The 3 Hidden Deadlines That Can Still Save You Six Figures in Taxes
If your CPA just filed your return and your tax bill made your eyes water, you’re not alone. Most independent physicians don’t struggle with income. They struggle with tax friction and retirement plan design that wasn’t built for today’s environment. But what many don’t realize is this: the most important retirement planning decisions happen after the return is filed not before.
- Three Deadlines Most Physicians Overlook
- The Structural Problem Most Physcians Miss
- The Upgrade Most Physicians Don’t Realize Exists
- A Simple Next Step
Three Deadlines Most Physicians Overlook
- March 31 – AFTAP Certification (The Silent Risk Marker)
If you sponsor a Cash Balance Plan, your actuary must certify your plan’s Adjusted Funding Target Attainment Percentage (AFTAP) by March 31.
This number determines whether your plan is:
- Fully flexible
- Restricted
- Or structurally under pressure
If AFTAP falls below key thresholds (80% or 60%):
- Lump sums can be restricted
- Accruals can be limited
- Mandatory contributions can be triggered
- “True-up” funding can become unavoidable
Most physicians don’t know their AFTAP until it’s already certified.
By then, your flexibility is gone.
- July 31 – Form 5500 Locks the Year in Place
By July 31 (unless extended):
- Your Form 5500 is filed
- Your interest crediting strategy is visible
- Funding volatility is documented
If your plan uses traditional Fixed Interest Crediting (FIC) in a volatile rate environment, this is often when cracks begin to show:
- Contribution spikes
- Overfunding traps
- Underfunding penalties
- Reduced design flexibility
Older CBPs were not engineered for rate compression followed by rapid increases.
- September 15 / October 15 – Final Deduction Window
If you extend your return:
- You may still make deductible contributions
- But only if your plan design supports it
- And only if earlier funding risk was managed correctly
Many physicians assume they can “decide later.”
In reality, most contribution flexibility was determined months earlier by plan structure.
The Structural Problem Most Physicians Miss
Most Cash Balance Plans installed before 2020 were designed around:
- Stable rate assumptions
- Fixed interest crediting
- Minimal integration with asset allocation
- Limited contribution smoothing
Today’s environment is different.
Interest rates moved sharply.
Market volatility increased.
Regulatory scrutiny expanded under SECURE 2.0.
Yet many plans remain static.
That mismatch creates risk.
The Upgrade Most Physicians Don’t Realize Exists
Modern plan design can incorporate:
- Market Return Crediting (MRC)
- Structural alignment between plan assets and liabilities
- FTAP/AFTAP risk band monitoring
- Contribution smoothing frameworks
This is not about chasing returns.
It’s about reducing funding distortion.
When properly structured, a Cash Balance Plan becomes:
- More predictable
- More flexible
- More durable
A Simple Next Step
Before April 30, request a Cash Balance Funding Risk Review
In 15 minutes we can determine:
- Your current AFTAP band
- Whether funding restrictions are likely
- Whether your crediting strategy is structurally aligned
- If your contribution flexibility is at risk
No projections.
No product discussion.
Just structural analysis.
Because the biggest tax savings don’t come from working harder.
They come from engineering smarter.