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QDRO and Your 401k or Pension Plan

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Throughout my military career I’ve constantly been surrounded by acronyms.  The Army is notorious for them: APFT, MOPP, PMCS, AWOL.  These are just a handful of the thousands of them that exist.  Some I know.  Most I don’t.  I was constantly having to research what the heck most of them stood for.

While acronyms were expected in the military, I didn’t imagine how prevalent they would be in the financial services industry. One of the acronyms that I came across that I felt like I was in the military again was QDRO.  What makes it even more confusing is that I’ve heard it pronounced both “Quid-dro” and “Quad-dro”.  What’s the correct pronunciation?  The jury stills out on that one.

What is a QDRO?

And exactly what does it have to do with your 401K or pension plan?  A QDRO is a Qualified Domestic Relations Order from the court which indicates the beneficiaries of your retirement account, other than you.  These beneficiaries are also called “alternate payees” and this comes into play should you and your spouse get a divorce.

Usually, the beneficiaries of your retirement account(s) might be your spouse, child or other dependent, or a former spouse, and the QDRO will define how each of these people receive distributions from the retirement account through child support or alimony payments and/or property ownership.

It’s necessary that the information in the QDRO is followed exactly in order to minimize your potential to paying penalties on money you don’t even receive from your 401k plan.

The Importance of a Qualified Domestic Relations Order

If you should go through a divorce, the QDRO becomes extremely important.  Following the QDRO is the key to avoiding 10% early withdrawal penalties imposed by 401k plans, because if you don’t follow the QDRO you can be taxed on money taken from your 401k even if it landed in the hands of your beneficiaries!  Make sure to enlist professional help (either through your 401k plan administrator or a tax professional) to minimize your own tax implications of having to distribute your 401k to alternate payees due to divorce.

Take Steps to Verify Information in the Qualified Domestic Relations Order

If your 401k plan is subject to a QDRO during a divorce (typically if you have been married at least 5 years before getting divorced), you want to give the administrator of your 401k a copy of your QDRO.  This allows them to carry out the order.  They’ll review the QDRO to ensure it’s valid within 18 months and determine whether or not any payments must be made to beneficiaries. You’ll receive notification of any alternate payee (beneficiary) receiving funds from the 401k, and provided the QDRO was followed correctly, you will not have to pay a 10% early withdrawal fee from the withdrawal of the funds distributed to your beneficiaries.

The few QDRO’s that I’ve dealt with had been drafted directly by the attorney.  All I had to was open the appropriate account (in my cases they were IRA’s) and the money was transferred directly in. I like simplicity :)

Who Receives Money From Your 401k After Divorce?

Where you live will determine how your 401k funds are distributed after a divorce.  Most states have equitable distribution rules, which means your 401k is divided 50/50 between you and your ex-spouse – but it depends on how long you were married and how much was contributed, as well.

Some ex-spouses win 50% of a 401k plan even in states without equitable distribution rules, during the divorce proceedings. If you live in any of the following states, you can count on paying out half of your retirement to your ex-spouse:  Arizona, California, Idaho, Louisiana, Nevada, New Mexico, Texas, Washington and Wisconsin.  These are “common property” states.

For the QDRO cases I’ve worked in, all have been in the state of Illinois.  Although, not a “common property” state, each spouse did receive 50% of the retirement account balance.

What About QDRO’s and Pensions?

QDRO’s are most commonly associated to 401k’s, but while I was doing my research I learned that they can also apply to pensions.  According to the PBGC.gov website here are three items that QDRO’s must do:

  1. Identity of the plan participant, each alternate payee, and each pension plan. A QDRO must specify the name and last known mailing address of the plan participant and each alternate payee covered by the order. A QDRO also must identify the name of each plan to which the order applies—this should be the plan’s formal name.
  2. Amount to be paid and when payments start. A QDRO must state how much of the plan participant’s benefit is to be paid to the alternate payee, such as a dollar amount or percentage of the benefit, or make clear the manner in which the amount is to be determined. A QDRO also must specify or allow the alternate payee to choose when payments to the alternate payee will start.
  3. What happens on the death of the plan participant and the alternate payee. A QDRO should specify whether the alternate payee will be treated as the participant’s spouse for purposes of any survivor benefits. A QDRO also should specify what happens to benefits when the alternate payee dies.

What a QDRO Must Not Require

There is sometimes a misconception on what a QDRO must and must not do.  The PBGC.gov site offers what a QDRO must not require the PBGC to do:

  • pay any benefits not permitted under ERISA or the Code;
  • provide any type or form of benefit, or any option, not otherwise provided by PBGC;
  • pay benefits with a value in excess of the value of benefits that would otherwise be payable by PBGC;
  • pay benefits to an alternate payee when those benefits are required to be paid to another alternate payee under an order previously determined to be a QDRO;
  • pay benefits to the alternate payee for any period before PBGC receives the order;
  • pay benefits as a separate interest to the alternate payee if the participant is already receiving benefit payments; or
  • change the benefit form if the participant is already receiving benefit payments.

Creative Commons License photo credit: ShellyS


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