Riester-Rente: Death and the Riester Contract
Written by Mark Lauterwein

Wednesday, 09 January 2008

Fundamentally the Riester-Rente is intended solely for the provision of the saver's own pension. The important exception in the event of the saver's death, is his partner with whom he was married up until the time of his death. When other relatives inherit the Riester funds, state contributions (a significant sum) need to be paid back to the government.

The remainder is taxed although this does not constitute a significant further reduction. The partner can inherit Riester Funds without having to pay back the state contributions provided these are transferred to their own Riester-Rente. It is by-the-by whether the partner of the deceased already has a Riester-Rente in place or not. When a new one is opened the tranferred scheme can carry on from where it left off.

Provided the Riester-Saver had not entered the so called annuitisation phase (Restverrentungsphase) before he died then the spouse can receive the sum of the saved monies. This phase begins at 58. At this threshold the savings plan switches over to a pension insurance scheme automatically which guarantees the saver a life long income. However, after this point a full inheritance of these monies is not possible. Should the Riester-Saver die a few years after the onset of the Restverrentungsphase there will hardly be any money for the next of kin. This is because the costs of insuring the pension are spread over the first five years although this depends on the terms and conditions of the policy in question.

The Riester saver can even reduce his premiums by stipulating that his spouse receives no monies in the event of his death. Furthermore the saver can arrange a guaranteed pension period (Rentengarantiezeit). If this stretches to five years then the pension payments will be made to the partner in the event of the saver's death. However, those who have arranged a clause precluding any such arrangement in the event of their death would be better sorting out a separate life insurance policy.

In conclusion, normally funds from a Riester-Rente would go to partner of the saver in the event of his or her death. However the conditions of the pension insurance policy should always be examined in this regard.

Article Source: http://www.ArticleBlast.com

About The Author:

Mark Lauterwein is a UK based writer currently researching the Riester-Rente scheme.

Comments On This Article:

Only registered users can write comments.
Please login or register.


You are welcome to publish this article free of charge on your website, newsletter, or e-zine, provided:

Site Menu
Home
Create An Account
FAQ's
Contact Us
ArticleBlast Site News
Article Categories
Advertising & Marketing
Animals & Pets
Arts & Entertainment
Auto & Trucks
Babies & Parenting
Business & Management
Computers & Internet
E-Com & Online Biz
Food & Drink
Health & Exercise
Home & Family
Home Improvement
Kids & Teens
Laws & Legal
Men
Money & Finance
News & Society
Real Estate
Reviews
School & Education
Self Improvement
Sports & Recreation
Travel & Leisure
Web Development
Website Promotion
Women
Writing
Login
Username

Password

Remember me
Forgotten your password?


Site Sponsors:

USFranchiseNews.com - Franchise News, Press Releases, Franchise Opportunities Divine Write - Advertising Copywriter, Website Copywriter, SEO Copywriter Become An ArticleBlast Site Sponsor
Sunday, July 06th 2008