Traditional Ira converts to annuity — when to take RMD
I am changing my Traditional IRA to an annuity in 2019. Do I need to take my 2019 RMD before I annuitize?
I am changing my Traditional IRA to an annuity in 2019. Do I need to take my 2019 RMD before I annuitize?
Permalink Submitted by Alan - IRA critic on Tue, 2019-01-15 01:25
Permalink Submitted by Ellen Schneider on Tue, 2019-01-15 15:23
Thanks so much for the information! I do have a second Traditional IRA from which I can take the RMD for 2019 for both IRAs. Since I have all my 12/31/18 statements, I have figured out how much I need to take for total RMD for 2019. So, I think I will take the RMD out before annuitizing. I certainly want to avoid a 50% penalty. I just wasnt sure if the annuity payment would cover an RMD every year. I will contact the insurance company and find out how they handle this. Hopefully, they fully understand the tax law. Of course, I will get back to you and let you know what they say.
Permalink Submitted by Alan - IRA critic on Tue, 2019-01-15 16:49
Having the other IRA makes this much easier and avoid messy calculations. However, there is no need to complete your RMD from the non annuity account and then add an entire year of annuity payouts to that. What you can do is simply determine how much the annuity will pay out for the year (# of months times the monthly payout), then subtract that amount from your total RMD and take the difference from your non annuity IRA anytime before the end of the year. Once the following year arrives, it is very simple as whatever the annuity pays you will be the RMD for that contract, and you will satisfy the RMD for your other IRA in the usual manner. In other words, after the annuitization year, the RMDs for each account are totally independent of each other. You don’t have any “basis” in your IRA, do you?
Permalink Submitted by Ellen Schneider on Fri, 2019-01-18 01:50
The insurance company said I do not have to take an RMD provided that I annuitize the entire amount of my traditional IRA. This is what they wrote: :The reason your RMD will automatically be satisfied for your Traditional IRA if you annuitize your IRA accumulation in 2019 is because when you annuitize the accumulation, you automatically satisfy the requirement. There is no longer an RMD amount you need to take because you annuitized the accumulation, not because of the amount of the RMD. However, please note that in order to satisfy the requirement, you must annuitize your full accumulation. If you annuitize a portion of the accumulation, you will still be required to withdraw the RMD amount for any portion that was not annuitized. “
Permalink Submitted by Alan - IRA critic on Fri, 2019-01-18 04:35