Well, the good news is that if you are a governmental employer,
you don't have to worry about the Form 5500 requirements. And if the contracts are excluded from being an "employer plan" under DOL regulations (because they are salary reduction only and meet certain other requirements), you also have no Form 5500 requirement. The bad news is that if you do not fall within one of these exemptions, there is simply no clear guidance as to how to proceed, unless all of the purchased 403(B) contracts are individual contracts (or are group contracts which can be split up into individual contracts). The problem is that all the rules governing Forms 5500 call for them to be filed until the trust under the plan has been completely distributed. This is a difficult rule to apply in a situation in which the assets are in annuity contracts or custodial accounts (over which the employer may not have much control) instead of a trust. Presumably, distributing individual annuity contracts or custodial accounts to each participant would work. However, we have run across situations in which an insurance company which has provided a group 403(B) annuity simply has no way to divide it up, or provides a mechanism only at a prohibitive cost. No guidance is available on how long one must go on filing Forms 5500 under such circumstances.
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