Conflicting advice on IRA distribution…Merrill Edge
My father died in March 2015 at the age of 93.
Per his wishes, my brother (59) and me (66) are inheriting everything 50/50 per the terms of his will. He had a small IRA ($18,000) with Merrill Edge, and, unfortunately, did not have the beneficiaries configured properly. Our predeceased mother was the sole beneficiary. My brother and I were NOT listed as contingent beneficiaries.
Merrill Edge first said we qualified for Inherited IRA’s, then changed their tune and said only an Inherited IRA fbo the Estate, or a Lump Sum Distribution, is permitted. The amounts differ, but we’ve been told by professionals that we’ll be taxed heavily on a Lump Sum paid to the Estate.
How can we lessen the tax burden? Neither of us need the money immediately. We’re also concerned about what needs to be completed, if anything, by December 31, 2015. My brother’s Merrill LYNCH advisor said to take our dad’s RMD by the end of year.
Permalink Submitted by Alan - IRA critic on Wed, 2015-12-23 00:01
Permalink Submitted by Clyde Acolita on Wed, 2015-12-23 00:22
Thanks!I guess it’s a matter of the executor (my brother) pushing Merrill Edge hard enough. Any tips if they refuse that option? FWIW, one of our financial guys said if Merrill Edge won’t cooperate to transfer our dad’s IRA to an Inherited IRA FBO Estate, then transfer that Inherited IRA FBO Estate to another firm he knows will split it up 50/50 as regular Individual Inherited IRA’s. On the other hand, we’re only dealing with $18K total.The both of us incurrred a few thousand dollars in lost wages, moving expenses, legal fees, and travel costs cleaning out his property in Alabama over the course of 3 weeks and moving my dad’s items back to his California house. We also had legal (probate) costs in Alabama, which were relatively cheap. Can this be applied to lessening the tax burden, or would that only work if a lump sum was paid to the Estate?We can still try to get the 2015 RMD pulled off. I guess our main concern is throwing ourselves under the bus by not doing everything we should by December 31, 2015.
Permalink Submitted by Alan - IRA critic on Wed, 2015-12-23 00:47
This link explains the situation and includes a link to a suggested letter to send to the IRA custodian. I am sure a firm a large as ML knows all about this, but would rather just have the account liquidated. I will have to look into whether any of your costs could be deducted from the estate income, but I think just the probate and court costs. Again, I would not worry about the year end deadline since the IRS will likely waive any penalty. A 5329 would just have to be filed for the estate or with a 1041 if the estate if the estate needs to file one. Is there any other income passing through the estate besides possible IRA distributions?