Executive Benefits · Nonqualified Deferred Compensation

Nonqualified deferred compensation: pay your best people later, retain them now

A NQDC plan is the employer’s promise to pay a key executive compensation in a future year — deferring the income, and the tax, until then. There are no contribution limits, you choose exactly who participates, and the vesting can act as powerful golden handcuffs. Here’s exactly how it works:

No contribution limits Select group of executives Governed by IRC §409A
The deferred-comp structure
The Executive defers salary or bonus Employer’s Promise unsecured · informally funded by COLI often held in a rabbi trust defer now Future Benefit paid at retirement / separation paid later
🎯

Reward a select group of executives

👑

No contribution limits

🔒

Powerful golden handcuffs

📝

Often funded with company-owned life insurance

The Basics

What is nonqualified deferred compensation?

Nonqualified deferred compensation (NQDC) is an arrangement in which an employer agrees to pay a key employee compensation in a future year rather than the year it’s earned. By postponing receipt, the executive postpones the income tax — potentially into lower-income years like retirement.

It’s called nonqualified because it doesn’t meet the requirements of a qualified plan like a 401(k). That’s the point: it sheds the contribution limits and nondiscrimination rules of qualified plans, so an employer can reward a hand-picked group of executives with no cap on the amount — provided it stays a “top-hat” plan limited to a select group of management or highly compensated employees.

The trade-off is security. A NQDC benefit is an unsecured promise to pay. Until it’s paid, the executive is a general creditor of the company, and any assets the employer sets aside to fund it must remain reachable by the company’s creditors — that’s what keeps the benefit tax-deferred.

Because the obligation can stretch for decades, employers usually informally fund it — most often with company-owned life insurance — and the whole arrangement is governed by the strict rules of IRC §409A.

Plain-English definition

The company promises to pay an executive later instead of now. The executive defers the tax, the employer ties the payout to staying (and to rules under §409A), and a life insurance policy is often set aside quietly to make sure the money is there.

Why employers use it

No contribution limits. Reward executives well beyond what a 401(k) allows.

Pick who plays. Offer it to a select group — no nondiscrimination testing.

Golden handcuffs. Vesting and forfeiture provisions reward staying.

Cost recovery. The employer owns the informal funding asset and recovers its cost.

Tax deferral. The executive defers income to potentially lower-tax years.

The Varieties

Common types of NQDC plans

“Nonqualified deferred comp” is an umbrella over several designs. Most fall into one of these.

💵

Elective salary deferral

The executive voluntarily defers a slice of their own salary into the plan to receive later.

🎉

Bonus deferral

The executive defers all or part of an annual or performance bonus rather than taking it now.

🏢

SERP

A Supplemental Executive Retirement Plan — an employer-funded promise of a future retirement benefit.

⚖️

Excess / restoration plan

Restores benefits that qualified-plan limits cut off for highly paid executives.

📊

Phantom stock / SARs

Pays a cash benefit tied to company value or share appreciation, without issuing real equity.

🎱

Director deferrals

Lets non-employee directors defer their fees on similar terms.

Step by Step

How a NQDC plan works

It runs on a written plan, a timely election, and strict §409A discipline around when money goes in and comes out.

1

Adopt the plan & elect

The employer adopts a written top-hat plan; the executive makes a §409A-compliant deferral election before the compensation is earned.

2

Defer the compensation

Salary, bonus, or an employer contribution is credited to a bookkeeping account and grows on a tax-deferred basis.

3

Informally fund it

The employer often buys company-owned life insurance (and may use a rabbi trust) to hedge the liability — assets that stay reachable by creditors.

4

Pay at a permitted event

The benefit is paid only on a §409A event — separation, a set date, death, disability, or change in control. The executive is taxed then; the employer deducts then.

An Honest Assessment

Deferred comp: the pros and the cons

It offers unmatched flexibility and retention power — at the cost of complexity, a deferred deduction, and real credit risk to the executive.

👍

Advantages

  • +

    No contribution limits. Reward key executives far beyond qualified-plan caps.

  • +

    Selective. Offer it to a chosen top-hat group — no nondiscrimination testing.

  • +

    Powerful handcuffs. Vesting and forfeiture provisions strongly reward staying.

  • +

    Cost recovery. The employer owns the informal funding (COLI), and can recover its cost.

  • +

    Tax deferral for the executive. Income shifts to potentially lower-tax years.

  • +

    Generally outside most of ERISA as a top-hat plan, giving flexible design.

⚠️

Drawbacks & risks

  • §409A is unforgiving. A violation can trigger immediate tax on all vested deferrals, plus a 20% penalty and interest.

  • Deferred deduction. The employer can’t deduct until the executive is paid (§404(a)(5)) — sometimes years later.

  • Unsecured. The executive is a general creditor; benefits are at risk if the company becomes insolvent — even with a rabbi trust

  • Rigid distributions. Money comes out only on permitted events; no easy early access.

  • FICA timing. Payroll tax generally applies at vesting, not at payout.

  • Balance-sheet liability. The promise is a liability, and funding assets can’t be netted against it.

Side by Side

How it compares to other executive benefits

Deferred comp, a Section 162 bonus, and split-dollar all reward key people with deferred value — but they differ sharply on deduction timing, control, and the executive’s security.

Factor Deferred Comp (NQDC) A promise to pay later Section 162 Bonus Employee owns the policy Split-Dollar Shared policy & benefits
Who owns the asset The employer (informal COLI / rabbi trust) The employee The owner or insured (varies by regime)
Employer tax deduction Deferred When benefits are paid (§404(a)(5)) Immediate When the bonus is paid (§162) Generally none currently
How the employee is taxed At distribution (FICA at vesting) On the bonus now (§61) On the economic benefit or loan interest
Employer recovers its cost Yes (owns the funding asset) No Often
Golden handcuffs / vesting Strong forfeiture provisions Only with a restrictive endorsement (REBA) Via vesting or rollout terms
Complexity & rules Complex §409A, top-hat / ERISA Simplest Moderate
Security for the employee Unsecured general creditor Owns it Varies by regime
Best fit Deferring large comp with strong handcuffs & cost recovery Simple, selective reward & retention Leveraged death benefit & estate planning

All three reward and retain key people, but they sit at different points on the simplicity-vs-control spectrum. A Section 162 bonus is the simplest and is deductible now; NQDC offers the strongest handcuffs and cost recovery but is the most complex; split-dollar sits in between. The right tool depends on your goals for deduction timing, retention, and the executive’s appetite for risk — confirm the design with your attorney and CPA.

Funding & Compliance

How NQDC is funded — and kept compliant

To stay tax-deferred, the plan must remain “unfunded” for tax purposes. Here’s how employers set money aside anyway — and the rule that governs it all.
Funding

Company-owned life insurance

The employer buys COLI on covered executives to hedge the liability, recover its cost, and provide a death benefit — while the policy stays a general corporate asset.
Security

Rabbi trust

A grantor trust holds the assets, protecting them from an employer that changes its mind — but they remain reachable by creditors in insolvency, which preserves the tax deferral.
Rules

§409A compliance

Strict rules govern deferral elections, the permitted distribution events, and a ban on accelerating payments. Get it wrong and the penalties are severe.
⚠️

§409A is the rule you can’t break. Distributions are allowed only on specified events — separation from service, a fixed date or schedule, death, disability, change in control, or an unforeseeable emergency. A single operational misstep can make all vested deferrals immediately taxable, plus a 20% additional tax and premium interest. This is a plan to build with experienced ERISA counsel and your CPA — not a DIY project.

Our Design Experience

Size the policy that informally funds the plan

Most NQDC promises are informally funded and hedged with company-owned life insurance. Our funding calculator helps you gauge the coverage, then connects you to instant-decision quotes.

Free Tool

The Funding Calculator

A deferred-comp promise is a future liability. Many employers set aside company-owned life insurance (COLI) to match that liability, recover their cost, and provide a death benefit. Our calculator sizes coverage per insured — a useful starting point to refine with your advisors and plan actuary.

  • Sizes coverage per covered executive
  • A starting point for informally funding the liability
  • Flags any policy set below the calculated need
  • Connects straight to instant-decision quotes
Open the Funding Calculator →
Example · informal funding
$3.0M
COLI sized to a projected benefit liability
Benefit liability
COLI death benefit
Annual premium

Illustrative only — not a quote.

Common Questions

Nonqualified deferred compensation FAQ

How is NQDC different from a 401(k)?
+
A 401(k) is a qualified plan: it has contribution limits, nondiscrimination rules, and its assets are protected for the employee. NQDC is nonqualified: no contribution limits, you can pick who participates, and the executive is an unsecured creditor whose benefit depends on the employer’s solvency. In exchange, the employer’s deduction is deferred until the benefit is paid.
When is the executive taxed?
+
For income tax, generally not until the benefit is actually or constructively received — typically at the §409A distribution event. For payroll tax (FICA/Medicare), a special timing rule applies the tax at the later of when services are performed or when the amount vests, which is often years before payout. This is general information, not tax advice.
When does the employer get its deduction?
+
Under IRC §404(a)(5), the employer deducts the compensation only in the year the executive includes it in income — that is, when it’s paid. In a plan that defers for many years, the employer waits the same number of years for the deduction. That timing is a real cost to weigh in the design.
What is a rabbi trust?
+
A rabbi trust is a grantor trust an employer uses to informally fund the plan. It reassures executives that the money is set aside and shields it from an employer that simply changes its mind — but the assets must remain reachable by the company’s general creditors if it becomes insolvent. That feature is exactly what keeps the plan “unfunded” and tax-deferred. (The IRS model language is in Rev. Proc. 92-64.)
How does life insurance fund the plan?
+
Most often through company-owned life insurance (COLI): the employer owns a policy on the covered executive, pays the premiums, and is the beneficiary. The policy’s cash value can help pay benefits, and the death benefit can recover the employer’s cost. It’s an informal hedge — the policy stays a general corporate asset, subject to creditors. Employer-owned policies also carry the §101(j) notice-and-consent rules.
What happens if §409A is violated?
+
The consequences fall on the executive: all vested deferred compensation under the plan becomes immediately taxable, plus a 20% additional income tax and premium interest. Because the rules are strict and the penalties steep, NQDC plans should be designed and operated with experienced ERISA counsel.
Sources

References

  1. 26 U.S.C. §409A — Inclusion in gross income of deferred compensation under nonqualified deferred compensation plans. Cornell Legal Information Institute. law.cornell.edu

  2. 26 U.S.C. §404(a)(5) — Employer’s deduction allowed in the year the employee includes the compensation in income. Cornell Legal Information Institute. law.cornell.edu

  3. 26 U.S.C. §3121(v)(2) — FICA special timing rule for nonqualified deferred compensation (taxed at the later of services performed or vesting). Cornell Legal Information Institute. law.cornell.edu

  4. Rev. Proc. 92-64 — IRS model rabbi trust provisions, including the insolvency / general-creditor trigger. Internal Revenue Service.

  5. IRS Nonqualified Deferred Compensation Audit Techniques Guide (Pub. 5528) — overview of constructive receipt, economic benefit, and §409A funding rules. irs.gov

Important disclosures

This site is for educational purposes, and QB Insurance LLC, nor its agents, provide tax or legal advice. We are trying to provide relevant information for funding a buy-sell agreement with life insurance, long-term care and/or disability insurance.

This page is provided by Quote-Bot for general educational purposes only and reflects information available as of its publication. Nonqualified deferred compensation is a sophisticated, highly technical strategy governed by IRC §409A, with severe penalties for non-compliance, and it leaves the executive an unsecured general creditor of the employer. It is not legal, tax, accounting, or investment advice, and no attorney-client or fiduciary relationship is created by reading it. Before adopting any deferred-compensation arrangement, work with qualified ERISA counsel, your CPA, and a plan administrator. Life insurance used to informally fund a plan is a separate employer asset; product availability, underwriting, and guarantees vary by applicant, carrier, and state.