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How quickly do death benefits need to be paid?

SMSF death benefits

Prescribed time frames are often applied to situations regarding financial matters. Meg Heffron examines what the dictated timelines mean for SMSF death benefits.

The term ‘as soon as practicable’ appears several times in tax and superannuation law – it’s never defined and often has different meanings depending on the context.

One place it appears is in the timing of death benefit payments. Death is one of the only times in superannuation law where a benefit must be taken from the fund.

Death benefits can be dealt with by paying lump sums, retirement-phase pensions or some combination (and simply starting a retirement-phase pension constitutes ‘dealing with’ that part of the deceased’s superannuation). Note that dealing with the death benefit means dealing with the entire amount – not just starting to pay a pension with part of the deceased’s account. The requirement to cash out the death benefit is not met until every last dollar has been accounted for and used to provide a pension or pay a lump sum.

When the deceased’s super was providing a pension that automatically reverted (continued) to another person, such as a surviving spouse, this requirement is met automatically. Even if the spouse needs to make some changes to their own superannuation to avoid negative tax consequences, the trustee has met the requirement to pay the death benefit by recognising the transfer of the pension to its new owner.

Under all other circumstances, however, the trustee must take positive action to deal with the death benefit. The law requires this to be done “as soon as practicable after the member dies”.

Generally, the ATO views six months as plenty of time to pay death benefits from an SMSF, even if this view has only been expressed informally via webinars and/or website content rather than formally in rulings or interpretative decisions.

That doesn’t mean not doing so within six months will automatically result in a breach, penalties or harsh tax consequences. It simply means if the trustee of the SMSF considers it was necessary to take longer than six months to deal with a member’s death benefits, it will be important to identify and document why that was the case. It would be reasonable for either the regulator or an auditor to critically question these reasons.

We are certainly aware of cases where the payment took much longer (sometimes even years) in cases where there were:

  • estate disputes or difficulty in identifying the right beneficiaries,
  • difficulties in putting trustees in place to make the relevant decisions or at least execute them, or
  • health issues for the surviving spouse who was also the remaining trustee.

Note, the ATO would generally look for legal impediments or circumstances that could not reasonably be foreseen when it comes to delays on death benefits. Reasons such as a lack of liquidity in the fund would generally be insufficient as the trustee of any superannuation fund has an obligation to ensure the fund is able to make benefit payments when these are due.

All that said, we are not aware of a single case where the ATO has actually taken away a fund’s complying status or subjected trustees to penalties where the only failure was the failure to make a death benefit payment quickly. The tax commissioner’s first focus is normally on ensuring the beneficiary receives the appropriate benefit.

Meg Heffron is managing director of SMSF specialist firm Heffron.

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