Daily Press (Sunday)

Dividing retirement accounts in a divorce

- By Joy Taylor Joy Taylor is editor of The Kiplinger Tax Letter.

Divorce can look a bit different for older couples. They generally don’t need to worry about child support or custody of young children. But splitting the retirement assets they jointly own and those that each spouse owns separately are another matter.

Along with the marital home, retirement accounts are often an older couple’s largest asset in a divorce proceeding.

The rules for splitting retirement assets differ depending on the type of account and can be complicate­d. And transferri­ng retirement funds to a former spouse can have unintended tax consequenc­es if done incorrectl­y, so the stakes are high for getting it right.

For one thing, you need a qualified domestic relations order (QDRO) that recognizes a divorcing spouse’s right to receive all or a portion of the account owner’s defined contributi­on plan or pension. There are two ways to divide plan assets using a QDRO. The first awards a separate interest in the account balance. The second allows a divorcing spouse to share in the payment of the benefits. Once both parties agree to the terms, the account owner gives the document to the plan administra­tor.

“Compared to splitting a pension, a 401(k) is a far easier asset to split,” says Laura Medigovich, a certified financial planner in Purchase, New York. That’s because you know the account value. If one spouse has a 401(k) worth $200,000, the divorcing couple could agree in the QDRO to split the account equally. In that case, $100,000 of the 401(k) balance can be transferre­d directly to the other spouse’s

IRA without incurring any federal income taxes or penalties.

That changes if the spouse receiving the money pockets the $100,000 instead of having it transferre­d to an IRA. Then he or she will owe income tax on the money, but there’s no 10% penalty for early distributi­ons, even if the spouse taking the cash isn’t yet 59 ½ . If the $100,000 is transferre­d to the spouse’s IRA and that person takes an early withdrawal, then the money is subject to both income tax and the 10% penalty.

Pensions are even more complicate­d to divvy up. Not only does each employer have different rules for how or whether a pension can be split, but you’ll also have to hire an actuary to calculate the present value of the future benefits. It’s easier to split a pension when the pensioner spouse has already started receiving benefits. Then you could use a QDRO to split the payments by either a dollar or percentage amount.

QDROs don’t apply to IRAs. To divide an IRA between spouses, the terms must be specified in the divorce or legal separation agreement, which the account owner gives to the IRA sponsor. For the money to be split free of taxes and penalties, the agreement should specify that a percentage or dollar amount of the account owner’s IRA balance should go to a spouse’s IRA in a direct trustee-to-trustee transfer.

If the receiving spouse takes cash out in the transfer, he or she will owe taxes on that withdrawal and, if younger than 59 ½ , a 10% penalty, too. Similarly, an account owner who takes a distributi­on from the IRA to give to a spouse in a divorce will be taxed on the payout (and owe a 10% penalty if under age 59 ½ ). If possible, use a Roth IRA for a spouse who wants cash. A Roth is more tax efficient because withdrawal­s are generally tax-free.

 ?? MATTHEW HICKS-BLUENALU/DREAMSTIME ??
MATTHEW HICKS-BLUENALU/DREAMSTIME

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