See: Section 1035 of the Internal Revenue Code .
Insurance Encyclopedia
Section 1035 of the Internal Revenue Code
Federal statute allows taking proceeds from one life insurance policy or annuity and reinvesting the funds immediately in another life insurance policy or annuity of the same type without having to pay tax on any profit. Sometimes referred to as a Section 1035 Exchange .
Section 105 Medical Reimbursement Plan
Federal statute that employers receive a 100% tax deduction for reimbursement to eligible employees for health care expenses paid by those employees and reimbursed by the employer (e.g., premiums and noninsured medical expenses).
Section 105 of the Internal Revenue Code
Federal statute that permits the self-employed a 100% tax deduction for the family health care expenses to include premiums related to health insurance, disability income insurance, and long-term care insurance. A 100% deductible is also allowed for noninsured medical, dental, and vision care expenses.
Section 125 of the Internal Revenue Code
Federal statute that an employer may maintain a separate written plan for employees that meets specific requirements and regulations and provides participants an opportunity to receive certain benefits on a pretax basis. Also known as cafeteria plan . Participants in a cafeteria plan must be permitted to choose among at least one taxable benefit (such as cash) and one qualified benefit. A qualified benefit is a benefit that does not defer compensation and is excludable from an employee’s gross income under a specific provision of the Code, without being subject to the principles of constructive receipt. Qualified benefits include accident and health benefits (but not Archer medical savings accounts or long-term care insurance); adoption assistance; dependent care assistance; group-term life insurance coverage; health savings accounts including distributions to pay long-term care services. The written plan must specifically describe all benefits and establish rules for eligibility and elections. A section 125 plan is the only means by which an employer can offer employees a choice between taxable and nontaxable benefits without the choice causing the benefits to become taxable. A plan offering only a choice between taxable benefits is not a section 125 plan. Employer contributions to the cafeteria plan are usually made pursuant to salary reduction agreements between the employer and the employee in which the employee agrees to contribute a portion of his or her salary on a pretax basis to pay for the qualified benefits. Salary reduction contributions are not actually or constructively received by the participant. Therefore those contributions are not considered wages for federal income tax purposes. In addition, those sums generally are not subject to FICA and FUTA.
Section 125 plan (Health Insurance)
A plan named after the section of the IRS tax code that permits employee contributions the ability to be matched by pre-tax dollars. This is a flexible benefit plan.
Section 226 policy
See: RETIREMENT ANNUITY.
Section 2503(c) of the Internal Revenue Code
Federal regulation allows the establishment of a trust for minors so that income can be collected until the minor reaches age 21. Then the income can be paid out and the $10,000 annual gift tax exclusion for each beneficiary can be applied.
Section 32 buy-out
An insurance policy, taking its name from the Finance Act 1981, s32, into which pension scheme leavers may transfer their preserved benefits.
Section 32A policy
Insurance policy that secures the protected rights of an active or deferred pensioner on the winding up of a contracted out money purchase scheme.