Why One Missed Step in a Military Divorce Can Eliminate Everything
Your Divorce Is Final. The Pension Is Divided. And Then It Disappears.
Everything looks correct.
The court order divides the military pension.
Payments begin.
The structure seems solid.
Then the service member dies.
And the payments stop.
Completely.
No warning.
No continuation.
No protection.
Because the Survivor Benefit Plan (SBP) was never properly handled.
What SBP Actually Does (And Why It Matters More Than the Pension Itself)
The Survivor Benefit Plan (SBP) is not just another term in a divorce order.
It is the mechanism that determines:
Whether payments continue after the service member’s death.
Without SBP
- Payments stop immediately upon death
- The former spouse receives nothing
- The pension effectively disappears
With Proper SBP Coverage
- Payments continue for life
- Income remains protected
- The benefit survives the service member
The Critical Reality
A properly divided pension without SBP is:
a benefit that ends when it is needed most
The Hidden Trap: Pension Division Does NOT Include Survivor Protection
This is where most cases go wrong.
Courts—and many attorneys—focus on:
- Dividing the pension
- Calculating percentages
- Structuring payment formulas
But SBP is separate.
The Dangerous Assumption
Many people believe:
“If the pension is divided, I’m protected.”
That is not true.
The Reality
Pension division governs:
- Payments during the service member’s life
SBP governs:
- Payments after death
If SBP is not addressed:
there is no continuation of benefits
The 3 Most Common SBP Mistakes
These mistakes are not rare.
They are the norm in rejected and defective military divorce orders.
1. SBP Not Addressed at All
This is the most common and most damaging error.
The order:
- Divides the pension
- Says nothing about SBP
Result:
The benefit ends at death.
2. Incorrect Beneficiary Designation
SBP must clearly designate:
- “Former spouse” coverage
Common errors include:
- Leaving “spouse” designation in place
- Failing to update after divorce
- Using unclear or inconsistent language
3. Failure to Secure a Deemed Election
This is where many cases are permanently lost.
Even if the order includes SBP:
The former spouse must often submit a deemed election.
If not:
The service member may:
- Fail to elect coverage
- Change the designation
- Remarry and redirect benefits
The Deadline That Destroys Cases
This is one of the most unforgiving rules in military divorce.
The 1-Year Rule
A deemed election must typically be submitted:
within one year of the divorce order
Miss the Deadline
And the consequences can be severe:
- Loss of SBP coverage
- Loss of lifetime benefits
- Limited or no ability to correct
The Critical Problem
Most people:
- Are never told about this deadline
- Assume the order is enough
- Realize the issue too late
Why This Mistake Is So Common
This is not about carelessness.
It is about structure.
The Gap Between State Court and Federal Systems
Family law operates in:
- State courts
- Equitable distribution frameworks
SBP operates in:
- A federal system
- With strict administrative requirements
What That Means in Practice
Even well-drafted divorce orders:
- May not comply with federal requirements
- May omit critical SBP elements
- May fail when reviewed by DFAS
How SBP Problems Show Up in Real Cases
SBP issues often surface in one of three ways:
1. DFAS Rejects the Order
If SBP language is defective or inconsistent:
👉 DFAS may reject the entire order
For a full breakdown of why this happens, see:
👉 Why DFAS Rejected Your Military Divorce Order (And How to Fix It)
2. Payments Stop Unexpectedly
The most devastating scenario:
- Pension was being paid
- Service member dies
- Payments immediately stop
3. Benefits Are Redirected
If SBP was not secured:
- A new spouse may receive the benefit
- The former spouse is left with nothing
Can SBP Be Fixed After the Divorce?
This is where timing becomes critical.
Sometimes It Can Be Fixed
If:
- Deadlines have not passed
- The issue is identified early
- Corrective action is taken quickly
Often It Cannot
If:
- The 1-year deemed election deadline has passed
- The benefit has been reassigned
- The record is already locked
The Harsh Reality
SBP mistakes are among the few errors that can:
permanently eliminate a financial benefit
Why This Issue Is Frequently Missed—Even by Good Lawyers
This is not about competence.
It is about specialization.
Most Family Law Attorneys:
- Do not regularly handle military retirement systems
- Are not focused on federal benefit structures
- Do not track SBP deadlines or election mechanics
The Result
SBP becomes:
- An afterthought
- A single line in an order
- Or omitted entirely
How National Security Law Firm Structures SBP Correctly
At National Security Law Firm, SBP is not treated as a detail.
It is treated as:
a critical component of the overall benefit structure
Our Approach
We:
- Integrate SBP into the full pension division strategy
- Ensure proper beneficiary designation
- Align language with DFAS requirements
- Address timing and election mechanics
We Work With Your Divorce Attorney
We do not replace your lawyer.
We act as specialized federal compliance counsel, ensuring that:
- The order works in practice
- The benefit is protected long-term
- The structure survives DFAS review
How to Protect Yourself From SBP Mistakes
If you are currently in a divorce involving military retirement:
Do Not Assume SBP Is Handled
Review the order carefully.
If SBP is not clearly addressed:
it is a problem.
Do Not Wait
Timing matters.
Delays can:
- Limit options
- Eliminate rights
- Create irreversible outcomes
Get the Structure Right Before It Is Final
Because once the order is entered:
fixing it becomes significantly harder
Frequently Asked Questions
What is SBP in a military divorce?
The Survivor Benefit Plan (SBP) is a program that allows a former spouse to continue receiving payments after the service member’s death.
Is SBP automatic when a pension is divided?
No.
SBP must be:
- Specifically addressed
- Properly structured
- Timely elected
What happens if SBP is not included?
Payments stop upon death.
The former spouse may receive nothing.
What is a deemed election?
A deemed election allows the former spouse to secure SBP coverage by notifying DFAS directly, typically within a strict deadline.
What is the deadline for SBP election?
Generally:
within one year of the divorce order
Can SBP be added after divorce?
Sometimes—but not always.
It depends on:
- Timing
- Existing designations
- Whether deadlines have passed
Does DFAS enforce SBP provisions?
Only if they are:
- Properly structured
- Clearly stated
- Compliant with federal requirements
The Bottom Line
Military pension division is only part of the equation.
Without SBP:
- The benefit is temporary
- The protection is incomplete
- The risk is significant
And once the window to fix it closes:
the loss can be permanent
Military Pension Division Is a System—Not a Single Issue
SBP is not a standalone problem.
It is one piece of a larger system that governs how military retirement is divided, structured, and paid.
And that system is controlled not just by state divorce law—but by federal rules under the Uniformed Services Former Spouses’ Protection Act and DFAS requirements.
That means:
- Pension division
- SBP elections
- DFAS compliance
- Payment structure
All have to work together.
If one piece is wrong, the entire structure can fail.
If you want to understand how all of these components fit together—and how to structure a military divorce order that actually works—you should start here:
👉 DFAS-Compliant Military Divorce Orders — Structured Correctly the First Time
Protect the Benefit Before It’s Too Late
If you are:
- Going through a military divorce
- Reviewing an existing order
- Concerned about SBP coverage
- Facing uncertainty about your benefits
The most important step is ensuring the structure is correct before deadlines pass.