I was reading your KiwiSaver column and a sentence caught my attention: "Once the money has gone into your KiwiSaver account it belongs to you, and if you were to turn 65 tomorrow you could apply to withdraw it all". But is it really yours? Or are you merely the temporary owner until part or all of your hard-earned and saved money is claimed by someone else? I was recently speaking with a woman who separated from her husband. She was really upset when her solicitor said she had to give her ex-husband 50 per cent of her KiwiSaver, as the lazy so-and-so hadn't bothered to ever start his own. The 50 per cent KiwiSaver value was knocked off her 50 per cent share of the house sale proceeds. This means she cannot afford to buy another house or get the First Home buyer options available under KiwiSaver.
You have raised an important issue - the impact of a relationship property claim on a person's KiwiSaver savings, or indeed any asset that they own at the time of a relationship breakdown.
I am not qualified to give legal advice, but as far as KiwiSaver is concerned it is an asset and could be included in any division of property.
I referred this question to Emma Dale, senior associate with law firm Chapman Tripp in Auckland. She says "Your reader is correct in that a KiwiSaver account balance is a person's asset (albeit that it is held in trust with rules regarding its use).
Because a KiwiSaver scheme balance forms part of a person's assets, it is therefore available in situations of property relationship settlements just as other investment funds would be.