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Reaching Retirement Plan Assets During Divorce

Divorce is one of a handful of commonly encountered situations that affect retirement planning. And when it comes to divorce and retirement, the ways that courts split retirement plan assets are sometimes determined by the type of retirement planning you and your spouse have done.

Once the value of an employee's interest in a qualified retirement plan is determined and a decision is made on how to divide the assets, it is still necessary to have the order drafted in a way that complies with the extensive regulations applicable to qualified employer-sponsored retirement plans. To protect an employee's retirement security, a retirement plan subject to the Employment Retirement Income Security Act (ERISA) must, by its terms, prohibit the assignment or alienation of the benefits provided by the plan. The Internal Revenue Code also requires that a plan contain an anti-assignment clause to qualify for tax benefits under the Code.

All or part of your interest in an employer-sponsored retirement plan may be transferred to your spouse if the transfer is made under a qualified domestic relations order (QDRO). A QDRO is a court order, judgment, or decree issued pursuant to an applicable state domestic relations law that relates to child support, alimony, or property rights of a spouse or former spouse, child, or dependent of the participant.

Tip

Tip

A QDRO may assign rights under a qualified plan, government plan, church plan, or 403(b) tax sheltered annuity.

To qualify as a QDRO, all of the following criteria must be met:

A plan administrator is required to determine whether a domestic relations order is a QDRO within a reasonable time after the receipt of the order and is required to notify you and each alternate payee of the determination. Every plan is required to have written procedures for making these determinations, and these written procedures should be available to you.

warning

Warning

A failure to meet the requirements for a QDRO could result in a situation where the plan participant is forced to include in income (and therefore pay tax on) amounts already paid to a former spouse. You would be well advised to ensure that the court entering the order retains jurisdiction over the matter, so that the order can be amended or clarified if it fails to meet the requirements of a QDRO.

Here are some additional issues to consider:


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