Latest Financial Planning News
How $1,000 plus regular contributions turned into $823,000 through compounding
Common sense the best defence against fraudsters: forensic auditor
Investment and economic outlook, August 2025
New report highlights confusion over BDBNs
How ‘investment procrastination’ could be hurting your wealth
ATO warns that SAR lodgments are on its radar
Compassionate release warning issued
The biggest earthquakes in history : (1905–2025)
How financial advice can reduce stress and save time
How personal data could boost your retirement income by up to 50%
Investment and economic outlook, July 2025
ATO flags October SAR lodgment date
Death benefits not reliant on probate
Challenges with TBC increase for those in pension phase
Avoid LRBA structure short cuts
The rise and fall of the world’s largest economies | GDP Epic Battle (1560–2025)
Div 296 sparking death benefit discussions
ATO warns SMSF trustees to be aware of increase in scams
Roles and Responsibilities in a Business Partnership
Beware of tax implications for failing to meet minimum pension requirements: consultant
Leasing property owned by an SMSF
A super contributions deadline you won’t want to miss
How topping up your super each year could leave you $80,000 better off in retirement
Evolution of Boeing - 1916 - 2025
ATO issues guidance on SMSF trustee appointment and compliance
ASIC to increase audit surveillance in 2025–26
Investment and economic outlook, May 2025
Legal case has succession planning lessons for SMSF members, advisers: legal expert
Your 30 June superannuation checklist
ATO releases ‘welcome guidance’ on death benefit income streams

The ATO has provided guidance on what action SMSF trustees should take where they have failed to meet the minimum pension payment requirements for a death benefit income stream.



       


 


In an online update, the ATO has provided clarification on the interaction between compulsory cashing requirements when a member dies and the requirement to pay a minimum pension amount each year.


The ATO explained that where a member of an SMSF dies, their benefits must be cashed by the fund as soon as practicable as part of the compulsory cashing requirements.


In some cases, a dependant beneficiary may choose to receive a death benefit income stream or pension, or they may receive one automatically in the case of a reversionary pension, the ATO said.


“Pensions paid from super, including death benefit income streams, have a minimum pension payment requirement, and a number of questions have recently been raised by the SMSF sector around the interaction between compulsory cashing requirements when a member dies and the requirement to pay a minimum pension amount each year,” it said.


“Cashing a death benefit in the form of a pension only satisfies the compulsory cashing requirements as long as the interest continues to be cashed in that form. Therefore, if the pension ceases because the minimum amount hasn’t been paid, the trustees may have contravened the Superannuation Industry (Supervision) Regulations 1994 (SISR).”


However, where a contravention has occurred, if trustees act swiftly, there are steps that can be taken to ensure that death benefits are still considered to be “cashed as soon as practicable”, the ATO stated.


One of the ways this can be achieved is by immediately cashing the benefit in the form of a new retirement phase income stream as soon as they become aware of the breach, the ATO said.


It could also be achieved by cashing the benefit in the form of a lump sum, either as a single lump sum or as an interim and final lump sum, or rolling over the interest that supported the death benefit income stream pension to another complying super fund for immediate cashing as a new death benefit income stream.


The ATO clarified that these options will only prevent future contraventions of the SISR and won’t remedy the breach that’s already occurred for failing to meet the compulsory cashing requirements.


“As long as one of these actions is taken immediately, the commissioner will accept the trustee is meeting on a go-forward basis the requirement to cash the benefits ‘as soon as practicable’ and will not therefore have further contravened the SISR. Failure to resolve the matter may have significant compliance consequences,” it said.


Colonial First State executive manager of technical services Craig Day said that, before this latest guidance from the ATO, SMSFs were left in an uncertain position because where the surviving trustee had failed to pay the minimum in that year, they had technically failed to satisfy the requirement that the income stream had continued to be paid.


“One way you could read the legislation is that that would actually require the payment of the reversionary pension as a death benefit out of the system, which wouldn’t be an ideal outcome due to an inadvertent breach,” Mr Day said.


Mr Day said while the ATO has confirmed that if you fail to pay the minimum, then you have breached the compulsory cashing requirements under regulation 6.21, they have also made it clear that they are happy to allow the trustee to commence a new pension, and that would still be considered to be a death benefit pension in that surviving spouse’s name.


“That is very much welcome because it means if we’ve got a client that’s made an inadvertent breach, then that doesn’t automatically require the payment of the death benefit lump sum out of the system, which wouldn’t be a great outcome,” he explained.


The ATO has also confirmed in the guidance, he said, that where the underpayment is small, or the result of an error, the trustee may be able to self-assess whether they can apply the exception to treat the fund as having continuously paid the pension, despite the underpayment.


“If the exception can be applied, the fund has not breached the SISR,” the ATO stated.


Mr Day said SMSF trustees also need to be aware that from a transfer balance cap reporting perspective, if the underpayment of a pension does happen and the pension is ceased, then they do need to report the debit in relation to the pension ceasing, but they are only required to report the debit from the time they become aware that the fund failed the pension standards.


“So, in the context of failing to pay the minimum, you would be reporting the debit effective at the end of 30 June and the value of the debit would be the value of the pension at that time, so even though the pension stopped at the beginning of the year, the value of the debit is based on the circumstances as of the end of the year,” he said.


 


 


Miranda Brownlee
17 July 2019
smsfadviser.com


 




5th-August-2019