Qualified Domestic Relations Order (QDRO)
A Qualified Domestic Relations Order (QDRO) is a court-issued legal order used most commonly in divorce proceedings to divide retirement plan assets. It recognizes that an alternate payee—typically a spouse, former spouse, child, or other dependent—is entitled to receive a specified portion of a participant’s retirement plan benefits.
Key points
- Applies to retirement plans governed by ERISA (for example, 401(k) and pension plans); it does not apply to IRAs.
- The order must be approved by both the court and the plan administrator to be effective.
- Taxes and distribution options depend on how the alternate payee receives the funds.
How a QDRO works
- The court prepares an order specifying the portion of the participant’s plan to be assigned to the alternate payee.
- The plan administrator reviews the order to confirm it meets plan rules and ERISA requirements; only then can funds be transferred or paid.
- An alternate payee who receives a distribution generally reports it for tax purposes as if they were the plan participant. They can often roll the distribution into another qualified plan or IRA to defer taxes.
- If benefits are paid directly to a dependent (e.g., a child), tax rules may treat the distribution as taxable to the plan participant.
Required elements of a valid QDRO
A QDRO must include clear, specific information, typically:
* Names and last known addresses of the plan participant and each alternate payee
* Identification of the retirement plan(s) to which the order applies
* The dollar amount or percentage of the benefit to be paid to the alternate payee
* The number of payments or the time period for which payments apply
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The order may address multiple plans, but it must clearly describe the benefit assigned for each plan.
Limitations and restrictions
A QDRO cannot:
* Require a plan to provide benefits, payment forms, or options that the plan does not offer.
* Increase the amount of benefits beyond what the plan provides (for example, by requiring actuarially greater benefits).
* Reassign benefits already committed to an alternate payee under an earlier QDRO that has priority. Earlier QDROs generally take precedence.
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Regulatory guidance also limits forcing certain payment forms (for example, plans are not required to provide a qualified joint and survivor annuity to an alternate payee for the lives of that alternate payee and a subsequent spouse).
Survivor and other beneficiary issues
- A QDRO can specify survivor benefits for a former spouse, but benefits already allocated to an alternate payee under a QDRO are not available as survivor benefits for a later spouse.
- If the alternate payee is a minor or legally incompetent, the QDRO can direct payments to a legal guardian, trustee, or other representative.
Who initiates and how payments are made
- An alternate payee (often the ex-spouse) usually files the QDRO as part of divorce or separation proceedings. Attorneys commonly assist in drafting and submitting the order.
- Payment options depend on the plan and the order and may include:
- Lump-sum distribution to the alternate payee
- Periodic installments
- Direct rollover into another qualified retirement account
Taxes and penalties
- If the alternate payee receives the distribution, they are generally responsible for income taxes on that amount, unless they roll it over into a qualified account.
- If the plan participant distributes assets without a QDRO, the participant may be responsible for taxes and potential early-withdrawal penalties if under age 59½.
Bottom line
A QDRO is the primary legal tool for dividing ERISA-covered retirement plan assets in family-law cases. It must meet specific content requirements, conform to plan rules, and be accepted by the plan administrator. Because QDROs involve plan-specific rules and tax consequences, parties often work with attorneys and plan representatives to draft an order that accomplishes the division while complying with applicable regulations.