IRA Beneficiaries
Hello –
Prior to The Secure Act, it made sense for a spouse who inherited a retirement plan to roll-it over into his/her own name in most cases (especially if that spouse had no anticipated needs for the monies if <59 1/2) in order to be able to name successor beneficiaries who would then be able to spread the lifetime RMD over their life expectancy.
Given The Secure Act and anyone not an eligible designated beneficiary needing to withdraw the funds by the end of the 10th year after death, if a husband were to pass, leaving his retirement account to his wife (whether a 401k, IRA, other type of qualified retirement plan, etc.), is there any necessity to roll the funds over to the spouse’s name since, whether the funds remain as an Inherited IRA by the spouse or are in the spouse’s own name, their children (assume not disabled or chronically ill and not minors) would be subject to the 10-year payout rule?
I recognize remaining an Inherited beneficiary is preferable in the event the inheriting spouse is <59 1/2 to avoid a 10% penalty in the event the beneficiary needs access to the funds prior to turning 59 1/2.
Thank you!
Jason
Permalink Submitted by Alan - IRA critic on Mon, 2021-01-18 17:27
You are correct that in most cases, the next beneficiary is only getting 10 years either way. However, if the surviving spouse maintains the account as inherited, they will be subject to much larger (Table I) RMDs than if they elected ownership, and their successor beneficiary would then inherit a smaller IRA.
An EDB is determined upon death of the owner, therefore if there is a child that is at risk of disability later on, the child is an EDB if they inherit from an owner, and they cannot be an EDB if they inherit as a successor beneficiary.
As the IRS found several years ago in PLR 2004 50057 that a QRP’s surviving spouse could do a direct rollover to an inherited IRA, it is generally a good idea to do this to avoid the problems the successor beneficiary might face if they inherited a QRP. Surviving spouse can still elect ownership of that inherited IRA down the road when it becomes an advantage.