Showing posts with label SECURE Act. Show all posts
Showing posts with label SECURE Act. Show all posts

Thursday, April 29, 2021

Inherited IRA Beneficiaries May Be Required To Take RMD’s

The SECURE Act became law on January 1, 2020 and made several changes to the rules for retirement accounts. One provision is that non-spouse beneficiaries of IRAs, with a few exceptions, must deplete the account within 10 years of the original owner’s death. This applies to all deaths after January 1, 2020. With this requirement, the SECURE Act put an end to the IRA Trust, which allowed IRA beneficiaries to stretch the Required Minimum Distributions (RMDs) over beneficiary’s  entire lifetime. Stretching was limited to a child and/or a grandchild or a qualifying trust benefitting a child and or a grandchild.

Many legal experts who analyzed the SECURE Act assumed the new 10-year rule would work like the existing 5-year rule for IRAs whose owners died prior to 72 and that had no designated beneficiary: although all funds had to be depleted within that time frame, no annual RMDs were required. The publication of IRS 590-B on March 21, 2021  (see pages 11-12), suggests the assumption was wrong and that the Internal Revenue Service requires RMDs.

590-B appears to suggest that not only would non-spouse beneficiaries of IRAs have to empty the entire account within ten years, but they also might  be required to take annual required minimum distributions in years 1-9. Those withdrawals would be based on the beneficiary’s own age and life expectancy. 

The tax implications are significant. Beneficiaries of traditional IRAs would have to pay taxes on their withdrawals, based on their tax bracket. Beneficiaries of Roth IRAs would lose the opportunity for the entire amount to grow tax-free before withdrawing it all at the end of the ten-year period.  This, of course, is the federal government's intention; the SECURE Act removes the tax benefits of stretch IRAs and ensures the government a meaningful opportunity to collect taxes as soon as possible.

The IRS rule has not been finalized, and is now open for public comment. Non-spouse IRA beneficiaries should be aware that depending on what happens, they may have to take a withdrawal this year. 

RMD's for 2020 were waived, by the way, due to COVID-19.

Monday, February 3, 2020

Secure Act- As the Dust Settles

The SECURE Act was passed in late December, so the first few weeks of the year brought significant discussion about what it means, what it accomplishes, and how it effects estate and financial plans.  Fleming and Curti, PLC, in Tuscon, Arizona assembled the "most interesting articles, blog posts, and musings" regarding the Secure Act.  Among them was, of course, Attorney Robert B. Fleming's highlights,  but noted that many others were "giving similar overviews."  
Here are just a few:

Natalie Choate, the universally recognized guru of estate planning and retirement plans provides a "deep dive" in the form of a 35-page analysis.
Fleming and Curti noted: 
"[a]s the days passed, more reading ensued. Nuances of the Act, some good and some not so good, were dissected and discussed. Because this is still new, expect this to continue in the months (and probably years) ahead." 
Among the interesting reads on specific Act-related topics:
In addition, to deal with the much-discussed loss of the “stretch” for inherited IRAs, different strategies are emerging:
Of course, there is a lot more out there. If you are interested in ongoing analysis, there’s The Slott Report, with almost daily posts on IRA news. Don’t believe everything you read, though. Especially right after a new law arrives, be mindful that 1) it takes a while for the dust to settle, 2) regulations, certain to come along, should clarify some things, and 3) every person’s situation is different. Plan to talk with your financial advisor and estate planning attorney.
This blog will post a separate article in a few days outlining how our office is revising trusts, and IRA beneficiary strategies as a result of the Secure Act.  The most obvious impact, of course, is the loss of the "stretch" IRA for the generation of an IRA owner's grandchildren.  IRA trusts still have utility, but the financial benefits are obviously less compelling.   There is not, however, an utter loss of the tax deferral for children or spouses, however, despite misinformation to the contrary.  The ten-year pay-out rule is not always the result, for good or ill.  Stay tuned!     

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