• Donor-Advised Funds

    The new University of Miami Donor-Advised Fund allows donors to make charitable contributions, receive an immediate tax benefit, and recommend grants to the University and other qualified charities over time. A popular and simple vehicle for effective charitable giving.
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  • Bequests

    By designating the University of Miami as a beneficiary in your will, trust or beneficiary designation form, you’re ensuring the future of the University.
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  • IRA Gifts

    If you are 70½ or older you may be interested in a planned gift that reduces the income and taxes from your IRA withdrawals. An IRA charitable rollover is a way you can support UM while benefiting yourself. Or at any age, designating the University of Miami as a beneficiary of your IRA can be a great way to remove highly taxed assets from your estate.
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  • Beneficiary Designation Gifts

    A beneficiary designation gift is a simple and affordable way to make a gift to support the University of Miami. You can designate us as a beneficiary of a retirement, investment or bank account or your life insurance policy.
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  • Appreciated Stock Gifts

    Donating appreciated securities, including stocks or bonds, is an easy and tax-effective way for you to make a gift to the University of Miami.
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Tuesday June 16, 2026

Washington News

Washington Hotline

401(k) Catch-Up Contribution Change

Employees who have a Section 401(k) plan are allowed to contribute up to $22,500 in 2023. Workers who are age 50 and older can also transfer a "Catch-Up" contribution of $7,500 to their account. The total 2023 contribution could be $30,000 for these individuals.

In 2022, Congress passed a major retirement bill with the title Secure 2.0 Act. This bill changed many of the rules on retirement contributions. One change is scheduled to take effect in 2024. Individuals who have earned over $145,000 will be able to make a 401(k) catch-up contribution of $7,500 (with potential increases in 2024 and future years). However, the catch-up contributions in 2024 and future years must be after-tax funds to a Roth IRA. Previously, the law permitted the catch-up contribution to be added to the regular 401(k) and funded with pre-tax dollars. The changed rule will require higher-income taxpayers to pay taxes now and transfer funds to the Roth IRA. Congress passed the Roth IRA rule for catch-up contributions because individuals will pay more taxes in an earlier year with a Roth IRA.

On June 29, a coalition of over 100 organizations sent a letter to the House Ways and Means Committee leaders. The coalition includes the National Association of State Retirement Administrators and many other organizations. The letter explained there is no possible way that the computer software for these organizations can be updated in time to handle the catch-up Roth IRA change for 2024. The letter notes, "But we have been struck by the overwhelming input from the retirement community that this particular task simply cannot be done in time by a vast number of plans."

The organizations warn that "many retirement plan participants will lose the ability to make catch-up contributions at the end of this year."

The organizations recommend that Congress or the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) allow a two-year delay in requiring a Roth catch-up IRA. They continue, "These circumstances pose a long list of other obstacles, including, for many plans, the challenges of adding a Roth feature and communicating that feature to participants, as well as special challenges for state and local governments and collectively bargained plans."

Editor's Note: The threat that many plans will need to eliminate 2024 catch-up contributions is quite substantial. It is possible that Congress or the IRS will delay the implementation of this new rule.

Published July 21, 2023
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