
Pension Paperwork Overload? What IORPS II Really Means for Your Pension Retirement Options
What IORPS II Really Means for Your Pension Retirement Options
Read MoreOne of the major advantages of an Approved Retirement Fund (ARF) is that any remaining value does not disappear when you die. Instead, the balance can pass to your spouse, partner, children or other beneficiaries, subject to specific Revenue tax rules.
Below is a clear explanation of what happens, who can inherit, and the tax implications involved.

Who Can Inherit My ARF? – Your ARF can pass to:
(Different tax rules apply depending on who receives the ARF and how the payment is structured.)
* No immediate income tax. * The fund becomes part of their own retirement planning. * Future withdrawals are taxed as income. * Considered the most tax-efficient route for spouses.
* Income tax applies at the spouse’s marginal rate in the year they receive it. * Less commonly used because the tax cost can be high.
(Note: In most cases, a spouse ARF-to-ARF transfer is the optimal approach)
* Taxed under inheritance tax (CAT) rules. * Standard CAT thresholds and rates apply.
* A specific income tax charge applies at a fixed rate (set by Revenue at 30%). * No Capital Gains Tax (CAT) on top of this. * The ARF does not transfer into their own ARF, they receive a taxed lump sum.
This fixed tax rate of 30% is often lower than the inheritance tax rate of 33%, making ARF benefits to adult children more tax-efficient than other assets.
Then the payment may be treated as:
So, in these cases, two layers of tax may apply.
The right choice depends on getting very experienced financial advisers who can clearly explain tax and ARF rules concisely and simply. That is what our team loves to do every day of the week at ARF Ireland.

Pension, Tax & Investment Specialist

Owner &
Director

Communications Manager

Financial
Advisor

Financial Administrator
No. Any value remaining in your ARF can be paid to your beneficiaries/estate, subject to the rules and tax treatment.
In many cases, yes. Often it can be transferred into your spouse/civil partner’s name, which can be a very tax-efficient approach.
They can, but the tax outcome can vary depending on their circumstances (and may be very different to a spouse inheriting). Planning this correctly will be important.
It can be, because unused funds may pass on.
It depends on paperwork, provider requirements, and whether probate is needed. Keeping beneficiaries and documents up to date can help reduce delays.
Usually: death certificate, beneficiary details/ID, and insurance company claim forms (exact requirements vary by provider) and a grant of probate.

What IORPS II Really Means for Your Pension Retirement Options
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