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December 19, 2024
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Missed Dependent Care Deadline - Returnable to Employees?

  • December 19, 2024
  • 1 reply
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Hello,

I recently realized that I missed my company's grace period deadline for our Dependent Care plan.  I have about a $2K balance remaining from what I contributed.  I see where most people say that this money is now forfeited to the employer, however, in reading part of Section 125, it states that: 

The Section 125 regulations generally provide the following permitted plan uses of experience gains resulting from forfeitures:

(B) Returned to the employees on a reasonable and uniform basis

With what is stated in (B) above, if there were four employees participating in the employer offered Dependent Care plan, would we each be able to receive $500 from my forfeited balance from the employer?

 

Thanks for the help!

    Best answer by Opus 17

    @blewis11 wrote:

    My employer is willing to work with me on the situation, just want to make sure they are following any mandated rules, per the IRS guidelines.


    Generally, all the rules for a section 125 plan must be in writing, and they must apply uniformly to all employees.  Also, in general, one of the reasons for forfeiture is that it pays part of the cost of administering the program--the employer doesn't get the money back, the benefit administrator does (if the plan is run by an outside administrator).

     

    One important thing I don't know is if the plan can be changed retroactively.  That would be a question for a tax attorney hired by your employer, or by the payroll company they use to process the benefit. 

     

    Then, if a change can be worked out, your employer has two more key things to consider. 

    1. If they create a policy to return the unused benefit to you, that must apply equally to everyone else, this year and going forward.  Do they want to do that? (They may also be required to file a corrected W-2.  I'm not sure about that, though).

     

    2. If they use an external benefits administrator, will this affect their contract with the benefits administrator, and in what way?  Will it increase the cost of offering the benefit?

    1 reply

    December 19, 2024

    We don't know what your employer's plan provides. Contact the administrator or human resources at your company. Notice that the word is "permitted" not "required." 

    blewis11Author
    December 19, 2024

    My employer is willing to work with me on the situation, just want to make sure they are following any mandated rules, per the IRS guidelines.

    Opus 17Answer
    Employee
    December 19, 2024

    @blewis11 wrote:

    My employer is willing to work with me on the situation, just want to make sure they are following any mandated rules, per the IRS guidelines.


    Generally, all the rules for a section 125 plan must be in writing, and they must apply uniformly to all employees.  Also, in general, one of the reasons for forfeiture is that it pays part of the cost of administering the program--the employer doesn't get the money back, the benefit administrator does (if the plan is run by an outside administrator).

     

    One important thing I don't know is if the plan can be changed retroactively.  That would be a question for a tax attorney hired by your employer, or by the payroll company they use to process the benefit. 

     

    Then, if a change can be worked out, your employer has two more key things to consider. 

    1. If they create a policy to return the unused benefit to you, that must apply equally to everyone else, this year and going forward.  Do they want to do that? (They may also be required to file a corrected W-2.  I'm not sure about that, though).

     

    2. If they use an external benefits administrator, will this affect their contract with the benefits administrator, and in what way?  Will it increase the cost of offering the benefit?