Since my last article on Voluntary Employees' Beneficiary Associations, I've received hundreds of phone calls with basic questions which I will attempt to answer in this article.
First and perhaps most important, a VEBA only becomes a tax-exempt organization under Internal Revenue Code Section 501(c)(9) when it has received a Letter of Determination from the Internal Revenue Service granting it tax exempt status.
If a business or professional wants to participate, it joins an existing multiple employer VEBA which has received this determination letter from the IRS. (It is important to note that while several VEBAs have received IRS determination letters, not all programs purporting to be VEBAs have received them.)
VEBAs allow large amounts of tax-deductible contributions for the funding of life insurance, accident insurance, sickness and other benefits for the members of the VEBA, their employees, dependents and beneficiaries. Contribution amounts can be made flexible and benefits are highly favorable to the business owner.
Under the proper conditions, a small business can sometimes put in hundreds of thousands of tax-deductible dollars per year to fund its VEBA.
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