SECURE Act 2.0: Congress Delivers Retirement Plan Legislation and Holiday Cheer as Part of Year-End Spending Bill

After months of on-again off-again consideration of competing bills, US Congress capitalized on bipartisan support for retirement plan legislation to deliver the SECURE 2.0 Act of 2022 (SECURE Act 2.0) as part of the year-end omnibus spending bill, the Consolidated Appropriations Act of 2023 (the CAA).

The Setting Every Community Up for Retirement Act of 2019 (SECURE Act 1.0), enacted at the end of 2019, included a wide range of provisions that were intended to expand access to retirement plans and make saving for retirement easier for both employers and employees. When it was enacted, SECURE Act 1.0 was widely hailed as the most significant piece of retirement plan legislation in more than 10 years. Barely three years later, SECURE Act 2.0 continues this push by not only expanding some of the original SECURE Act 1.0 themes and concepts, but also adding a host of new ones. SECURE Act 2.0 is not final until the CAA is signed into law, but it is widely anticipated that President Joseph Biden will sign it soon.

There is nothing that employers or retirement plan sponsors need to do by year's end in response to SECURE Act 2.0. A brief listing of significant provisions in SECURE Act 2.0 is set forth below. Morgan Lewis will issue more detailed analyses of SECURE Act 2.0 in a series of releases in the coming weeks.

PROVISIONS EXPANDING COVERAGE AND INCREASING RETIREMENT SAVINGS

PROVISIONS IMPACTING RETIREMENT PLAN DISTRIBUTIONS

PROVISIONS IMPACTING POOLED EMPLOYER PLANS (PEPS), MULTIPLE EMPLOYER PLANS (MEPS), AND GROUPS OF PLANS (GOPS)

SIMPLIFICATION AND CLARIFICATION OF RETIREMENT PLAN RULES AND ADMINISTRATION

CONCLUSION

As noted above, there is nothing that employers or retirement plan sponsors need to do by year end to comply with SECURE Act 2.0. In particular, plan amendments to comply with SECURE Act 2.0 generally do not need to be made until the end of the 2025 plan year (or the end of the of the 2027 plan for certain governmental plans and collectively bargained plans).

SECURE Act 2.0 also extends the amendment deadlines for other recent legislation—SECURE Act 1.0., the Coronavirus Aid, Relief, and Economic Security Act (CARES Act), and the Taxpayer Certainty and Disaster Relief Act of 2020—to conform to the SECURE Act. 2.0 amendment deadlines.

Morgan Lewis will be providing a more detailed analysis of SECURE Act 2.0 in the coming weeks. In the meantime, if you have any questions concerning SECURE Act 2.0, please reach out to your Morgan Lewis contact.

Contacts

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