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Super & Tax

Death Benefit Dependant

A person allowed under super law to receive your death benefit directly, including a spouse, child, or someone financially dependent on you.

What it means

A death benefit dependant is someone the superannuation law permits to receive your death benefit directly from the fund. Under the SIS Act this covers your spouse or de-facto partner, any child of any age, a person in an interdependency relationship with you, and anyone financially dependent on you. Only these people (or your legal personal representative) can be validly named in a Binding Death Benefit Nomination — nominate anyone else and it fails.

How it's used

Knowing who qualifies as a dependant determines who you can name and who can claim. Example: Sophie wanted to leave her super to her sister, but a sister is not a death benefit dependant, so she instead directed it to her estate and gifted it through her Will. Be careful: the super-law definition of dependant is broader than the tax dependant definition, so someone may be entitled to receive a benefit yet still be taxed on it.

This page is general information about Australian estate-planning terms, not legal advice. See our Legal Disclaimer.

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