IRS Releases Guidance for Effective Date of Same-Sex Spousal Retirement Rights - Internal Revenue Service


Plan sponsors now know how and by when retirement plans must comply with the U.S. Supreme Court’s decision in Windsor.

The IRS has released its long-awaited guidance on the effective date by which qualified retirement plans must recognize same-sex spousal rights as a result of the U.S. Supreme Court’s decision in United States v.Windsor.[1] As anticipated, the IRS guidance set forth in IRS Notice 2014-19 does not apply same-sex spousal rights retroactively.[2] Instead, retirement plans must recognize statutory spousal rights for same-sex spouses, such as the right to consent to the participant’s waiver of a qualified joint and survivor annuity, beginning June 26, 2013, the date of the Windsor decision. Similarly, retirement plans are required to recognize same-sex marriage based on the “state of celebration” rule, rather than a “state of domicile” rule, beginning September 16, 2013, the date of earlier IRS guidance that established the state of celebration standard.

Background

The Windsor decision held that the federal Defense of Marriage Act (DOMA) provision establishing marriage for federal law purposes as a legal union between opposite-sex spouses was unconstitutional. Based on DOMA, many plan sponsors limited spousal rights under their retirement plans accordingly, while other plan sponsors voluntarily extended those rights to same-sex spouses and other same-sex partners. The Windsor decision effectively required many of those spousal rights to extend to same-sex spouses.

Earlier IRS guidance in Revenue Ruling 2013-17 clarified the extension of those rights in some respects by (1) establishing that the validity of a same-sex marriage is based on its recognition by the state of celebration (the state where the marriage ceremony occurred), rather than its recognition by the same-sex spouses’ current state of domicile, and (2) declining to extend those rights to same-sex relationships that are not denominated as marriage under state law (e.g., domestic partnerships).[3] However, this earlier IRS guidance did not establish any specific rules about how and when qualified retirement plans needed to comply with these new same-sex spousal rules and requirements.

New Guidance

IRS Notice 2014-19 provides additional and helpful guidance for the timing and scope of the implementation of same-sex spousal rights by qualified retirement plans. The following are some of the key points covered by the new guidance:

Now that this guidance is available, plan sponsors should evaluate whether any conforming plan amendments are necessary or desirable and, if so, ensure that they are properly adopted by the applicable deadline (which will be by the end of 2014 for most plans).


[1]. 133 S. Ct. 2675 (2013).

[2]. View IRS Notice 2014-19 here.  

[3]. View Revenue Ruling 2013-17 here.


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National Law Review, Volume IV, Number 99