First-Year Implementation — No Prior Year Plan
Practice Profile
- Owner: Age 52 physician
- Income (W-2 / K-1 combined): $1,000,000
- Employees: 8 total
- Avg age: 38
- Avg comp: $80,000
- Existing Plan: 401(k) + Profit Sharing
Baseline (Owner Only – No Existing Cash Balance Plan)
|
Component |
Contribution |
|
401(k) + Profit Sharing |
~$76,500 |
|
Total Deduction |
$76,500 |
Efficient for staff… but severely capped for owner
With Cash Balance Plan Added (Adopted Before 12/31)
Owner Contribution
|
Component |
Contribution |
|
401(k) + Profit Sharing |
$76,500 |
|
Cash Balance Plan |
$300,000 |
|
Total Owner |
$376,500 |
Staff Cost Impact
1) 401(k) + Profit Sharing (Required)
|
Category |
Amount |
|
Staff PS contribution |
~$120,000 |
2) Cash Balance Plan (Required Minimums)
|
Category |
Amount |
|
CB credits to staff |
~$80,000 |
Total Employer Cost
|
Category |
Amount |
|
Owner total |
$376,500 |
|
Staff total |
$200,000 |
|
Total Contribution |
$576,500 |
Efficiency Ratio (What Actually Matters)
- Owner benefit: $376,500
- Staff cost: $200,000
- Efficiency Ratio ≈ 1.9 : 1
For every $1 to staff → ~$1.90 to owner
Tax Impact
- Total deductible contribution: $576,500
- Incremental vs. no CB: ~$500,000
At ~40% combined tax rate: Tax savings ≈ $200,000
Timing Advantage
Under Internal Revenue Code Section 412 & 430 framework:
- Plan adopted: Late in current year (e.g., October–December)
- Contribution funded: By September 15 next year
- Finalize contribution amounts after 2026 income is known
- Coordinate with CPA for maximum deductible contribution
- Layer in design changes before AFTAP certification (March 31, 2027)
Large deduction now, cash funded later
Design Levers (Why This Works)
Because there is no prior CB plan, we can optimize from scratch:
Key Design Choices
- Age-weighted allocations (favor older owner vs younger staff)
- Compensation caps and integration
- Cross-tested profit sharing to minimize staff load
- Cash balance formula calibrated to maximize owner accrual
What Happens If Designed Poorly (Typical Market Outcome)
|
Design Type |
Staff Cost |
Owner Benefit |
Ratio |
|
Generic FIC design |
$250K+ |
$300K |
~1.2 : 1 |
|
Optimized design (above) |
$200K |
$376K |
1.9 : 1 |
The difference is pure design not investment return
Key Insight
Starting fresh (no prior Cash Balance plan) is the highest-leverage entry point:
- No legacy funding issues
- No AFTAP constraints under Internal Revenue Code Section 436
- Maximum flexibility to skew benefits toward the owner
Decision Framing (What the Physician Actually Decides)
You’re not deciding:
“Do I want a CB plan?”
You’re deciding:
“Am I willing to spend ~$200K on staff to unlock ~$300K+ for myself and save ~$200K in taxes?”
Call to Action
Cash Balance Cost vs. Benefit Analysis (Custom to Your Practice)
We’ll model:
- Exact staff cost (by census)
- Maximum owner contribution range
- Efficiency ratio
- Tax savings
- 3–5 year funding stability (MRC vs FIC)
Additional Considerations
Fixed Interest Crediting May Be More Appropriate When:
- Short-duration plans that are approaching termination
- Sponsors with very low risk tolerance or preference for contribution smoothing via fixed assumptions
- Situations where administrative simplicity outweighs funding efficiency
Limitations/Risks for Market Return Crediting:
- Increased variability in credited interest year-to-year
- Need for proper investment alignment and fiduciary oversight
- Potential communication complexity with participants
While Market Return Crediting can improve alignment between assets and liabilities in many modern plan designs, the appropriate strategy is highly dependent on the sponsor’s objectives, time horizon, and risk tolerance, and should be evaluated on a case-by-case basis.
This is our interpretation of this data and is for illustrative purposes only and is not indicative of future performance. This content is provided for educational purposes only and should not be construed as specific recommendations or investment advice. The scenarios outlined are intended to be illustrative of one outcome of different crediting strategies, and your specific situation can and will vary. Always consult with your investment professional before making important investment decisions.