[Code of Federal Regulations]
[Title 48, Volume 1]
[Revised as of October 1, 2007]
From the U.S. Government Printing Office via GPO Access
[CITE: 48CFR31.205-6]

[Page 611-619]
 
            TITLE 48--FEDERAL ACQUISITION REGULATIONS SYSTEM
 
                CHAPTER 1--FEDERAL ACQUISITION REGULATION
 
Sec. 31.205-6  Compensation for personal services.

    (a) General. Compensation for personal services is allowable subject 
to the following general criteria and additional requirements contained 
in other parts of this cost principle:
    (1) Compensation for personal services must be for work performed by 
the employee in the current year and must not represent a retroactive 
adjustment of prior years' salaries or wages (but see paragraphs (g), 
(h), (j), (k), (m), and (o) of this subsection).
    (2) The total compensation for individual employees or job classes 
of employees must be reasonable for the work performed; however, 
specific restrictions on individual compensation elements apply when 
prescribed.
    (3) The compensation must be based upon and conform to the terms and 
conditions of the contractor's established compensation plan or practice

[[Page 612]]

followed so consistently as to imply, in effect, an agreement to make 
the payment.
    (4) No presumption of allowability will exist where the contractor 
introduces major revisions of existing compensation plans or new plans 
and the contractor has not provided the cognizant ACO, either before 
implementation or within a reasonable period after it, an opportunity to 
review the allowability of the changes.
    (5) Costs that are unallowable under other paragraphs of this 
Subpart 31.2 are not allowable under this subsection 31.205-6 solely on 
the basis that they constitute compensation for personal services.
    (6)(i) Compensation costs for certain individuals give rise to the 
need for special consideration. Such individuals include:
    (A) Owners of closely held corporations, members of limited 
liability companies, partners, sole proprietors, or members of their 
immediate families; and
    (B) Persons who are contractually committed to acquire a substantial 
financial interest in the contractor's enterprise.
    (ii) For these individuals, compensation must--
    (A) Be reasonable for the personal services rendered; and
    (B) Not be a distribution of profits (which is not an allowable 
contract cost).
    (iii) For owners of closely held companies, compensation in excess 
of the costs that are deductible as compensation under the Internal 
Revenue Code (26 U.S.C.) and regulations under it is unallowable.
    (b) Reasonableness--(1) Compensation pursuant to labor-management 
agreements. If costs of compensation established under ``arm's length'' 
labor-management agreements negotiated under the terms of the Federal 
Labor Relations Act or similar state statutes are otherwise allowable, 
the costs are reasonable unless, as applied to work in performing 
Government contracts, the costs are unwarranted by the character and 
circumstances of the work or discriminatory against the Government. The 
application of the provisions of a labor-management agreement designed 
to apply to a given set of circumstances and conditions of employment 
(e.g., work involving extremely hazardous activities or work not 
requiring recurrent use of overtime) is unwarranted when applied to a 
Government contract involving significantly different circumstances and 
conditions of employment (e.g., work involving less hazardous activities 
or work continually requiring use of overtime). It is discriminatory 
against the Government if it results in employee compensation (in 
whatever form or name) in excess of that being paid for similar non-
Government work under comparable circumstances.
    (2) Compensation not covered by labor-management agreements. 
Compensation for each employee or job class of employees must be 
reasonable for the work performed. Compensation is reasonable if the 
aggregate of each measurable and allowable element sums to a reasonable 
total. In determining the reasonableness of total compensation, consider 
only allowable individual elements of compensation. In addition to the 
provisions of 31.201-3, in testing the reasonableness of compensation 
for particular employees or job classes of employees, consider factors 
determined to be relevant by the contracting officer. Factors that may 
be relevant include, but are not limited to, conformity with 
compensation practices of other firms--
    (i) Of the same size;
    (ii) In the same industry;
    (iii) In the same geographic area; and
    (iv) Engaged in similar non-Government work under comparable 
circumstances.
    (c) [Reserved]
    (d) Form of payment. (1) Compensation for personal services includes 
compensation paid or to be paid in the future to employees in the form 
of--
    (i) Cash;
    (ii) Corporate securities, such as stocks, bonds, and other 
financial instruments (see paragraph (d)(2) of this subsection regarding 
valuation); or
    (iii) Other assets, products, or services.
    (2) When compensation is paid with securities of the contractor or 
of an affiliate, the following additional restrictions apply:

[[Page 613]]

    (i) Valuation placed on the securities is the fair market value on 
the first date the number of shares awarded is known, determined upon 
the most objective basis available.
    (ii) Accruals for the cost of securities before issuing the 
securities to the employees are subject to adjustment according to the 
possibilities that the employees will not receive the securities and 
that their interest in the accruals will be forfeited.
    (e) Income tax differential pay. (1) Differential allowances for 
additional income taxes resulting from foreign assignments are 
allowable.
    (2) Differential allowances for additional income taxes resulting 
from domestic assignments are unallowable. (However, payments for 
increased employee income or Federal Insurance Contributions Act taxes 
incident to allowable reimbursed relocation costs are allowable under 
31.205-35(a)(10).)
    (f) Bonuses and incentive compensation. (1) Bonuses and incentive 
compensation are allowable provided the--
    (i) Awards are paid or accrued under an agreement entered into in 
good faith between the contractor and the employees before the services 
are rendered or pursuant to an established plan or policy followed by 
the contractor so consistently as to imply, in effect, an agreement to 
make such payment; and
    (ii) Basis for the award is supported.
    (2) When the bonus and incentive compensation payments are deferred, 
the costs are subject to the requirements of paragraphs (f)(1) and (k) 
of this subsection.
    (g) Severance pay. (1) Severance pay is a payment in addition to 
regular salaries and wages by contractors to workers whose employment is 
being involuntarily terminated. Payments for early retirement incentive 
plans are covered in paragraph (j)(6) of this subsection.
    (2) Severance pay is allowable only to the extent that, in each 
case, it is required by--
    (i) Law;
    (ii) Employer-employee agreement;
    (iii) Established policy that constitutes, in effect, an implied 
agreement on the contractor's part; or
    (iv) Circumstances of the particular employment.
    (3) Payments made in the event of employment with a replacement 
contractor where continuity of employment with credit for prior length 
of service is preserved under substantially equal conditions of 
employment, or continued employment by the contractor at another 
facility, subsidiary, affiliate, or parent company of the contractor are 
not severance pay and are unallowable.
    (4) Actual normal turnover severance payments shall be allocated to 
all work performed in the contractor's plant. However, if the contractor 
uses the accrual method to account for normal turnover severance 
payments, that method will be acceptable if the amount of the accrual 
is--
    (i) Reasonable in light of payments actually made for normal 
severances over a representative past period; and
    (ii) Allocated to all work performed in the contractor's plant.
    (5) Abnormal or mass severance pay is of such a conjectural nature 
that accruals for this purpose are not allowable. However, the 
Government recognizes its obligation to participate, to the extent of 
its fair share, in any specific payment. Thus, the Government will 
consider allowability on a case-by-case basis.
    (6) Under 10 U.S.C. 2324(e)(1)(M) and 41 U.S.C. 256(e)(1)(M), the 
costs of severance payments to foreign nationals employed under a 
service contract performed outside the United States are unallowable to 
the extent that such payments exceed amounts typically paid to employees 
providing similar services in the same industry in the United States. 
Further, under 10 U.S.C. 2324(e)(1)(N) and 41 U.S.C. 256(e)(1)(N), all 
such costs of severance payments that are otherwise allowable are 
unallowable if the termination of employment of the foreign national is 
the result of the closing of, or the curtailment of activities at, a 
United States facility in that country at the request of the government 
of that country; this does not apply if the closing of a facility or 
curtailment of activities is made pursuant to a status-of-forces or 
other country-to-country agreement entered

[[Page 614]]

into with the government of that country before November 29, 1989. 10 
U.S.C. 2324(e)(3) and 41 U.S.C. 256(e)(2) permit the head of the agency 
to waive these cost allowability limitations under certain circumstances 
(see 37.113 and the solicitation provision at 52.237-8).
    (h) Backpay. Backpay is a retroactive adjustment of prior years' 
salaries or wages. Backpay is unallowable except as follows:
    (1) Payments to employees resulting from underpaid work actually 
performed are allowable, if required by a negotiated settlement, order, 
or court decree.
    (2) Payments to union employees for the difference in their past and 
current wage rates for working without a contract or labor agreement 
during labor management negotiation are allowable.
    (3) Payments to nonunion employees based upon results of union 
agreement negotiation are allowable only if--
    (i) A formal agreement or understanding exists between management 
and the employees concerning these payments; or
    (ii) An established policy or practice exists and is followed by the 
contractor so consistently as to imply, in effect, an agreement to make 
such payments.
    (i) Compensation based on changes in the prices of corporate 
securities or corporate security ownership, such as stock options, stock 
appreciation rights, phantom stock plans, and junior stock conversions.
    (1) Any compensation which is calculated, or valued, based on 
changes in the price of corporate securities is unallowable.
    (2) Any compensation represented by dividend payments or which is 
calculated based on dividend payments is unallowable.
    (3) If a contractor pays an employee in lieu of the employee 
receiving or exercising a right, option, or benefit which would have 
been unallowable under this paragraph (i), such payments are also 
unallowable.
    (j) Pension costs. (1) Pension plans are normally segregated into 
two types of plans: defined-benefit and defined-contribution pension 
plans. The contractor shall measure, assign, and allocate the costs of 
all defined-benefit pension plans and the costs of all defined-
contribution pension plans in compliance with 48 CFR 9904.412--Cost 
Accounting Standard for Composition and Measurement of Pension Cost, and 
48 CFR 9904.413--Adjustment and Allocation of Pension Cost. Pension 
costs are allowable subject to the referenced standards and the cost 
limitations and exclusions set forth in paragraph (j)(1)(i) and in 
paragraphs (j)(2) through (j)(6) of this subsection.
    (i) Except for nonqualified pension plans using the pay-as-you-go 
cost method, to be allowable in the current year, the contractor shall 
fund pension costs by the time set for filing of the Federal income tax 
return or any extension. Pension costs assigned to the current year, but 
not funded by the tax return time, are not allowable in any subsequent 
year. For nonqualified pension plans using the pay-as-you-go method, to 
be allowable in the current year, the contractor shall allocate pension 
costs in the cost accounting period that the pension costs are assigned.
    (ii) Pension payments must be paid pursuant to an agreement entered 
into in good faith between the contractor and employees before the work 
or services are performed and to the terms and conditions of the 
established plan. The cost of changes in pension plans are not allowable 
if the changes are discriminatory to the Government or are not intended 
to be applied consistently for all employees under similar circumstances 
in the future.
    (iii) Except as provided for early retirement benefits in paragraph 
(j)(6) of this subsection, one-time-only pension supplements not 
available to all participants of the basic plan are not allowable as 
pension costs, unless the supplemental benefits represent a separate 
pension plan and the benefits are payable for life at the option of the 
employee.
    (iv) Increases in payments to previously retired plan participants 
covering cost-of-living adjustments are allowable if paid in accordance 
with a policy or practice consistently followed.
    (2) Defined-benefit pension plans. The cost limitations and 
exclusions pertaining to defined-benefit plans are as follows:

[[Page 615]]

    (i)(A) Except for nonqualified pension plans, pension costs (see 48 
CFR 9904.412-40(a)(1)) assigned to the current accounting period, but 
not funded during it, are not allowable in subsequent years (except that 
a payment made to a fund by the time set for filing the Federal income 
tax return or any extension thereof is considered to have been made 
during such taxable year). However, any portion of pension cost computed 
for a cost accounting period, that exceeds the amount required to be 
funded pursuant to a waiver granted under the provisions of the Employee 
Retirement Income Security Act of 1974 (ERISA), will be allowable in 
those future accounting periods in which the funding of such excess 
amounts occurs (see 48 CFR 9904.412-50(c)(5)).
    (B) For nonqualified pension plans, except those using the pay-as-
you-go cost method, allowable costs are limited to the amount allocable 
in accordance with 48 CFR 9904.412-50(d)(2).
    (C) For nonqualified pension plans using the pay-as-you-go cost 
method, allowable costs are limited to the amounts allocable in 
accordance with 48 CFR 9904.412-50(d)(3).
    (ii) Any amount funded in excess of the pension cost assigned to a 
cost accounting period is not allowable in that period and shall be 
accounted for as set forth at 48 CFR 9904.412-50(a)(4). The excess 
amount is allowable in the future period to which it is assigned, to the 
extent it is not otherwise unallowable.
    (iii) Increased pension costs are unallowable if the increase is 
caused by a delay in funding beyond 30 days after each quarter of the 
year to which they are assignable. If a composite rate is used for 
allocating pension costs between the segments of a company and if, 
because of differences in the timing of the funding by the segments, an 
inequity exists, allowable pension costs for each segment will be 
limited to that particular segment's calculation of pension costs as 
provided for in 48 CFR 9904.413-50(c). The contractor shall make 
determinations of unallowable costs in accordance with the actuarial 
method used in calculating pension costs.
    (iv) The contracting officer will consider the allowability of the 
cost of indemnifying the Pension Benefit Guaranty Corporation (PBGC) 
under ERISA section 4062 or 4064 arising from terminating an employee 
deferred compensation plan on a case-by-case basis, provided that if 
insurance was required by the PBGC under ERISA section 4023, it was so 
obtained and the indemnification payment is not recoverable under the 
insurance. Consideration under the foregoing circumstances will be 
primarily for the purpose of appraising the extent to which the 
indemnification payment is allocable to Government work. If a beneficial 
or other equitable relationship exists, the Government will participate, 
despite the requirements of 31.205-19(c)(3) and (d)(3), in the 
indemnification payment to the extent of its fair share.
    (v) Increased pension costs resulting from the withdrawal of assets 
from a pension fund and transfer to another employee benefit plan fund, 
or transfer of assets to another account within the same fund, are 
unallowable except to the extent authorized by an advance agreement. If 
the withdrawal of assets from a pension fund is a plan termination under 
ERISA, the provisions of paragraph (j)(3) of this subsection apply. The 
advance agreement shall--
    (A) State the amount of the Government's equitable share in the 
gross amount withdrawn or transferred; and
    (B) Provide that the Government receives a credit equal to the 
amount of the Government's equitable share of the gross withdrawal or 
transfer.
    (3) Pension adjustments and asset reversions. (i) For segment 
closings, pension plan terminations, or curtailment of benefits, the 
amount of the adjustment shall be--
    (A) For contracts and subcontracts that are subject to full coverage 
under the Cost Accounting Standards (CAS) Board rules and regulations, 
the amount measured, assigned, and allocated in accordance with 48 CFR 
9904.413-50(c)(12); and
    (B) For contracts and subcontracts that are not subject to full 
coverage under the CAS, the amount measured, assigned, and allocated in 
accordance with 48 CFR 9904.413-50(c)(12), except the numerator of the 
fraction at 48

[[Page 616]]

CFR 9904.413-50(c)(12)(vi) is the sum of the pension plan costs 
allocated to all non-CAS-covered contracts and subcontracts that are 
subject to Subpart 31.2 or for which cost or pricing data were 
submitted.
    (ii) For all other situations where assets revert to the contractor, 
or such assets are constructively received by it for any reason, the 
contractor shall, at the Government's option, make a refund or give a 
credit to the Government for its equitable share of the gross amount 
withdrawn. The Government's equitable share shall reflect the 
Government's participation in pension costs through those contracts for 
which cost or pricing data were submitted or that are subject to Subpart 
31.2. Excise taxes on pension plan asset reversions or withdrawals under 
this paragraph (j)(3)(ii) are unallowable in accordance with 31.205-
41(b)(6).
    (4) Defined-contribution pension plans. In addition to defined-
contribution pension plans, this paragraph also covers profit sharing, 
savings plans, and other such plans, provided the plans fall within the 
definition of a pension plan at 31.001.
    (i) Allowable pension cost is limited to the net contribution 
required to be made for a cost accounting period after taking into 
account dividends and other credits, where applicable. However, any 
portion of pension cost computed for a cost accounting period that 
exceeds the amount required to be funded pursuant to a waiver granted 
under the provisions of ERISA will be allowable in those future 
accounting periods in which the funding of such excess amounts occurs 
(see 48 CFR 9904.412-50(c)(5)).
    (ii) The provisions of paragraphs (j)(2)(ii) and (iv) of this 
subsection apply to defined-contribution plans.
    (5) Pension plans using the pay-as-you-go cost method. When using 
the pay-as-you-go cost method, the contractor shall measure, assign, and 
allocate the cost of pension plans in accordance with 48 CFR 9904.412 
and 9904.413. Pension costs for a pension plan using the pay-as-you-go 
cost method are allowable to the extent they are not otherwise 
unallowable.
    (6) Early retirement incentives. An early retirement incentive is an 
incentive given to an employee to retire early. For contract costing 
purposes, costs of early retirement incentives are allowable subject to 
the pension cost criteria contained in paragraphs (j)(2)(i) through (iv) 
of this subsection provided--
    (i) The contractor measures, assigns, and allocates the costs in 
accordance with the contractor's accounting practices for pension costs;
    (ii) The incentives are in accordance with the terms and conditions 
of an early retirement incentive plan;
    (iii) The contractor applies the plan only to active employees. The 
cost of extending the plan to employees who retired or were terminated 
before the adoption of the plan is unallowable; and
    (iv) The present value of the total incentives given to any employee 
in excess of the amount of the employee's annual salary for the previous 
fiscal year before the employee's retirement is unallowable. The 
contractor shall compute the present value in accordance with its 
accounting practices for pension costs. The contractor shall account for 
any unallowable costs in accordance with 48 CFR 9904.412-50(a)(2).
    (k) Deferred compensation other than pensions. The costs of deferred 
compensation awards are allowable subject to the following limitations:
    (1) The costs shall be measured, assigned, and allocated in 
accordance with 48 CFR 9904.415, Accounting for the Cost of Deferred 
Compensation.
    (2) The costs of deferred compensation awards are unallowable if the 
awards are made in periods subsequent to the period when the work being 
remunerated was performed.
    (l) Compensation incidental to business acquisitions. The following 
costs are unallowable:
    (1) Payments to employees under agreements in which they receive 
special compensation, in excess of the contractor's normal severance pay 
practice, if their employment terminates following a change in the 
management control over, or ownership of, the contractor or a 
substantial portion of its assets.
    (2) Payments to employees under plans introduced in connection with 
a change (whether actual or prospective)

[[Page 617]]

in the management control over, or ownership of, the contractor or a 
substantial portion of its assets in which those employees receive 
special compensation, which is contingent upon the employee remaining 
with the contractor for a specified period of time.
    (m) Fringe benefits. (1) Fringe benefits are allowances and services 
provided by the contractor to its employees as compensation in addition 
to regular wages and salaries. Fringe benefits include, but are not 
limited to, the cost of vacations, sick leave, holidays, military leave, 
employee insurance, and supplemental unemployment benefit plans. Except 
as provided otherwise in subpart 31.2, the costs of fringe benefit are 
allowable to the extent that they are reasonable and are required by 
law, employer-employee agreement, or an established policy of the 
contractor.
    (2) That portion of the cost of company-furnished automobiles that 
relates to personal use by employees (including transportation to and 
from work) is unallowable regardless of whether the cost is reported as 
taxable income to the employees (see 31.205-46(d)).
    (n) Employee rebate and purchase discount plans. Rebates and 
purchase discounts, in whatever form, granted to employees on products 
or services produced by the contractor or affiliates are unallowable.
    (o) Postretirement benefits other than pensions (PRB). (1) PRB 
covers all benefits, other than cash benefits and life insurance 
benefits paid by pension plans, provided to employees, their 
beneficiaries, and covered dependents during the period following the 
employees' retirement. Benefits encompassed include, but are not limited 
to, postretirement health care; life insurance provided outside a 
pension plan; and other welfare benefits such as tuition assistance, day 
care, legal services, and housing subsidies provided after retirement.
    (2) To be allowable, PRB costs shall be incurred pursuant to law, 
employer-employee agreement, or an established policy of the contractor, 
and shall comply with paragraphs (o)(2)(i), (ii), or (iii) of this 
subsection.
    (i) Pay-as-you-go. PRB costs are not accrued during the working 
lives of employees. Costs are assigned to the period in which--
    (A) Benefits are actually provided; or
    (B) The costs are paid to an insurer, provider, or other recipient 
for current year benefits or premiums.
    (ii) Terminal funding. PRB costs are not accrued during the working 
lives of the employees.
    (A) Terminal funding occurs when the entire PRB liability is paid in 
a lump sum upon the termination of employees (or upon conversion to such 
a terminal-funded plan) to an insurer or trustee to establish and 
maintain a fund or reserve for the sole purpose of providing PRB to 
retirees.
    (B) Terminal funded costs shall be amortized over a period of 15 
years.
    (iii) Accrual basis. PRB costs are accrued during the working lives 
of employees. Accrued PRB costs shall be--
    (A) Measured and assigned in accordance with generally accepted 
accounting principles. However, the portion of PRB costs attributable to 
the transition obligation assigned to the current year that is in excess 
of the amount assignable under the delayed recognition methodology 
described in paragraphs 112 and 113 of Financial Accounting Standards 
Board Statement 106 is unallowable. The transition obligation is defined 
in Statement 106, paragraph 110;
    (B) Paid to an insurer or trustee to establish and maintain a fund 
or reserve for the sole purpose of providing PRB to retirees; and
    (C) Calculated in accordance with generally accepted actuarial 
principles and practices as promulgated by the Actuarial Standards 
Board.
    (3) To be allowable, PRB costs must be funded by the time set for 
filing the Federal income tax return or any extension thereof, or paid 
to an insurer, provider, or other recipient by the time set for filing 
the Federal income tax return or extension thereof. PRB costs assigned 
to the current year, but not funded, paid or otherwise liquidated by the 
tax return due date as extended are not allowable in any subsequent 
year.
    (4) Increased PRB costs caused by delay in funding beyond 30 days 
after each quarter of the year to which they are assignable are 
unallowable.

[[Page 618]]

    (5) The Government shall receive an equitable share of any amount of 
previously funded PRB costs which revert or inure to the contractor. 
Such equitable share shall reflect the Government's previous 
participation in PRB costs through those contracts for which cost or 
pricing data were required or which were subject to Subpart 31.2.
    (6) The Government shall receive an equitable share of any amount of 
previously funded PRB costs which revert or inure to the contractor. 
Such equitable share shall reflect the Government's previous 
participation in PRB costs through those contracts for which cost or 
pricing data were required or which were subject to subpart 31.2.
    (p) Limitation on allowability of compensation for certain 
contractor personnel.

(Note that pursuant to Section 804 of Pub. L. 105-261, the definition of 
``senior executive'' in (p)(2)(ii) has been changed for compensation 
costs incurred after January 1, 1999.)

    (1) Costs incurred after January 1, 1998, for compensation of a 
senior executive in excess of the benchmark compensation amount 
determined applicable for the contractor fiscal year by the 
Administrator, Office of Federal Procurement Policy (OFPP), under 
Section 39 of the OFPP Act (41 U.S.C. 435) are unallowable (10 U.S.C. 
2324(e)(1)(P) and 41 U.S.C. 256(e)(1)(P)). This limitation is the sole 
statutory limitation on allowable senior executive compensation costs 
incurred after January 1, 1998, under new or previously existing 
contracts. This limitation applies whether or not the affected contracts 
were previously subject to a statutory limitation on such costs.
    (2) As used in this paragraph--
    (i) Compensation means the total amount of wages, salary, bonuses, 
deferred compensation (see paragraph (k) of this subsection), and 
employer contributions to defined contribution pension plans (see 
paragraphs (j)(4) and (q) of this subsection), for the fiscal year, 
whether paid, earned, or otherwise accruing, as recorded in the 
contractor's cost accounting records for the fiscal year.
    (ii) Senior executive means--
    (A) Prior to January 2, 1999--
    (1) The Chief Executive Officer (CEO) or any individual acting in a 
similar capacity at the contractor's headquarters;
    (2) The four most highly compensated employees in management 
positions at the contractor's headquarters, other than the CEO; and
    (3) If the contractor has intermediate home offices or segments that 
report directly to the contractor's headquarters, the five most highly 
compensated employees in management positions at each such intermediate 
home office or segment.
    (B) Effective January 2, 1999, the five most highly compensated 
employees in management positions at each home office and each segment 
of the contractor, whether or not the home office or segment reports 
directly to the contractor's headquarters.
    (iii) Fiscal year means the fiscal year established by the 
contractor for accounting purposes.
    (iv) Contractor's headquarters means the highest organizational 
level from which executive compensation costs are allocated to 
Government contracts.
    (q) Employee stock ownership plans (ESOP). (1) An ESOP is a stock 
bonus plan designed to invest primarily in the stock of the employer 
corporation. The contractor's contributions to an Employee Stock 
Ownership Trust (ESOT) may be in the form of cash, stock, or property.
    (2) Costs of ESOPs are allowable subject to the following 
conditions:
    (i) For ESOPs that meet the definition of a pension plan at 31.001, 
the contractor--
    (A) Measures, assigns, and allocates the costs in accordance with 48 
CFR 9904.412;
    (B) Funds the pension costs by the time set for filing of the 
Federal income tax return or any extension. Pension costs assigned to 
the current year, but not funded by the tax return time, are not 
allowable in any subsequent year; and
    (C) Meets the requirements of paragraph (j)(2)(ii) of this 
subsection.
    (ii) For ESOPs that do not meet the definition of a pension plan at 
31.001, the contractor measures, assigns, and allocates costs in 
accordance with 48 CFR 9904.415.

[[Page 619]]

    (iii) Contributions by the contractor in any one year that exceed 
the deductibility limits of the Internal Revenue Code for that year are 
unallowable.
    (iv) When the contribution is in the form of stock, the value of the 
stock contribution is limited to the fair market value of the stock on 
the date that title is effectively transferred to the trust.
    (v) When the contribution is in the form of cash--
    (A) Stock purchases by the ESOT in excess of fair market value are 
unallowable; and
    (B) When stock purchases are in excess of fair market value, the 
contractor shall credit the amount of the excess to the same indirect 
cost pools that were charged for the ESOP contributions in the year in 
which the stock purchase occurs. However, when the trust purchases the 
stock with borrowed funds which will be repaid over a period of years by 
cash contributions from the contractor to the trust, the contractor 
shall credit the excess price over fair market value to the indirect 
cost pools pro rata over the period of years during which the contractor 
contributes the cash used by the trust to repay the loan.
    (vi) When the fair market value of unissued stock or stock of a 
closely held corporation is not readily determinable, the valuation will 
be made on a case-by-case basis taking into consideration the guidelines 
for valuation used by the IRS.

[48 FR 42301, Sept. 19, 1983]

    Editorial Note: For Federal Register citations affecting section 
31.205-6, see the List of CFR Sections Affected which appears in the 
Finding Aids section of the printed volume and on GPO Access.