For many people, retirement accounts and divorce settlements are confusing. Will your ex-spouse get your retirement? Will your divorce settlement require you to give over half what you planned to retire on?
Here’s what you need to know.
If you or your spouse has money tied up in a retirement plan, you’ll need to account for it in your divorce settlement. The type of retirement plan (or plans) that you have will determine how you’re supposed to split this asset.
You can be years away from retirement and still have to split some of what’s in your retirement account in your divorce settlement. In California, the law allows for two types of property: separate and community.
Contributions you made to a retirement account before you were married generally count as separate property. If you put money into your retirement account for, say, 10 years before you married your spouse, the contributions you made during that decade are yours and yours alone.
Contributions you made to a retirement account during the time that you were married count as community property. The court can divide this part of your retirement account between you and your ex-spouse.
If you contributed some money to a retirement account before your marriage and some money after your marriage, you have both separate and community property. Only the money you put in and benefits you earned during your marriage count as community property, but it can be a little bit complicated to sort through it all so you can follow the law.
Related: Contested vs. uncontested divorce in California
However, you don’t have to hire a pension expert. You and your spouse are free to reach an agreement on how to divide your retirement account – and that might even include doing something like waiving your rights to each other’s pensions.
A QDRO is a qualified domestic relations order. The QDRO is a court order that explains the details on splitting up certain types of pensions. It grants one spouse certain rights to the other spouse’s pensions.
What Should a QDRO Include?
A QDRO must include, at minimum:
Some plans require additional information, as well. This is just the bare minimum.
If you’re filing for separate retirement plans, such as if you had two jobs with pensions that cover some portion of the time you were married, you must file a separate QDRO for each.
Your attorney – and your pension expert, if you choose to hire one – will explain what you need in your situation.
If you’re divorcing and you or your spouse has a retirement plan, your divorce settlement needs to reflect it. We may be able to help you, so call us at 209-546-6870 to schedule your consultation with a Stockton divorce attorney now. We’ll also answer your questions about child custody, child support, spousal support and property division.
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