Controlled Group Retirement Plans

Controlled Group Retirement Plans

Controlled group retirement plans are a cornerstone of corporate benefits planning in the United States, especially for businesses operating through multiple entities. These rules ensure that companies under common ownership treat employees equitably across the group and prevent employers from structuring multiple entities to favor certain employees in retirement benefits. Understanding how controlled group regulations under the Internal Revenue Code (IRC) apply to qualified retirement plans is essential for accountants, HR professionals, and business owners who want to remain compliant while optimizing tax efficiency and employee benefits.

Understanding Controlled Groups

A controlled group exists when two or more corporations, trades, or businesses have sufficient common ownership to be considered a single employer for qualified retirement plan purposes. These rules are defined in IRC Sections 414(b) and 414(c) and are enforced by the IRS to prevent discrimination in favor of highly compensated employees (HCEs).

Types of Controlled Groups

There are three primary types of controlled groups:

  1. Parent-Subsidiary Controlled Group
    • One corporation owns at least 80% of another corporation’s stock (by vote or value).
    • Example: If Alpha Holdings Inc. owns 85% of Beta Manufacturing LLC, the two form a parent-subsidiary controlled group.
  2. Brother-Sister Controlled Group
    • The same five or fewer individuals, estates, or trusts own at least 80% of two or more corporations, and
    • Those same owners have more than 50% identical ownership across each corporation.
    Owner Ownership in X Corp Ownership in Y Corp Identical Ownership Alice 70% 40% 40% Bob 30% 60% 30% Totals 100% 100% 70% Since at least 80% of ownership is shared and identical ownership exceeds 50%, X and Y form a brother-sister controlled group.
  3. Combined Controlled Group
    • A combination of parent-subsidiary and brother-sister relationships.
    • For instance, if a parent company owns two subsidiaries that are also connected by mutual ownership, they form a combined controlled group.

Why Controlled Group Rules Matter for Retirement Plans

Without controlled group rules, a business owner could place executives in one entity with a generous 401(k) plan while placing lower-paid employees in another entity with limited or no benefits. The IRS prevents this by requiring all entities under common control to be treated as one employer for retirement plan purposes.

This aggregation affects:

  • Plan coverage testing
  • Nondiscrimination testing
  • Top-heavy testing
  • Contribution and deduction limits
  • Eligibility and vesting

These requirements ensure fair access to retirement benefits and uphold the integrity of qualified plan status under ERISA and the IRC.

Key IRS Code Sections Governing Controlled Groups

IRC SectionSubjectApplication
414(b)Controlled groups of corporationsDefines parent-subsidiary and brother-sister relationships
414(c)Trades or businesses under common controlExtends rules to partnerships and LLCs
414(m)Affiliated service groupsApplies to service-based entities
414(n)Leased employee rulesIncludes leased employees in plan coverage
414(o)Treasury regulatory authorityGrants IRS power to interpret and enforce controlled group rules

How Controlled Group Rules Affect Retirement Plans

1. Coverage Testing under IRC §410(b)

All controlled group members must be aggregated for coverage testing. The plan must include a sufficient percentage of non–highly compensated employees (NHCEs) relative to HCEs.

The coverage ratio is calculated as:

\text{Coverage Ratio} = \frac{\text{NHCEs Benefiting / Total NHCEs}}{\text{HCEs Benefiting / Total HCEs}}

A plan passes if this ratio is at least 70%.

Example:

EntityHCEsNHCEsNHCEs Covered
A104020
B52515
Totals156535
\text{Coverage Ratio} = \frac{35/65}{15/15} = 0.538 = 53.8%

Since 53.8% is below 70%, the plan fails coverage testing unless additional NHCEs are included or an average benefits test is performed.

2. Nondiscrimination Testing

Under IRC §401(a)(4), retirement plans must not disproportionately favor HCEs. When controlled group entities maintain separate plans, their benefits and contributions are combined for nondiscrimination testing.

If one subsidiary offers a 10% employer match and another offers 3%, the combined results may fail nondiscrimination testing unless benefits are harmonized.

3. Top-Heavy Testing

A plan is top-heavy if key employees’ balances exceed 60% of total plan assets. All plans in the controlled group must be aggregated for this test under IRC §416(g).

EntityPlan AssetsKey Employee BalancesTop-Heavy %
A$1,000,000$600,00060%
B$500,000$300,00060%

Combined top-heavy percentage = 60%. Thus, all plans in the group must make minimum 3% contributions for all eligible employees.

4. Contribution and Deduction Limits

The annual addition limit applies across all plans within the group under IRC §415(c):

\text{Annual Limit} = \min(100% \text{ of Compensation}, $66,000 \text{ for 2023})

The deduction limit under IRC §404(a)(7) is 25% of total compensation paid to eligible participants across the controlled group.

Example:

If total payroll = $4,000,000, then:

0.25 \times 4,000,000 = 1,000,000

Total deductible employer contributions cannot exceed $1,000,000.

5. Eligibility and Service Crediting

Service with any controlled group member must count toward plan eligibility and vesting under IRC §410(a). If an employee transfers between entities, their service time continues uninterrupted for retirement purposes.

6. Combined Form 5500 Reporting

Each plan in a controlled group may file its own Form 5500, but aggregation must be reflected in testing and compliance records. Auditors will review group-level data during plan examinations.

Attribution Rules

Ownership attribution rules extend control through family and entity relationships to prevent manipulation of ownership structures.

Attribution TypeDescription
SpousalOwnership by one spouse attributed to the other if ownership exceeds 50%.
Parent-ChildParents own shares held by minor children and vice versa.
EntityOwnership by an entity attributed proportionally to its owners or partners.
Trust/BeneficiaryOwnership held in trust attributed to beneficiaries.

Example:

If John owns 100% of ABC Corp. and his spouse owns 70% of XYZ LLC, the two entities are a brother-sister controlled group under spousal attribution.

Types of Retirement Plans Impacted

Controlled group rules apply to all qualified retirement plans, including:

Plan TypeDescriptionAggregation Required
401(k)Employee salary deferral planYes
Profit-SharingEmployer discretionary contributionYes
Money PurchaseFixed employer contributionYes
Defined BenefitPromised fixed retirement benefitYes
Cash BalanceHybrid defined benefit planYes

Example: Defined Benefit Plan Formula

\text{Annual Pension} = 1.5% \times \text{Years of Service} \times \text{Final Average Pay}

If an employee works 25 years and earns $180,000 average pay:

0.015 \times 25 \times 180,000 = 67,500

The employee receives a $67,500 annual pension.

Safe Harbor 401(k) Plans

To simplify compliance, many controlled groups adopt safe harbor 401(k) plans, which automatically satisfy nondiscrimination and top-heavy requirements.

Common safe harbor formulas:

  • 3% nonelective contribution to all eligible employees, or
  • 100% match on first 3% + 50% on next 2% of deferrals.

Example: Safe Harbor Cost Summary

EntityPayroll3% ContributionDeductible Amount
A$2,000,000$60,000Yes
B$1,000,000$30,000Yes
C$1,500,000$45,000Yes
Total$4,500,000$135,000Compliant

This uniform plan design reduces administrative complexity and ensures all entities pass testing.

Common Mistakes in Controlled Group Plan Administration

  1. Failing to Identify Common Ownership – Not recognizing when multiple entities meet the 80% threshold.
  2. Testing Each Entity Separately – Performing coverage or nondiscrimination tests on one company instead of aggregating all.
  3. Ignoring Attribution Rules – Overlooking family or entity ownership linkages.
  4. Misapplying Deduction Limits – Claiming deductions per entity rather than per group.
  5. Lack of Documentation – Failing to maintain records showing group structure and ownership.

Corrective Actions for Noncompliance

If a plan fails testing due to controlled group issues, employers can:

  • Make corrective contributions to non-highly compensated employees.
  • Use the IRS Employee Plans Compliance Resolution System (EPCRS) for voluntary correction.
  • Merge or align plans to meet coverage and nondiscrimination requirements.

Administrative Best Practices

  1. Centralize Plan Oversight – Designate a lead entity to handle plan administration.
  2. Align Plan Years – Use a common plan year for all entities to simplify testing.
  3. Conduct Annual Ownership Reviews – Update control status as ownership changes.
  4. Use a Single Plan Document – Simplifies compliance and reduces duplication.
  5. Consult Professionals – Coordinate with ERISA attorneys, actuaries, and auditors.

Case Study: Multi-Entity Professional Group

Scenario:
Smith Holdings Inc. owns 90% of Alpha Design and 85% of Beta Engineering. Alpha offers a 401(k) plan with a 4% match; Beta offers none.

Issue:
IRS controlled group rules apply. The plans fail coverage and nondiscrimination testing since not all employees have access to benefits.

Resolution:
Smith Holdings implements a unified safe harbor 401(k) plan across all entities.

Result:

  • Automatic compliance with §401(k) and §416.
  • Improved employee participation.
  • Simplified administration and consistent benefits.
EntityPayroll3% Safe HarborAnnual Deduction
Alpha$1,200,000$36,000Yes
Beta$800,000$24,000Yes
Total$2,000,000$60,000Compliant

Penalties for Failing Controlled Group Compliance

Failure to comply with controlled group rules can result in severe consequences, including:

  • Plan disqualification (loss of tax-deferred status).
  • Immediate taxation of vested plan balances.
  • Employer excise taxes on nondeductible contributions.
  • Retroactive penalties and interest.

These penalties underscore the importance of proactive compliance and thorough documentation.

Future Regulatory Developments

The IRS continues to refine definitions of control, especially regarding limited liability companies and professional service organizations. Legislation may expand “common control” standards beyond ownership thresholds to include operational or management overlap, increasing compliance complexity for diversified corporations.

Summary and Key Takeaways

  • Controlled group rules under IRC §414(b) and §414(c) aggregate related entities for retirement plan compliance.
  • All members are treated as one employer for testing, contribution, and deduction purposes.
  • Family and entity attribution rules often create control relationships that owners overlook.
  • Failure to aggregate properly can disqualify plans and trigger tax penalties.
  • Safe harbor 401(k) designs simplify compliance for multi-entity businesses.

Conclusion

A well-designed controlled group retirement plan balances compliance with strategic financial management. By recognizing the IRS’s single-employer treatment, businesses can prevent disqualification, maintain employee trust, and optimize tax outcomes. Regular testing, unified documentation, and consistent plan design are the foundation of a compliant and effective retirement plan strategy for controlled groups.

Controlled group retirement plans are not simply an administrative requirement—they represent a disciplined approach to corporate accountability and equitable employee benefit distribution across all entities in a unified business structure.

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