On this page...
When you participate in the Retirement Investors' Club (RIC), you choose how much to contribute to a 457 employee contribution account through automatic payroll deductions (see contribution limits on this page).
You also choose to have deductions taken from your paycheck before state and federal income taxes (pretax) or after taxes withheld (post-tax Roth). There are no vesting requirements.
Back to topContribution limits
There is no minimum contribution to participate in the 457. The 457 plan maximum contribution limits are declared by the IRS annually. See IRS annual contribution limits.
Back to topPayroll deductions
You may change or stop deductions at any time. If you choose to discontinue contributions, your match contributions will also be discontinued.
RIC 457 payroll deduction elections are made in Workday and will affect the next available check from the date of your request.
To make an election, log into Workday and choose the Benefit Plan option that includes the:
- Name of your provider,
- How you want your deductions taxed (pretax or Roth) and
- Preferred payroll deduction frequency (1st paycheck monthly, 2nd paycheck monthly, 1st and 2nd paychecks monthly or all payrolls)
You will then select the contribution type of either dollar amount or percentage (of gross pay) and enter the dollar amount or percent. For more information, review the Deferred Compensation Smart Guide
Note: We no longer process payroll change requests submitted on the RIC Account Form.
Back to topAge 50+ limit
If the amount you wish to defer will cause you to go over the Age 50+ limit, you may possibly qualify for the 3-Year Catch-Up limit. This plan allows employees who are close to retirement to make contributions up to twice the regular contribution limit.
Back to topFinal paycheck
If you are requesting a final check payroll deduction, do not make the election in Workday.
When you retire, you have the option to defer final wages, unused sick pay (up to $2,000), and unused vacation pay from your final paycheck (up to the IRS maximum limit). You have the option to contribute pretax, post-tax, or both.
Back to top