Delayed Discovery of Granddaughter’s Inherited IRA
My granddaughter recently discovered she was the beneficiary of the IRA held by her stepfather. Her stepfather passed away in 2016 and my granddaughter was never notified of the IRA. The company holding the IRA has indicated she would need to establish a beneficiary account and take a lump sum distribution. Evidently, she is past the period of time when she could have requested to distributions under the 5 year rule in effect at that time. Since it appears she will need to take a lump sum distribution, will it be satisfactory with the IRS if should she reports and file taxes on the full distribution as part of her how 2024 tax return or is there other steps that need to be addressed?
Permalink Submitted by Alan - IRA critic on Thu, 2024-01-04 15:37
Almost all IRA agreements default to LE RMDs for beneficiaries, not the 5 year rule (assuming step father passed prior to RBD). Under IRS PLR 2008-11028 the IRS allowed a beneficiary to make up late LE RMDs and preserve their stretch. Normally, the IRA agreement does not give the custodian authority to force out distributions. However, the account balance, the need for funds, and the added calculations (determining each year ending account balance) and reporting may not warrant the beneficiary pursuing LE RMDs. Either way, there will be a need to file multiple Form 5329 forms to request that the IRS waive the penalty for missed RMDs.
Permalink Submitted by Edd Rhoades on Fri, 2024-01-05 17:37
I greatly appreciate your feedback. I have some addittional questions for clarification on how to best proceed. They are in a general comment I made below before seeing the reply option specific to your post.