Title 29 › Chapter CHAPTER 18— - EMPLOYEE RETIREMENT INCOME SECURITY PROGRAM › Subchapter SUBCHAPTER III— - PLAN TERMINATION INSURANCE › Subtitle Subtitle E— - Special Provisions for Multiemployer Plans › Part part 1— - employer withdrawals › § 1391
When an employer leaves a multiemployer pension plan, the plan must calculate how much of the plan’s unpaid promised benefits the employer must cover. The default method adds up three things: the employer’s share of changes in unfunded benefits for plan years after September 25, 1980; the employer’s share of any unfunded benefits that existed at the end of the plan year before September 26, 1980; and the employer’s share of any reallocated unpaid benefits the plan cannot collect. Each year’s change or reallocated amount is “unamortized” by reducing it by 5 percent for each year after it arose. An employer’s share is normally based on the employer’s required contributions over a 5-year span divided by the total contributions by all contributing employers in the same years, with adjustments for employers who left or whose amounts were uncollectible. Plans (except most building-and-construction plans, which have special rules) may amend their rules to use other approved methods instead of the default. Alternatives include a method that spreads pre-1980 obligations over 15 years, methods that base the share on recent 5-year contribution patterns after subtracting collectible withdrawal claims, a method that ties liability to benefits attributable to the employer’s employees and then allocates remaining unfunded amounts by an adopted asset-allocation method, and other corporation-approved approaches. The agency that makes the rules may allow certain denominator adjustments and let plans use more than 5 but not more than 10 years for contribution comparisons. Plans covered by section 404(c) of the tax code must use the method described in one alternative unless they choose another approved method. If liabilities are transferred to another plan because of a withdrawal, the employer’s amount is reduced by the transferred unfunded value as of the last plan year ending on or before the withdrawal. After plan mergers, the calculations follow agency regulations, and if a withdrawal happens in the first plan year after a merger, the plans are treated as if they had stayed separate.
Full Legal Text
Labor — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Legislative History
Reference
Citation
29 U.S.C. § 1391
Title 29 — Labor
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73