Top-Heavy Retirement Plan Rules, Testing, and Compliance

Top-Heavy Retirement Plan: Rules, Testing, and Compliance

Overview

A top-heavy retirement plan is a qualified employer-sponsored plan—such as a 401(k), profit-sharing, or defined benefit plan—in which key employees hold a disproportionate share of total plan assets. The Internal Revenue Code (IRC) requires annual top-heavy testing to ensure that retirement benefits do not unfairly favor owners, officers, or highly compensated individuals over rank-and-file employees.

If a plan is determined to be top-heavy, the employer must meet additional minimum contribution and vesting requirements to maintain its tax-qualified status.

Definition of a Top-Heavy Plan

A retirement plan is considered top-heavy when key employees collectively own more than 60% of the total plan assets as of the last day of the preceding plan year.

The threshold is expressed mathematically as:

\frac{Total\ Value\ of\ Key\ Employee\ Accounts}{Total\ Value\ of\ All\ Participant\ Accounts} > 0.60

If this ratio exceeds 60%, the plan is top-heavy and must follow specific rules for non-key employees.

Who Is a Key Employee

Under Internal Revenue Code Section 416(i), a key employee includes any individual who meets one or more of the following criteria during the plan year:

  1. Owner Test – Owns more than 5% of the business, directly or indirectly.
  2. Officer Test – Is an officer of the company earning more than $220,000 (for 2025, indexed annually).
  3. Ownership and Compensation Test – Owns more than 1% of the business and earns more than $150,000.

Non-key employees are all other participants who do not meet these thresholds.

Example of Top-Heavy Determination

Assume a company has five employees participating in its 401(k) plan:

EmployeeStatusAccount Balance ($)
Owner AKey500,000
Owner BKey300,000
Manager CKey150,000
Employee DNon-Key75,000
Employee ENon-Key50,000

Total plan assets = 1,075,000.
Key employee assets = 950,000.

The ratio is 950,000 / 1,075,000 = 0.8837 = 88.37%.
Because this exceeds 60%, the plan is top-heavy.

Employer Obligations for Top-Heavy Plans

When a plan is determined to be top-heavy, the employer must make additional minimum contributions for non-key employees and meet accelerated vesting requirements.

Minimum Contribution Requirements

Employers must contribute to non-key employees’ accounts an amount equal to at least:

Minimum\ Contribution = \max(3%, Highest\ Key\ Employee\ Contribution\ Rate)

If key employees contribute less than 3%, non-key employees must receive an equivalent percentage contribution.

Example:
If key employees contribute 4% of their compensation, non-key employees must receive at least a 3% employer contribution.

Minimum Vesting Requirements

Top-heavy plans must use one of the following accelerated vesting schedules:

  • Three-Year Cliff Vesting: 100% vesting after three years of service.
  • Six-Year Graded Vesting: 20% vesting after two years, increasing by 20% each year thereafter until fully vested at six years.

Testing and Compliance Procedures

Step 1: Identify Key Employees

Determine who qualifies under ownership and compensation tests.

Step 2: Calculate Account Balances

Include all account balances, vested and unvested, as of the determination date.

Step 3: Apply Adjustments

Include any distributions made within the past five years to former key employees.

Step 4: Determine the Ratio

Compare the total of key employee balances to all balances.

If the result exceeds 60%, the plan is top-heavy for the following plan year.

Step 5: Apply Minimum Requirements

Make contributions and ensure compliance with vesting requirements.

Practical Example

A company has the following total plan balances at year-end:

  • Key employees: $1,200,000
  • Non-key employees: $500,000
  • Total assets: $1,700,000

The plan’s key employee ratio is 1,200,000 / 1,700,000 = 70.6%.
The plan is top-heavy.

If a non-key employee earns $60,000 annually, the required employer contribution is:
0.03 \times 60,000 = 1,800\ USD.

Penalties for Non-Compliance

Failure to correct a top-heavy imbalance can lead to:

  • Disqualification of the plan from tax-favored status.
  • Loss of employer tax deductions for contributions.
  • Potential tax liabilities for both employer and employees.

Therefore, employers must perform annual top-heavy testing and document compliance.

Mitigation Strategies

Employers can reduce the likelihood of a plan becoming top-heavy by:

  1. Encouraging Broad Participation: Increase enrollment among non-key employees through automatic enrollment features.
  2. Providing Matching Contributions: Incentivize employee deferrals to balance contributions.
  3. Plan Design Adjustments: Use safe harbor 401(k) or new comparability plan designs to maintain compliance.
  4. Monitoring Regularly: Conduct interim reviews rather than waiting until year-end testing.

Relationship to Safe Harbor Plans

Safe harbor 401(k) plans are automatically exempt from top-heavy rules, provided they meet IRS requirements for matching or nonelective contributions.
This makes safe harbor designs attractive for small businesses with ownership concentration.

Tax Implications

  • Employer contributions to correct top-heavy status remain tax-deductible within IRS limits.
  • Employees are not taxed until funds are distributed.
  • Early distributions remain subject to income tax and potential 10% penalties before age 59½.

Conclusion

A top-heavy retirement plan occurs when key employees control more than 60% of total plan assets. The IRS requires employers to ensure fairness and equitable benefits by providing minimum contributions and adopting accelerated vesting schedules for non-key employees. Regular top-heavy testing, balanced plan design, and active employee participation help maintain compliance while ensuring the plan remains qualified and beneficial for all participants.

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