devil is in the details, but hopefully, pending Internal Revenue Service ("IRS") guidance will help make these accounts work and give employees the added security they were looking for when it comes to making retirement savings decisions.

To read the article, click here.

The content of this article is intended to provide a general guide to the subject matter. Specialist advice should be sought about your specific circumstances.

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