
What’s the Problem: My daycare and commuting circumstances have changed and I would like to make changes to my cafeteria plan elections. Am I permitted to revoke or change my elections midyear?
Answer: At this time, you may be eligible to make changes to your Flexible Spending Account (FSA) elections. These pre-tax accounts are administered for commuter benefits (Qualified Parking and/or Qualified Transportation) and/or dependent care expenses.
- Dependent Care Expenses: Below are some questions and answers about your Dependent Care FSA and whether the disruptions caused by COVID-19 permit you to make changes to your existing elections.
Question: My child’s daycare center closed due to COVID-19, and I am now working from home. Can I decrease my dependent care FSA election amount as I do not need daycare services right now?
Answer: Yes, if your expenses have decreased because your child’s daycare center has closed, you can temporarily change or cancel your deferral.
Question: My child’s school is closed due to COVID-19. I now need to pay someone to watch my child in my home. Can I increase my dependent care FSA election?
Answer: Yes, you may increase your election if your child being unable to attend school results in an increase in daycare expenses.
- Commuter FSA: You are always able to make changes to your Qualified Parking and/or Qualified Transportation election amount. IRS regulations permit you to increase or decrease your monthly election amount at any time, if you find that the amount you are contributing exceeds your spending. This includes for the time spent working from home during government-issued stay-at-home orders.
- Note about the healthcare FSA and other benefit plans: At this time, the IRS still requires a qualified change in status (e.g., birth, marriage, divorce, job change impacting coverage) before you can change your deferral election to a healthcare FSA. Your plan will have a deadline, often a 30-day window, to make qualified changes, and you must provide evidence of the reason for the change when you make the request. The same mid-year status change rules generally apply to other benefit elections, such as coverage under a medical plan.
Employers should check their cafeteria plan document to confirm that midyear election changes are available under plan terms. If the cafeteria plan does not permit midyear changes, employers can consider amending the plan to provide eligible employees the opportunity to make changes to account for their changed circumstances. Once the employer confirms that these changes are permissible, the employer can communicate the employees’ options.
Recent News on LawFuel
- From Croissants to Chaos – A Love Letter to Defiant ParisParis Travel Beyond the Postcards John Bowie, LawFuel publisher There’s something magnificently… Read more: From Croissants to Chaos – A Love Letter to Defiant Paris
- Luxury Expenses Claims Dog Pogust GoodheadPrivate jets, yachts and lavish spending are some of the claims against Thomas Goodhead, co-founder of Pogust Goodhead who is now at the center of one of the most significant governance crises in modern UK law firm litigation, according to a Times report. Pogust Goodhead (former SPG Law) secured a £450 million debt facility and is now seeing its co-founder CEO ousted before its headline case reaches judgment. Thomas Goodhead co-founded Pogust Goodhead with U.S. class action veteran Harris Pogust, propelling the firm into the big league in 2023 when it secured a reported £450 million investment . . . log in to read more
- One in Three UK Law Firms Breach Anti-Money-Laundering RulesA third of UK law firms have failed to meet basic anti-money-laundering… Read more: One in Three UK Law Firms Breach Anti-Money-Laundering Rules
- What Car Accident Laws Mean for Injury VictimsArticle source: Welcome Law Firm, CT Waterbury, Connecticut, carries a sense of… Read more: What Car Accident Laws Mean for Injury Victims
- Building a Strong Case: How Employees Can Prove Workplace Harassment Workplace harassment can make your job feel bad sometimes; this can hurt… Read more: Building a Strong Case: How Employees Can Prove Workplace Harassment
- How Would Elon Musk Run Your Law Firm?The man who sent rockets into orbit while simultaneously disrupting the automotive industry has articulated a management philosophy that’s equal parts brilliance and brutality. And while we can’t all aspire to his sleep schedule or his Twitter habits, there’s something law firms, those bastions of precedent and process, might learn from a leader who treats bureaucracy as “a substitute for thinking” and regards failure as the admission price to innovation. So what might the key to building a successful law firm be if Elon Musk was on the management committee? First, let’s consider the five key, “Musk steps{ that are simple but devastingatinlgy effective.