Still working exception
Taxpayer is an employee of Employer A, a partnership. Taxpayer was not an owner during the year he attained age 70 1/2. He has used the still working exception to delay his RMD withdrawals from the retirement plan of the employer.
Taxpayer is a partner (more than 5% during the year he attained age 70 1/2) in a partnership. He has taken his RMD since attaining his required beginning date.
Is it possible to structure a merger of the two partnerships which would permit the still working exception to remain in effect?
Permalink Submitted by Alan - IRA critic on Fri, 2023-08-18 14:19
I assume taxpayer was born prior to 7/1/1949, indicating that the year they turned 70.5 is the correct year for >5% ownership determination. Probably the easiest way to reduce RMDs would be to first take the RMD for employer B’s plan, then do a direct rollover of the balance into Employer A’s plan in December of each year. That will result in a very low balance in A’s plan at year end and a very low 2024 RMD. Of course, plan A would have to accept rollovers from other plans. If that plan will accept IRA rollovers but not from other plans, taxpayer could roll B’s balance to a rollover IRA, then do another to Plan A. This would eliminate the complexities of mergers of the two employers and having to terminate the plan of B. Taxpayer should also consider that deferral of several RMDs using the exception could result in having very large RMDs when they finally start. This is a larger problem if taxpayer plans to work to 80 or beyond.