If you contributed to a retirement fund during any period of employment and were not paid out the benefits, they could be part of the many billions of rands of unpaid assets still invested in a retirement fund or an unclaimed benefit fund.
You may also be due unclaimed benefits if you are a dependant or are related to someone who has since passed away who contributed to a pension or provident fund while employed, but never received the benefits.
You may also be a beneficiary of unclaimed benefits if you are a former member of a fund that distributed a surplus in the fund after you left that fund.
How unpaid retirement benefits are defined
Unclaimed retirement benefits are dealt with in terms of the Pension Funds Act.
The Pension Funds Act defines unclaimed benefits as those that have not been paid out two years after a member has left the fund.
Since 2019, regulations under the Act have obliged employer-sponsored retirement funds to keep your benefits invested should you leave the fund before retirement, unless you request the funds to be paid out or transferred to another fund.
Read more: What happens to my savings in an employer-sponsored fund if I leave my employer?
This is likely to make it more difficult for funds to identify exactly when retirement benefits are unclaimed, but in cases where a member has retired or died, and the member or his or her family cannot be contacted, benefits may be identified as unclaimed.
How unpaid benefits are preserved
Unclaimed benefits that have not been paid out more than two years after you have left the fund, can be held in the fund or transferred to an unclaimed benefits fund.
The fund will be able to deduct reasonable costs incurred for attempting to trace members from benefits identified as unclaimed.
At all times, however, you still have the right to claim the money.
What can you do to access your unclaimed benefit?
If you know the name of the pension fund to which you belonged or to which a family member belonged, you can contact the pension fund directly.
If you do not know how to contact the fund, you can contact the Financial Sector Conduct Authority (FSCA).
The FSCA can provide you with the contact details of the pension or provident fund to enable you to claim unclaimed retirement fund benefits. Visit the FSCA's Unclaimed benefits page here or use its online search.
In order to claim from a fund you will need certain documents:
Tracing agents
If you are a member who has unclaimed assets or you are a beneficiary of unclaimed assets, you may be contacted by a tracing agent.
Tracing agents will ask you to send proof that you were a member or the dependant of a member.
Funds appoint tracing agents and pay their fees, so a legitimate tracing agent should not ask you to pay a fee.
A legitimate tracing agent will not be able to tell you how much you are due, as this information is held by the fund and the fund administrator. Only the fund administrator will tell you how much money is available.
If you want to check that the tracing agent is legitimate, contact the fund directly and ask if the fund appointed the agent.
What happens after you claim unpaid benefits
If you are a former member
If you left a fund or retired from a fund without taking benefits that you have now established are due to you, you can:
If the member left the fund and then died
If you are a relative of a deceased member with unpaid benefits in a fund that you are claiming, be aware that there is a difference between unpaid benefits for members who left a fund and then died, and members who died while still a member.
In the case of a member who left a fund and then died, the executor of the estate should claim the benefits.
If a member died while still a member
In the case of a member who died while still a member, and for whom death benefits are unpaid, the Pension Funds Act needs to be complied with.
The Act requires trustees of the fund to identify anyone who was financially dependent on the member, consider anyone the member named as a beneficiary and to distribute the benefits equitably among the dependants and beneficiaries.
The trustees may have already identified you as a someone to whom benefits should be distributed, or they may still need to investigate the family circumstances before they can pay out. Read more: What happens to my retirement savings if I die before retirement?
REMEMBER If a family member dies after retirement, it is possible they were no longer a member of the fund. They may have left the fund on retirement and been receiving a pension or annuity from an annuity provider. If the annuity was a guaranteed annuity, there would only be benefits due to any beneficiaries if the annuity had a guaranteed term that has not yet expired. If the member had an investment-linked living annuity provided by a life insurer and beneficiaries were named, any remaining investments can be paid to the beneficiaries. Alternatively, it will be paid into the member’s estate and distributed according to the will. If the member was being paid a pension by the fund, you will need ask about the rules of the fund and if there are any benefits due to a spouse or any other dependants. If the member had an investment linked living annuity provided by the fund, the trustees will decide how any remaining investments will be distributed to the dependants and any beneficiaries the member named in accordance with the Pension Funds Act. |