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vrzuker
Returning Member

I am going through a divorce and my husband cashed out his 401K before divorce is final. Do I have to pay penalties and taxes? He is 44

This will also add to my income, and I have to file Married filing separate so higher taxes for me please help. He did this without my knowing?
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I am going through a divorce and my husband cashed out his 401K before divorce is final. Do I have to pay penalties and taxes? He is 44

"This will also add to my income"

 

Not if he did it the way you say he did it.

 

"and I have to file Married filing separate"

 

Possibly.  You are still allowed to file jointly if you are still legally married, but signing a joint return means you would be taking full and equal legal responsibility for the entire tax return.  You also need to be in cooperation with your estranged spouse.  Filing separately may be the best legal choice even if you owe more taxes that way.  The legal entanglement of filing jointly may cost you in the long run.

 

"He did this without my knowing?"

 

And also without competent financial advice, apparently. 

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11 Replies

I am going through a divorce and my husband cashed out his 401K before divorce is final. Do I have to pay penalties and taxes? He is 44

why do you think it will add to your taxes.?

The 401k account is under his SSN.

DMarkM1
Expert Alumni

I am going through a divorce and my husband cashed out his 401K before divorce is final. Do I have to pay penalties and taxes? He is 44

If you have a choice, you will need to compare filing separately vs filing jointly.  Which works out better for you, having to share in the payment of his taxes/penalties or filing separately with only your income/deductions.    

 

Neither innocent spouse or injured spouse applies in this situation.  

 

Innocent spouse applies when a couple files a joint return and one spouse makes a mistake (omitting income or not paying taxes) and the other spouse was unaware.  

 

Injured spouse applies when a couple files a joint return and the refund is used to pay a back-debt for one of the spouses that does not apply to the other spouse.  

 

 

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I am going through a divorce and my husband cashed out his 401K before divorce is final. Do I have to pay penalties and taxes? He is 44

I think your husband needs to see an accountant.

 

If he is required to give you cash as part of the divorce settlement, that's not taxable income to you.

 

If he was going to be ordered to share his 401(k) with you, what should have happened is he should have gotten a qualified domestic relations order (QDRO) from the court, ordering the 401(k) trustee to split the account.  Then, you would be owner of a 401(k) in your own name.  You could keep it until you retired, or roll it over to an IRA or your own workplace retirement plan, or cash it out.  If you cashed out the 401(k), you would pay regular income tax but no penalty, since the account was transferred to you under a QDRO.  If you rolled it over to an IRA and then cashed it out, you would owe regular Income tax AND the 10% penalty, because there is no exception for an IRA under a QDRO.  If you held the assets until retirement, you would pay regular income tax.

 

But, if he really did cash out while it was under his own name, then he owes all the tax and penalties.  Any cash he gives you afterwards is not taxable to you.

 

(Note that if he did this less than 60 days ago, and gets clued into the mess he made for himself, he can reverse the cash-out and apply for a QDRO to do it right, then you would owe tax as I described.  If this was more than 60 days ago, he screwed himself and there's nothing he can do about it.)

vrzuker
Returning Member

I am going through a divorce and my husband cashed out his 401K before divorce is final. Do I have to pay penalties and taxes? He is 44

He refuses to file jointly. 

I didn't know he cashed it out until my lawyer said he did and he refuses to file jointly.  

I am going through a divorce and my husband cashed out his 401K before divorce is final. Do I have to pay penalties and taxes? He is 44

"This will also add to my income"

 

Not if he did it the way you say he did it.

 

"and I have to file Married filing separate"

 

Possibly.  You are still allowed to file jointly if you are still legally married, but signing a joint return means you would be taking full and equal legal responsibility for the entire tax return.  You also need to be in cooperation with your estranged spouse.  Filing separately may be the best legal choice even if you owe more taxes that way.  The legal entanglement of filing jointly may cost you in the long run.

 

"He did this without my knowing?"

 

And also without competent financial advice, apparently. 

vrzuker
Returning Member

I am going through a divorce and my husband cashed out his 401K before divorce is final. Do I have to pay penalties and taxes? He is 44

We agreed to each keep our own 401k  so no division.  However he believes he could cash out before divorce judgment was made. 

vrzuker
Returning Member

I am going through a divorce and my husband cashed out his 401K before divorce is final. Do I have to pay penalties and taxes? He is 44

Common law state.  So it adds to my income.  He had a failed business and no. Other income. 

 

I made over 75,000 so his cash out became my income. 

I am going through a divorce and my husband cashed out his 401K before divorce is final. Do I have to pay penalties and taxes? He is 44


@vrzuker wrote:

We agreed to each keep our own 401k  so no division.  However he believes he could cash out before divorce judgment was made. 


As long as you are filing separately, and do not live in a community property state, you have nothing to worry about.  It's all his income and his penalties.

 

If you live in a community property state, see a competent tax professional (not a seasonal storefront operation). When you live in a community property state, you must divide your community income equally even when you file separate returns.  The definition of community income varies from state to state.  If you are legally separated, your income after the separation might not be "community" income any more, because the marital community might have ended with the separation.  Or, his 401(k) might be individual income and not community income because it is an individual account, regardless of the date the marital community ends.  Community property states can have tax complications and a professional opinion may be advisable.

 

Cheers. 

vrzuker
Returning Member

I am going through a divorce and my husband cashed out his 401K before divorce is final. Do I have to pay penalties and taxes? He is 44

We are a community state. Idaho. This is why I am worried. 

I am going through a divorce and my husband cashed out his 401K before divorce is final. Do I have to pay penalties and taxes? He is 44


@vrzuker wrote:

Common law state.  So it adds to my income.  He had a failed business and no. Other income. 

 

I made over 75,000 so his cash out became my income. 


A state with common law marriage is not necessarily the same as a community property state.  Make sure you are in a community property state before you get in too deep.

 

Even in a community property state, this might not be "community income."  It will depend on the laws of your state.  A 401(k) might not be community income because of the type of account it is, or it might not be community income if the "community" ends on separation instead of divorce. 

 

You need professional guidance.  Ultimately, if this is deemed to be community income and you owe taxes and penalties, that financial problem should be included with all your other financial concerns as part of your divorce settlement discussions.  If this has to go before a judge, I think you will find most family court judges do not look favorably on spouses who take actions to financially penalize their partners. 

 

Here is the IRS publication on community property.

https://www.irs.gov/publications/p555

 

Good luck.

 

 

vrzuker
Returning Member

I am going through a divorce and my husband cashed out his 401K before divorce is final. Do I have to pay penalties and taxes? He is 44

Thank you so much 

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