Understanding QDROs and the Hodorowski Group, LLC 401(k) Plan
Dividing retirement assets during divorce can be tricky, especially when dealing with a company-sponsored 401(k) plan such as the Hodorowski Group, LLC 401(k) Plan. This guide will walk you through how a Qualified Domestic Relations Order—or QDRO—is used to fairly divide this specific plan. Whether you’re the plan participant or the alternate payee (usually a former spouse), knowing your rights and responsibilities can make a big difference in your financial outcome.
At PeacockQDROs, we’ve completed thousands of QDROs from start to finish. That means we don’t just draft the order and leave you to figure out the rest. We handle the drafting, preapproval (if applicable), court filing, submission, and follow-up with the plan administrator. That’s what sets us apart from firms that only prepare the document and hand it off to you.
Plan-Specific Details for the Hodorowski Group, LLC 401(k) Plan
- Plan Name: Hodorowski Group, LLC 401(k) Plan
- Sponsor: Hodorowski group, LLC 401(k) plan
- Address: 20250731122431NAL0006040161001, 2024-01-01
- EIN: Unknown (required for QDRO processing)
- Plan Number: Unknown (required for QDRO processing)
- Industry: General Business
- Organization Type: Business Entity
- Status: Active
- Plan Year: Unknown to Unknown
- Effective Date: Unknown
- Participants: Unknown
- Assets: Unknown
Because the plan is part of a General Business operation run by a Business Entity, you should expect typical 401(k) features such as employer matching contributions, vesting schedules, loan opportunities, and possibly different account types (Roth and traditional).
What Is a QDRO and Why You Need One
A QDRO is a legal order that instructs a retirement plan administrator to divide a plan participant’s retirement account to give a portion to an alternate payee, typically an ex-spouse. Without a QDRO, the plan cannot legally pay retirement benefits to anyone other than the participant, even if divorce paperwork says otherwise.
This makes the QDRO process absolutely essential if you’re dividing a plan like the Hodorowski Group, LLC 401(k) Plan in divorce.
Key Issues When Dividing a 401(k) Plan
Employee and Employer Contributions
401(k) accounts often receive both employee contributions (your own income) and employer contributions (like matches or profit-sharing). A QDRO can divide both types of funds. However, employer contributions may be subject to a vesting schedule—a timeline of when the employee legally owns those funds.
Only the vested portion of the employer contributions can be awarded in a QDRO. If the participant hasn’t hit full vesting by the cutoff date (often the date of separation or divorce), the unvested portion can’t be shared with the alternate payee.
Vesting Schedules and Forfeitures
In general business organizations like Hodorowski group, LLC 401(k) plan, employer contributions may be forfeited if the participant leaves the company before being fully vested. When drafting a QDRO, it’s important to determine how much of the account is vested and what might still be forfeited.
At PeacockQDROs, we help interpret this kind of language—and make sure your QDRO reflects exactly what you’re entitled to, no more and no less.
Loan Balances and Repayments
Many 401(k) plans allow participants to borrow from their accounts—and that includes the Hodorowski Group, LLC 401(k) Plan. If the participant has an outstanding loan, it affects the total value of the account. The QDRO can treat that loan in a few different ways:
- Exclude the loan from the alternate payee’s share, assigning it solely to the participant
- Include it in the marital balance to be shared, even though the payee won’t receive any loan funds
This choice can change the share percentages significantly. Make sure your QDRO attorney understands how to handle outstanding loans based on your goals.
Roth vs. Traditional 401(k) Funds
If the Hodorowski Group, LLC 401(k) Plan includes both Roth and traditional accounts, those must be treated separately. Roth accounts grow tax-free, while traditional accounts are taxed later upon distribution. Mixing them during division can create unwanted tax issues for the alternate payee.
The QDRO must specify what portion comes from which account type. For example, you could receive 50% of the Roth subaccount and 50% of the traditional subaccount—or direct a lesser share of one type based on tax planning strategies.
Steps to Divide the Hodorowski Group, LLC 401(k) Plan Through a QDRO
Step 1: Gather Plan Information
Before anything else, you’ll need plan contact details, the formal plan name (Hodorowski Group, LLC 401(k) Plan), the plan sponsor (Hodorowski group, LLC 401(k) plan), and ideally the plan number and EIN. If you don’t have the latter two, try contacting the HR department or reviewing plan documents.
Step 2: Draft the QDRO
Unlike other legal documents, QDROs must follow Internal Revenue Code Section 414(p), ERISA guidelines, and match plan-specific rules. At PeacockQDROs, we make sure your QDRO meets every requirement and includes necessary details like:
- Names and addresses of both parties
- Identification of the plan (by name and number)
- Amount or percentage awarded to the alternate payee
- Handling of any earnings or losses on the awarded share
- Loan balance instructions
- Whether Roth and traditional funds are treated differently
Step 3: Submit for Pre-Approval (If Applicable)
Some plan administrators require a pre-approval of draft QDROs before they will honor them post-court approval. This can save a lot of time and unnecessary revisions. We handle this stage whenever it’s an option—with successful results.
Step 4: Obtain Court Approval
Once you have a finalized draft, it must be formally signed by both parties and then be entered as a court order through your divorce court. Only once it’s signed by a judge does it become a “Qualified” Domestic Relations Order.
Step 5: Submit to Plan Administrator for Processing
The final step is getting the approved QDRO to the plan administrator. We also monitor the process from here until the funds are assigned properly and the alternate payee receives confirmation.
Common Mistakes to Avoid
A poorly drafted QDRO can be rejected—delaying your retirement division for months or worse. We frequently see divorcing couples make these common QDRO mistakes:
- Forgetting to specify the valuation date
- Omitting how gains/losses apply
- Failing to address loans, especially if outstanding
- Mixing Roth and traditional money improperly
How Long Will the Process Take?
It’s a question we hear all the time. The honest answer? It depends. But our guide on the 5 key factors that determine QDRO timing can give you the real-world variables to pay attention to—like plan responsiveness, court backlog, and whether revisions are needed.
Why Choose PeacockQDROs?
We specialize in retirement division and QDROs—nothing else. Our clients often find us after getting incomplete or rejected work from general lawyers. We work start-to-finish, and we maintain near-perfect reviews and pride ourselves on a track record of doing things the right way.
Our full-service QDRO work means fewer headaches—and real peace of mind during what is already a challenging time.
Final Thoughts
The Hodorowski Group, LLC 401(k) Plan is subject to all the complexities that come with modern 401(k) plan division—like vesting, loans, and mixed account types. A QDRO gives you the only legal way to ensure retirement assets are divided properly and won’t result in penalties or tax issues.
And with the right help, the process doesn’t have to be overwhelming.
If your divorce was in California, New York, New Jersey, Connecticut, Kansas, Missouri, Iowa, or North Dakota, and you have questions about qualified domestic relations orders or dividing retirement assets like the Hodorowski Group, LLC 401(k) Plan, contact PeacockQDROs. We specialize in QDROs and have successfully processed thousands of orders from start to finish.
Get the answers you need—explore our QDRO resources or reach out for personalized help if you’re in one of our service states.