
Beneficiary nomination
Knowing who your super benefit will be paid to in the event of your death can give you peace of mind.
If you die, having a nomination in place lets us know who your super must go to or who you’d prefer it to go to (depending on your nomination type).
Who can I nominate as a beneficiary?
Super law describes the beneficiaries you can nominate for your super. These are your dependants or your estate.
Under super law, your dependants are:
- your spouse, including a de facto spouse of the same sex or opposite sex, who lives with you on a genuine domestic basis
- your children of any age, including adopted children, foster children and those by a previous relationship
- any person with whom you have an interdependency relationship.
An interdependency relationship is defined under super and tax law as being between two people:
- who have a close personal relationship
- who live together
- where one or each of them gives the other financial support, and
- where one or each of them gives the other domestic support and personal care.
An interdependency relationship may also exist if there is a close personal relationship between the two persons, but one or more of the other requirements for interdependency are not satisfied because of a physical, intellectual or psychiatric disability.
If you nominate your estate as a , this is your legal personal representative, who is the executor of your will or administrator of your estate.
Binding? Non-binding? Revisionary?
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Binding nominations
A binding nomination is a legal document that means CSC must pay your benefit to the person(s) you have specified if your binding nomination is valid and has not expired.
If you are splitting your super benefit between multiple beneficiaries, you need to make sure you’ve allocated 100% of your benefit, and that your nomination is in whole percentages (e.g. 30% not 30.5%) otherwise your nominations will be invalid.
It’s important to keep your beneficiaries up-to-date and understand who is eligible for a binding nomination. The three-year mark is the maximum time you should wait to review your beneficiaries. You should let us know whenever your circumstances change, such as if you get married, register a relationship, get divorced, have children, change an interdependency relationship, start a new interdependency relationship, or if one of your nominated beneficiaries dies.
You can renew an existing binding nomination without completing a new form, as long as the renewal is received within 3 years. You can do this by logging in to your CSC Navigator account and completing the renewal declaration to confirm and extend your current nomination.
Any changes to your beneficiaries, or a renewal outside of 3 years requires a new form with witness signatures.
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Non-binding nominations
If you don’t have a binding nomination in place when you die, we will use our discretion in accordance with the law to determine who will receive your benefit.
A non-binding nomination lets us know who your preferred beneficiaries are, and will be used as a guide when we determine who we pay your benefit to. A non-binding nomination does not expire, so it’s important to update your non-binding nominations whenever your circumstances change. Non-binding nominations can be made through your CSC Navigator at any time, or call us if you need help.
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Reversionary nominations (for CSCri)
Why make one?
A reversionary nomination binds CSC to pay your retirement account balance when you die to the single dependant you nominate. Choosing this option:
- provides certainty about who will receive your account balance
- overrules any previous nominations of any type
- does not expire.
You cannot nominate your estate as a reversionary .
How we’ll pay your benefit
We’ll pay your income stream to your nominated dependant until your account balance reaches zero. While your dependant is receiving the income stream, they will have the authority to manage the account, for example switch investment options, change the annual payment amount and make lump sum withdrawals.
Note that if an income stream is payable to a child over 18 who is:
- disabled, we will pay the income stream until the account balance reaches zero
- not disabled but who is a financial dependant, we will pay this only until the child turns 25, at which time we will pay them a lump sum for the remaining account balance. (Otherwise the income stream stops at age 18.)
Nominating a beneficiary
Nomination forms
Beneficiary nomination (ADF Super & PSSap)
Use this form to nominate someone to receive your benefit if you die.
Nominate a beneficiary (CSCri)
Use this form to legally nominate, change, renew or revoke an existing nomination of who you would like your benefit paid to when you die.