Spouse inherited Roth RMD options
Spouse died in 2009 at age 62 when his wife was 73. He had a converted his traditional IRA to a Roth a few years before he died. The surviving spouse has not treated this Roth as her own IRA. In 2018 the deceased spouse would have been 70.5 and the custodian has identified that an RMD is required. The distribution period from table 1 for the 82 year old wife is 9.1 which means she would have take out about 1/10 of the value of the account. She does not need to take the distributions.
Are there any consequences of not taking the RMD this year and just letting her be the deemed owner of the Roth after the end of the year?
Should she still consider retitling the IRA in her own name after the end of the year or can she do it this year without taking the RMD?
Permalink Submitted by Alan - IRA critic on Wed, 2018-01-24 23:27
While not taking a beneficiary RMD in 2018 will result in default to ownership of the inherited Roth, rather than having an inconsistency between the listed title and the default ownership, she should elect to assume ownership of the Roth right away, then have it retitled or rolled over to a new Roth account. There is no 2018 RMD requirement to do this. Her Roth account will be fully qualified and tax free, and there will be no question that her beneficiaries will be designated beneficiaries rather than successor beneficiaries.