One-time spousal Rollover of a Traditional IRA inherited from a deceased wife
Background: I am over 70-1/2 (will be age 74 at the end of 2018) and taking RMDs from my traditional IRA. My wife passed away in 2017. She would not have been 70-1/2 until 2020 (at which time my end of year age will be 76). We both have substantial traditional IRAs and both IRAs are about 98% taxable income when taking distributions. I elected to “inherit” her IRA in 2017 because: (1) I did not need the income from her IRA and (2) it would permit me to delay having to RMDs until the year she would have been 70-1/2 (i.e., 2020).
My plan is to do a one-time permitted Rollover of my wife’s now inherited IRA in to my IRA prior to 2020 (when she would have turned 70-1/2). The reason for this rollover is so that my RMD will be smaller because I can use Table III (Uniform Lifetime) rather that leaving her IRA as “inherited” and having to take RMDs under Table I (Single Life Expectancy/For Use by Beneficiaries). My RMD using Table III at age 76 (factor = 22.0) generates a much smaller RMD than using Table I at age 76 (factor 12.7). Since I don’t need the money and would like it to continue to grow tax free for my child, I plan on doing a one-time rollover from the traditional IRA I inherited from my decease wife in to my traditional IRA.
Question: I would like to confirm that all of my assumptions in the two previous paragraphs are correct, and secondly that I should make the one-time rollover of the inherited IRA in to my IRA sometime after 12/31/2018 and before 12/31/2019. Additionally, assuming that I made that rollover in 2019, my RMD for 2019 would be computed only on my end of 2018 IRA balance – that is, without the amount of the inherited IRA from my wife.
I would appreciate any comments regarding my plan.
Permalink Submitted by Alan - IRA critic on Sat, 2018-06-09 19:30
Permalink Submitted by James Bradley on Sun, 2018-06-10 22:13
Alan, Thanks for your quick and precise response. Jim