Placing a Roth IRA Account in a Revocable Trust with a beneficiary designation
I have a Revocable Trust. I have a trust account that includes some equities in a trust account for me and in another trust account for my wife……I havew (5) Roth IRA accounts that are not in my trust. Should they be? I have different beneficiary designations for each of these (5) Roth accounts. I was recently advised to put these Roth accounts into our trust accounts so they do not have to go through Probate… but, our trust accounts do not provide for beneficiary designations are are destined to go to our children…whereas some of the Roth accounts are for our grandchildren….my question is…can i place in a Trust account and still have a beneficiary designation for these Roth accounts??
I was told that if these Roth accounts are not in a trust they could be tied up for some time and not be available to their designated beneficiaries??
Permalink Submitted by Alan - IRA critic on Sun, 2023-11-05 17:08
Only an individual can own an IRA. A trust can be named as beneficiary of an IRA and inherit it when the owner passes and the trustee of the trust will then control the inherited IRA according to the provisions stated in the trust. The trust needs to be drafted to meet the requirements of a “qualified trust” to avoid having a limited distribution period for a Roth IRA of 5 years, and the trustee must submit the trust provisions to the IRA custodian by 10/31 of the year following your death or the trust will not be qualified, regardless of how drafted. There are several purposes for trusts, depending on your goals, but avoiding probate is not one of them since naming a direct beneficiary on your IRAs also avoids probate. Do your beneficiaries need creditor protection including from spouses or is a trust needed to control distributions to spendthrift beneficiaries? Typically, due to the Secure Act, unless the trust beneficiaries are disabled or chronically ill, an inherited IRA will have to be distributed in 10 years. What you were told about IRAs being tied up is not true, as a named beneficiary (if not a minor) can immediately file a death certificate and provide their contact info to the IRA custodian and have control of their inherited IRA in a couple weeks after your death.