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Using Non-Qualified Deferred Compensation Plans to Attract Top Talent

Written by Scott Richardson, Managing Director, Executive Benefits | Nov 19, 2025 8:36:36 PM

In the persistent competition for executive talent, standard compensation packages often fall short. To gain a competitive edge, leading organizations are increasingly leveraging Non-Qualified Deferred Compensation (NQDC) plans. These specialized retirement savings vehicles offer a powerful way to attract, retain, and reward the key leaders who drive business success.

What is a Non-Qualified Deferred Compensation (NQDC) Plan?

A Non-Qualified Deferred Compensation (NQDC) plan is an arrangement between an employer and select employees to either defer a portion of participating employees’ current compensation to a future date, such as retirement, or allow the employer to award benefits paid at a future date. Unlike qualified plans like a 401(k), NQDC plans are not subject to the Employee Retirement Income Security Act (ERISA) nondiscrimination rules. This key difference allows companies to be selective, offering these plans exclusively to a group of management or highly compensated employees.

This selectivity enables organizations to create highly attractive and tailored compensation components for the individuals most critical to their success. By providing a vehicle for substantial tax-deferred savings beyond qualified plan limits, NQDC plans serve as a sophisticated tool to empower executive wealth creation and secure long-term loyalty.

Common NQDC plan structures

NQDC plans can be designed in various ways to meet specific organizational objectives. The most common structures include:

Elective deferral plans

Executives voluntarily elect to defer a portion of their base salary, bonus, or other compensation. This allows them to lower their current taxable income while saving for the future.

Supplemental Executive Retirement Plans (SERPs)

These are employer-funded plans designed to provide additional retirement income to executives. A SERP can be structured to provide a specific benefit, such as a percentage of final pay, or as an annual contribution to a notional account. They are powerful retention tools, often tied to service-based vesting schedules.

Excess benefit plans

These plans are specifically designed to replace benefits that executives lose in qualified plans due to IRS-imposed limits on contributions and compensation. They "make whole" what a 401(k) or defined benefit plan cannot provide.

Performance-based plans

Companies can link NQDC contributions or vesting to the achievement of specific individual or corporate performance goals. This directly aligns executive rewards with shareholder value creation, making the plan a strategic incentive rather than just a savings vehicle.

The strategic role of NQDC plans in talent management

Best-in-class employers utilize NQDC plans not merely as a benefit but as a core component of their executive talent strategy. The value extends across the entire employee lifecycle.

Attraction

In a competitive hiring landscape, a well-designed NQDC plan can be a significant differentiator. It signals that the organization is invested in the long-term financial well-being of its leaders. For a candidate weighing multiple offers, the opportunity to have supplemental employer-funded retirement income or defer substantial income on a tax-advantaged basis can be a decisive factor, especially for those who have already maxed out their 401(k) contributions.

Retention

Retention is where NQDC plans deliver exceptional value. By incorporating vesting schedules—often over three to seven years—companies create a powerful "golden handcuff." An executive with a substantial, unvested balance in their NQDC account is far less likely to be lured away by a competitor. This mechanism helps ensure leadership stability and protects the company’s investment in its key talent.

Performance alignment

Linking NQDC awards to long-term performance metrics transforms the plan from a simple deferral vehicle into a driver of business results. For example, contributions could be tied to achieving multi-year revenue growth, profitability targets, or market share gains. This structure ensures that executives are rewarded for creating sustainable, long-term value for the organization.

Funding and security considerations

A critical aspect of NQDC plan design is the approach to funding. Because these plans are "non-qualified," the assets are not protected from the company's creditors in the same way 401(k) assets are. This creates a risk for the participant. Employers have several options to manage and mitigate this risk.

Informal funding

The employer may choose to simply record the deferral as a liability on its books and pay the benefits from general corporate assets when they come due. While simple, this approach offers no security to the executive if the company faces financial distress.

Rabbi trust

The employer makes contributions to an irrevocable trust to cover its future obligations. While the assets in a Rabbi Trust cannot be accessed by the company for operational purposes, they remain subject to the claims of the company's general creditors in the event of bankruptcy. This provides psychological security for the executive without resulting in immediate taxation.

Corporate-Owned Life Insurance (COLI)

Many companies use COLI as a vehicle to finance their NQDC obligations. The company purchases life insurance policies on its key executives. The tax-free growth of the cash value inside the policies can be used to offset the cost of the future benefit payments, and the death benefit can help recover the costs.

Navigating IRC section 409A compliance

The American Jobs Creation Act of 2004 introduced Section 409A to the Internal Revenue Code, imposing strict rules on NQDC plans. Failure to comply can result in severe tax consequences for the participant, including immediate taxation of all deferred amounts, a 20% penalty tax, and additional interest penalties.

At a high level, Section 409A governs:

  • Deferral elections: When an employee must elect to defer compensation.
  • Distribution triggers: The permissible events for payment (e.g., separation from service, disability, death, a specified date, or a change in control).
  • Payment schedules: The timing and form of payments (e.g., lump sum or installments).

Given the complexity and punitive nature of non-compliance, it is imperative that organizations work with experienced legal and tax advisors to ensure their NQDC plans are designed and administered in full accordance with Section 409A.

5 steps to implementing a successful NQDC plan

Launching an NQDC plan requires a structured, multi-disciplinary approach. Key implementation steps include:

  1. Establish governance: Form a committee, typically comprising HR, Finance, and Legal leaders, to oversee plan design and administration. Define the plan’s strategic objectives.
  2. Define eligibility: Determine which group of management or highly compensated employees will be eligible. This decision should align with the plan's goals of attracting and retaining specific talent segments.
  3. Design the plan: Decide on the core features, including types of deferrals (elective, employer-funded), contribution sources (salary, bonus), vesting schedules, and distribution options.
  4. Select a financing strategy: Analyze the financial implications of different funding approaches (informal, Rabbi Trust, COLI) and select the one that best balances executive security with corporate cost-effectiveness.
  5. Develop communications: Create clear, comprehensive materials to educate eligible executives on the plan’s benefits, risks, and enrollment process. Effective communication is crucial for driving participation and appreciation.

Conclusion

For companies seeking to secure and motivate elite leadership talent, Non-Qualified Deferred Compensation plans offer a strategic advantage that standard benefits cannot match. By providing a flexible, tax-efficient savings platform, these plans empower executives to build substantial wealth while aligning their interests with the long-term success of the organization. When designed and implemented with care, an NQDC plan becomes more than just a line item in a compensation package—it becomes a powerful statement about how much an organization values its leaders.

Interested in exploring how a custom-designed NQDC plan could enhance your executive compensation strategy? Contact a member of the Risk Strategies Executive Benefits team to discuss plan design options and access industry benchmarking data.

About the author

Scott Richardson is a Managing Director for the Brown & Brown Executive Benefits division. Scott has a specialization in the financial services and life insurance industries that spans four decades. Scott has built significant relationships with bank and credit union regulatory agencies and was involved in the development of customized benefit plans and BOLI placements for hundreds of banks and credit unions throughout the country. This provides Mr. Richardson with a unique background in the legal aspects of compensation, nonqualified benefits and bank-owned life insurance (BOLI) and corporate-owned life insurance (COLI) plan design.

Scott Richardson has addressed numerous trade groups on the topics of executive compensation, nonqualified benefits and BOLI. In addition, he has been quoted in various trade publications.

Scott has a law degree from Mitchell Hamline School of Law (formerly William Mitchell College of Law), St. Paul, Minnesota. He is a member of FINSECA and is past president of the Twin Cities Society of Financial Services Professionals.

Scott served as a Director of an Illinois financial institution until September 2024 and is an investor in a de novo bank in the Southeastern US. He has earned designations as a Chartered Life Underwriter (CLU) and Chartered Financial Consultant (ChFC), and holds Series 6, 7, 63, 65 and 24 licenses.

Securities offered through Integrity Alliance, LLC, Member SPIC, Integrity Wealth is a marketing name for Integrity Alliance, LLC, RSC Insurance Brokerage, Inc. DBA Risk Strategies, Part of the Brown & Brown team, is not affiliated with Integrity Wealth.

This material has been prepared for informational purposes only. It is not intended to provide, and should not be relied on for, tax, legal, or accounting advice. Companies should consult their own tax, legal, and accounting advisors before engaging in any transaction.