An IRA is an investment account that you own in your individual name. In fact, during your life, only you (or a spouse) can own the IRA without it becoming taxable. It is, therefore, almost never advisable to transfer your IRA to your trust while you are living (the rare exceptions being certain types of planning where incurring the tax is acceptable under the plan, such as Medicaid planning or tax conversion planning).
Each year, you can contribute income that you earn, to an IRA subject to certain limits. For traditional IRAs, this contribution typically is deductible from your income, and then later withdrawals are subject to income tax. For Roth IRAs, the contribution generally is not tax deductible, and later withdrawals are tax-free. If you withdraw assets from either type of IRA before age 59 ½, you generally will incur an early-withdrawal penalty of 10%.
When you reach age 72, you must start taking required minimum distributions (RMDs) each year from a traditional IRA. The RMDs are based on your age and a life expectancy factor listed in tables published by the IRS. Roth IRAs are not subject to RMDs during your life.
If you withdraw only the RMDs from your IRA, there will normally be assets left in the IRA at your death. And, if the IRA has a high rate of investment return, it is possible your IRA will be more valuable at your death than it was when you started taking RMDs.
The IRA proceeds, normally, do not pass under the terms of your will or trust, but instead pass by way of the IRA beneficiary designation. The most common designations are to individuals – for example, all to a spouse or in equal shares to children. A trust, however, can be named as an IRA beneficiary, and in many instances, a trust is a better option than naming an individual or group of individuals.
When a trust is named as the beneficiary of an IRA, the trust inherits the IRA when the IRA owner dies. The IRA then is maintained as a separate account that is an asset of the trust. Some good reasons to consider naming a trust as an IRA beneficiary, instead of an individual, include:
- Avoiding Probate. Beneficiary designations, like all forms of Direct Transfer Designations work best when there is a tidy timing, order, and sequence to demise. If, however, a beneficiary survives, but does not prosecute a claim form (perhaps due to illness, incapacity, or incompetency), the proceeds will be subject to probate in the estate of the deceased beneficiary even if there is a contingent beneficiary. If a primary and contingent beneficiary both pass nefore the death of an account owner, and there is no other beneficiary, beneficiary, the proceeds will ordinarily pass as part of the account owner's probate estate. Each institution, however, will have its own rules, since beneficiary designations are governed by contract. This can create uncertainty regarding matters such as how long must the beneficiary survive the owner in order to be considered a beneficiary. Trusts remove these uncertainty, and do not involve probate since assets are distributed at the action of a Trustee, when the Trustee completes the administration, rather than being determined on an arbitrary dates such as when the account owner passes.
- Beneficiary Ownership Limitations. Perhaps the intended beneficiary is a minor who is legally unable to own the IRA. Or, perhaps the IRA owner wants to support an individual with special needs who will lose access to government benefits if he or she owns assets in his or her own name. A solution in both cases could be to name a trust as the IRA beneficiary, which will then become the legal owner in place of the minor or individual with special needs. More importantly, a trust can "spring" protection into place when needed. In other words, the beneficiary is protected even if s/he was healthy and not receiving government benefits when the account owner created the plan, but later unexpectedly suffered some change in circumstance creating disability, challenge or disadvantage to distribution.
- Second Marriage or Complicated Family Structures. An IRA owner may wish for RMDs to benefit his second spouse during the spouse’s lifetime, and then have the remainder of the IRA pass to his own children. If the IRA owner leaves the IRA outright to his spouse, he can be certain that his spouse will benefit, but he can’t guarantee that his children will receive anything. If he instead leaves the IRA to a properly structured trust, his desire to benefit both sets of beneficiaries can be carried out.
- Competent Management. We often hope IRA beneficiaries will take only the RMDs, but an individual who has inherited an IRA has the right to take larger distributions, or even withdraw the entire balance of the IRA. A beneficiary's access to an inherited IRA owned by a trust will be subject to the terms of the trust.
- Succession Control. When an individual IRA beneficiary inherits an IRA, s/he can name their own successor beneficiaries. If the IRA owner wishes to control succession beyond the initial beneficiary, the owner will need to set forth the succession terms in a trust and name the trust as the IRA beneficiary. Do you want your grandchildren, for example, to inherit the proceeds instead of your daughter or son-in-law?
- Creditor Protection. A person’s own IRA has some level of protection from creditors. Inherited IRAs do not enjoy the same protection; the U.S. Supreme Court ruled that inherited IRAs do not qualify under the Federal Bankruptcy Code as exempt from the claims of creditors as “retirement funds.” An inherited IRA held instead in a properly structured trust will not be an asset of the beneficiary and will have full or partial protection from creditors.
- Contingency Planning. What if....? What if a beneficiary becomes disabled, becomes incompetent, marries unwisely, becomes an addict, becomes a criminal, joins a cult, develops severe marital problems, finds bad luck and has numerous creditors, becomes a citizen of another nation that treats property differently, develops severe mental illness, becomes incarcerated or institutionalized? Trusts can be flexible forward looking instruments that permit planning you might think unlikely or even impossible. Beneficiary designations are only a name on a line, regardless of what happens after the name is written.
- Avoiding Estate Taxes. Most estate plans for wealthy individuals include trusts designed to minimize and postpone the payment of federal and state estate tax. For such estate plans to work as intended, the portion of these trusts that shelters an individual’s federal or state estate tax exemption amounts needs to be funded upon the individual’s death. Often, the only asset available to do this funding is an IRA.
- Minimizing Income/Capital Gains Taxes. Many estate plans include trusts designed to minimize and/or postpone the payment of federal and state income or capital gains tax. For such estate plans to work as intended, the portion of these trusts that produces deferral or maximizes step-up in basis need to be controlled by the trust. Beneficiary designations can, especially combined with other instruments, accomplish these, perhaps, but alone they are powerless to accomplish such objectives.
Regardless, there is little doubt that the luster of stretching an IRA to minimize income taxes is limited by the Secure Act. The rules about distributing an inherited IRA after the owner dies have changed. The preferred payout has long been the “stretch IRA,” where the post-death RMDs are stretched out, with annual distributions, over the life expectancy of the new IRA beneficiary. In this case, the IRA could continue to grow tax-deferred, often for many decades after the owner’s death.
The SECURE Act, passed in December of 2019, has significantly reduced the ability to create a stretch IRA. The prior stretch rule has been replaced, for most beneficiaries, with a 10-year rule that requires the IRA to be distributed out completely by the end of the tenth year following the year of the IRA owner’s death. It was originally believed that the 10-year rule does not require annual distributions, so long as the full amount is distributed by end of the tenth year. Unfortunately, new rules seem to require RMD's, defying the predictions of many pundits.
The new 10-year rule does not apply to the following beneficiaries (known as “eligible designated beneficiaries”): the IRA owner’s surviving spouse, the owner’s children while they are minors, certain individuals who are chronically ill or disabled, and any person who is not more than 10 years younger than the IRA owner. The stretch IRA is still available for these beneficiaries.
The post-death RMDs for a trust named as an IRA beneficiary will be calculated under either the stretch payout rule, the 10-year rule, or the 5-year rule, depending on certain attributes of the trust and the trust beneficiaries. It matters whether the trust qualifies as a see-through trust, whether it is a conduit trust or an accumulation trust, and whether the trust beneficiaries are non-individuals, “regular” beneficiaries, or part of the new class of “eligible designated beneficiaries.”
The analysis of which RMD rule applies is not always clear, and there are aspects of the SECURE Act that will require clarification through IRS regulations. For these reasons, among others, it is important to involve your estate planning attorney and accountant in any decision to name a trust as an IRA beneficiary. You will want to confirm that your reasons for naming a trust as your IRA beneficiary are reflected in the trust terms and will not be negated by the RMD payout rules. It is also important to review beneficiary designations to be sure that any trust beneficiaries are appropriately named.
It is important to note that the RMD payout rules are different than the payout rules of the trust. Even if an IRA must pay out under the 5-year rule to a trust named as the IRA beneficiary, it does not necessarily mean that the IRA assets will distribute out to the trust beneficiaries within five years. Instead, the terms of the trust regarding distribution to trust beneficiaries will apply. For example, if the trust is completely discretionary, then once the IRA assets are distributed out of the IRA to the trust itself, the after-tax proceeds of the IRA will remain invested with other assets of the trust until the trustee exercises its discretion to make a distribution to one or more of the beneficiaries.
No comments:
Post a Comment