IRS Announces 2025 Retirement Plan Limits

The Internal Revenue Service (“IRS”) has announced the following dollar limits applicable to tax-qualified plans for 2025:

  • The limit on the maximum amount of elective contributions that a person may make to a 401(k) plan, a 403(b) tax-sheltered annuity, or a 457(b) eligible deferred compensation plan increased from $23,000 to $23,500.
  • The limit on “catch-up contributions” to a 401(k) plan, a 403(b) tax-sheltered annuity, or a 457(b) eligible deferred compensation plan for persons age 50 and older is unchanged for 2025 at $7,500.
  • As a result of change made by SECURE 2.0, for 2025, employees aged 60, 61, 62, and 63 who participate in a 401(k) plan, a 403(b) tax-sheltered annuity, or a 457(b) eligible deferred compensation have a higher catch-up contribution limit, which for 2025 is $11,250 instead of $7,500.
  • The dollar limit on the maximum permissible allocation under 401(k) and other defined contribution plans is increased from $69,000 to $70,000.
  • The maximum annual benefit under a defined benefit plan is increased from $275,000 to $280,000.
  • The maximum amount of annual compensation that may be taken into account on behalf of any participant under a qualified plan will go from $345,000 to $350,000.
  • The dollar amount used to identify “highly compensated employees” is increased from $155,000 to $160,000.

Additional information regarding benefit plan dollar limits can be obtained in Notice 2024-80, 2025 Amounts Relating to Retirement Plans and IRAs, as Adjusted for Changes in Cost-of-Living.

IRS Issues FAQs Regarding Long-Term Part-Time Employees in 403(b) Plans

The IRS recently issued Notice 2024-73, which provides much-needed guidance on long-term, part-time (“LTPT”) employees in ERISA-governed 403(b) retirement plans. Following passage of the SECURE 2.0 Act, an employee is generally considered a LTPT employee if he or she works at least 500 hours per year for two consecutive years.

Among other items, the Notice sets forth the IRS position on the following key issues on which the benefits community has been seeking clarification:

  • A part-time employee who qualifies as a LTPT employee must have the right to make elective deferrals to an ERISA 403(b) plan (unless some other statutory exemption applies), notwithstanding the Tax Code’s permitted exclusion for employees who normally work less than 20 hours per week.
  • An ERISA 403(b) plan may continue to exclude from the plan part-time employees who do not qualify as LTPT employees, notwithstanding the “consistency requirement,” which generally prevents a plan from excluding some part-time employees and not others.
  • An ERISA 403(b) plan is not required to provide the right to make elective deferrals to certain student employees, even if they qualify as LTPT employees. This is because the student employee exclusion is based on an employee classification (a student performing the service), rather than an amount of service (not an hours-based exclusion).

The guidance in the Notice is effective for plan years beginning after December 31, 2024. Importantly, the Notice also provides that a previously promulgated proposed regulation relating to the handling of LTPT employees in 401(k) plans, once finalized, will apply no earlier than plan years beginning on or after January 1, 2026 (i.e., a two-year extension).