IF YOUR U-M PAY IS $102,000 OR MORE
Certain features of the retirement plan provide additional tax advantages for compulsory participants whose U-M earnings exceed the Social Security (FICA) taxable wage base. The wage base is the point at which you no longer pay the 6.2% Social Security tax ($102,000 in 2008).
If you are already participating
If you are already enrolled in the retirement plan at the time you meet the compulsory criteria, the 5% you contribute on your U-M pay over the FICA wage base no longer counts against the 403(b) elective deferral limit (see below). This allows you to contribute more to an SRA.
Additional tax-deferring advantages
Your elective deferrals or voluntary contributions to the U-M Retirement Plan are tax-coded as 403(b). Because you are required to contribute 5% on your U-M pay over the FICA wage base, the tax coding of these contributions change from 403(b) to 401(a). These 401(a) contributions are still tax-deferred, but no longer count against your 403(b) limit. This unique tax advantage allows you to contribute more to the SRA.
For more comprehensive information on the IRS contribution limits, view the IRS/SRA Max Limit Handbook.
Reduced Benefit Option
If you are in the Reduced Benefit Option, you contribute nothing and the University provides a 5% contribution on eligible salary up to the wage base. On eligible earnings exceeding the wage base, you contribute 5% and the U-M contribution increases to 10% for the rest of the calendar year.
Your TIAA-CREF and Fidelity statements will change
Your 5% contribution will appear under two plan types on your quarterly statements and online over the course of the calendar year as a compulsory participant. Your 5% contribution made on your U-M pay under the FICA wage base ($102,000 in 2008) will be listed under the University of Michigan 403(b) Retirement Plan at TIAA-CREF and Fidelity.
Once your U-M pay exceeds the FICA wage base, your 5% contribution is no longer classified as a 403(b) contribution but as a 401(a) contribution. As a result, the deposits of your 5% payroll contribution for the rest of the year will no longer appear under the U-M 403(b) Plan on the quarterly statements and online. Instead, they will appear under the University of Michigan 401(a) Retirement Plan at TIAA-CREF and Fidelity. The 401(a) Plan is also where the 10% U-M match is reported. |