IRA owner and primary beneficiary die without naming beneficiary
I was just retained to help settle some accounts for a client who is the administrator of his parent’s estate and I would like to confirm my understanding.
My client’s father had an IRA and he named his wife as primary beneficiary and their son as contingent beneficiary. The IRA owner died in 2018 at 87 and the spouse subsequently died in 2019 at 88. Unfortunately, the IRA was never transferred to the beneficiary spouse and the IRA beneficiary was not updated. Both IRA owner and beneficiary spouse were over 70 1/2 and the son is 65. There was no trust in place and assets are going through probate.
According to the custodial agreement with Vanguard, the IRA goes to the “estate” of the spouse beneficiary since the IRA was never transferred to the spouse and there were no beneficiary updates.
Questions: Is there any way it could possibly be transferred to the contingent beneficiary of the original owner of the IRA, the son? If not, I believe we use the non-recalculated single life expectancy of the original IRA owner payable to the estate, correct?
How can we avoid keeping the estate open for such a long time? Can the estate be closed and can the administrator of the estate instruct the custodian to transfer the inherited IRA into the inherited IRA for the estate beneficiary, the son? If so, what is the tax code or rule number that support this?
Thank you for your assistance.
Permalink Submitted by Alan - IRA critic on Sat, 2020-08-22 02:35
Permalink Submitted by Louis Windawi on Wed, 2020-08-26 22:07
Alan, I really appreciate your prompt reply and input, it does help a lot. Thank you. Louis