Spousal Exception for RMDs from IRA
Page 126 of Ed’s new book notes that the rule for using the Joint Life Expectancy Table applies “when the spouse is 10 years younger AND is the sole beneficiary for the entire year.” Does that mean if the spouse is listed as primary beneficiary to 100% of the IRA that listing a son, for example, as the contingent beneficiary (also 100%), the exception is violated? Or so long as the spouse is 100% primary (in other words, the sole primary beneficiary), having a contingent beneficiary is a non-issue in this regard?
Thanks for any feedback on this.
Permalink Submitted by Alan - IRA critic on Sat, 2021-03-20 16:51
Contingent beneficiary is a non issue, so the IRA owner can use the joint table if sole spousal beneficiary is MORE THAN 10 years younger. 10 years produces the same result as the Uniform Table which assumes the beneficiary is exactly 10 years younger.
Permalink Submitted by David Toberisky on Sun, 2021-03-21 12:11
Thanks for your reply and the clarification.