Qualified Domestic Relations Orders — QDROs — divide retirement-plan interests in divorce. For California high-asset cases, where multiple plans, plan types, and large account balances are routinely in play, the QDRO is the operational instrument that converts the property-division decree into actual money in the alternate payee’s account. The drafting and processing picture in 2026 has settled in ways that practitioners should know.
Plan Types and Their Quirks
Three plan types dominate high-asset divorces:
- Defined-contribution plans (401(k), 403(b), profit-sharing). Division by dollar amount or percentage of account balance as of a specified date. Plan administrators generally process these routinely; the drafting question is the gains/losses adjustment between valuation date and segregation date.
- Defined-benefit plans (traditional pensions, cash-balance plans). Division by Time Rule formula or by a present-value lump sum. Defined-benefit plans require more careful drafting and often require an actuarial input.
- Government and military plans (CalPERS, CalSTRS, federal civil service, military retired pay). Each has its own statutory regime; the federal-employee plans use Court Orders Acceptable for Processing rather than standard ERISA QDROs.
Plan-Administrator Response Patterns
Plan administrators in 2026 review draft QDROs more rigorously than they did a decade ago. Common rejection reasons:
- Ambiguous valuation date or segregation language.
- Failure to address gains and losses between valuation and segregation.
- Provisions that exceed the plan’s actual benefit structure.
- Survivor-benefit language that conflicts with the plan’s default survivor rules.
The best 2026 practice is to obtain the plan’s model QDRO before drafting and to submit a pre-approval draft to the administrator before entering the order with the court.
Tax-Treatment Considerations
Distributions to an alternate payee under a QDRO are not subject to the 10% early-withdrawal penalty under Internal Revenue Code § 72(t)(2)(C). The alternate payee retains the option to roll the distribution into an IRA or to take cash with ordinary income taxation. For younger alternate payees, the penalty waiver creates a planning window that does not exist outside the QDRO context.
Common Drafting Errors
Three errors recur:
- Missing the segregation step. The QDRO must direct the plan to segregate the alternate payee’s share; a percentage-only formula without a segregation directive leaves the share at risk of investment loss before processing.
- Ambiguous survivor language. Pre-retirement survivor benefits and post-retirement survivor benefits are different actuarial questions and require separate treatment.
- Stale valuation dates. A QDRO drafted against a valuation date that is more than six months stale at submission produces processing complications that often require re-drafting.
For high-asset California divorces, the QDRO is the single most consequential transactional instrument that produces real money for the alternate payee. The drafting precision pays for itself.