Estate IRA
How can I get information on an estate IRA? The decedent was 92 years old in year of death and had a traditional IRA. No beneficiary. IRA goes into an estate IRA. The bank says it goes into an estate IRA and can then be cashed out. There is more than one heir. How can the IRA be split among heirs? Does the bank who holds the IRA make IRAS for each heir? If the IRA is cashed out, are there federal income taxes on the IRA, like early withdrawl? This is all very confusing and I would like to know the best way to proceed. I saw the following on your site. Please explain further given the circumstances I described above.
“In the second option, death occurs after the RBD.
Here Kate died on September 13, 2013. Now distributions to the estate can be made using the balance of Kate’s life expectancy. Kate turned 71 in the year of her death. The life expectancy factor (from the IRS Single Life Table) is 16.3. When the estate calculates its first required distribution (RMD) it will use a factor of 15.3. You subtract one from the previous year’s factor each year to get the factor for the current year.
Does the estate have to remain open for the next 15.3 years in order to receive the annual RMDs? IRS says no, it does not. When the estate inherits, a properly titled inherited IRA is set up for the estate. Example: John Smith, deceased, IRA fbo (for benefit of) J. Smith Estate
When the estate is closed, the executor or personal representative of the estate informs the IRA custodian that the shares for each beneficiary of the estate should be assigned to inherited IRAs in their names. A direct transfer of inherited IRA assets is done to an inherited IRA fbo each estate beneficiary. This does not change how the RMDs are calculated. The beneficiaries must continue to use the balance of Kate’s life expectancy. Now the estate can be closed.”
Permalink Submitted by Alan - IRA critic on Thu, 2019-05-23 21:19
Permalink Submitted by CECI DEV on Fri, 2019-05-24 00:58
Thank you. The bank has already said it only wants to do an estate IRA. Could I take this estate IRA to another bank who may assign it to individual inherited IRAs for each estate beneficiary? The value of the IRA is about $82K and 5 beneficiaries one at 10%, the other 4 at 22.5%. Also, another mistake was made. 3 uncashed distribution checks were found. The bank said they had to go back into the IRA. I read the post that they could have been deposited into the estate checking account. Can I ask for those 3 checks to be re-issued? The bank was wrong in that the checks were made out to the decedent and could not be put into the decedents estate account because they were not made out to “The Estate of…”. Checks were around $24.5K in total. Please advise.
Permalink Submitted by Alan - IRA critic on Fri, 2019-05-24 01:43
Permalink Submitted by CECI DEV on Fri, 2019-05-24 02:51
Thank you so much.
Permalink Submitted by CECI DEV on Fri, 2019-05-24 03:08
I should also say that, the IRA is subject to inheritance tax by the state. So, with having to pay federal income tax as well, the amount actually inherited in greatly diminished.
Permalink Submitted by CECI DEV on Fri, 2019-05-24 11:43
I cannot thank you enough. I have a clear idea of the goal going forward.
Permalink Submitted by Alan - IRA critic on Fri, 2019-05-24 16:04
Permalink Submitted by CECI DEV on Fri, 2019-05-24 19:53
Hi, Again, Thank you so much.
Permalink Submitted by CECI DEV on Fri, 2019-05-24 20:10
Hi,So I talked to the bank and they will code the checks as a death withdrawl on a 1099R to the estate.
Permalink Submitted by Alan - IRA critic on Fri, 2019-05-24 20:40
Permalink Submitted by CECI DEV on Fri, 2019-05-24 21:32
Hi,
Permalink Submitted by David Mertz on Fri, 2019-05-24 22:43
If the bank insists on issuing a code 4 2019 Form 1099-R to the estate, corresponding to the reissued checks, they must also issue a corrected 2018 Form 1099-R to indicate that this money was *not* distributed in 2018 and they must issue a corrected 2018 Form 5498 to include this money in the reported year-end FMV. It makes no sense for them to do that, though, since it’s far easier for them to just reissue the checks with no reporting on a 2019 Form 1099-R.
Permalink Submitted by CECI DEV on Fri, 2019-05-24 23:17
Makes sense for the 2018 check. What about for the other 3 years? 2015, 6 and 7?I will have to try and speak with someone else at the bank and if necessary retain an advocate because all of this seems very straight forward regarding re-issuing the checks and I am not sure why they are reluctant. The person I spoke with said that this has not happened to them before and I think that is why.
Permalink Submitted by Alan - IRA critic on Sat, 2019-05-25 02:18
Now I see why the taxable income for 2018 will be lower – up to now I assumed that all these checks were distributed in 2018, not in prior years. Because of issue date, the checks are stale and probably were not negotiable as a result, so they HAD to be reissued. Decedent has been paying taxes on money all along that was never deposited. The replacement checks can be issued to the estate as long as no 1099R is issued. If the bank’s processing platform cannot handle this without a 1099R, then they should issue the checks to the decedent as pure replacements with no reporting, and send them to you for deposit into the estate account. If this is a small bank without experienced staff, they must have other resouces they can check with that are able to understand that there are RMD issues and taxes already paid based on prior 1099R forms.
Permalink Submitted by CECI DEV on Sat, 2019-05-25 04:19
I went to the bank to ask if the checks were still good. They told me they had to take the checks and told me I had to sign the checks. I did not know they were depositing them into the IRA account. This was wrong. They should not have done that. The checks should have only gone into the estate account. The checks could not have been stale otherwise they wouldn’t have done that. Is it possible to reverse this and have the checks re-issued? They haven’t done anything with the 1099s in their system yet although they were going to make it seem like the checks were never issued and reverse the 1099s. I don’t see how they could do that.
Permalink Submitted by CECI DEV on Sat, 2019-05-25 04:32
Plus, I never asked them to deposit the 2018 check. When the woman on the phone said she could re-issue the checks and what about the 2018 check, I said to re-issue that too after she checks. She was going to check on things and get back to me. Then after all of the they ca’tissue checks to dead people talk, she told me she already cancelled that check and deposited it. I said I never asked her to do it and she said the money has to go somewhere, it can’t just be out there. If anything, this 2018 check needs to be re-issued. And before, she told me they could re-issue the checks. Their problem is re-issuing the checks to a dead person, which they say they cannot do. I wonder if that is true. I don’t think they can take a contribution to an IRA of a dead person either.
Permalink Submitted by Alan - IRA critic on Sat, 2019-05-25 17:45
I think what they are doing is voiding the 4 checks and re issueing the total amount in a check payable to the estate. You can then deposit it in the estate account. The replacement check offsets the voided checks so the IRA account balance should not change when all is done. Of course, you need to check the IRA balance to make sure it is correct. They also cannot report the replacement check as a distribution to the estate since these amounts were already reported and taxes paid (I assume) in prior years. That would leave things as they should be with the money from these IRA distributions in the estate account for you to distribute according to the will (or state intestate provisions if there was no will). Also, note that this is the same end result as if the decedent deposited the checks in their checking account and then passed. The checking balance would be part of the estate as it will be once the bank issues replacement checks.
Permalink Submitted by CECI DEV on Sat, 2019-05-25 18:45
They are not doing that. The checking account was closed. They took the checks and deposted them in the IRA. I signed the checks, they told me I had to. Behind the scenes they were trying to make it look like they had never been issued. When I called to ask if the IRA could be transferred to another bank who could retitle it the way I asked for it to be to beneficiaries, they said that yes it could. That is when I found out about the checks. I asked for them to be re-issued and at first she said they could then later came back and said they could not do that, they could not issue a check to a dead person and cited regulations as the reason. So, here I am. They say they will do a death distribution for the amount of the checks if I write them a letter asking them to do so. The check will be to the estate and they will do a 1099 to the estate. Its not replacing the checks. Its not right. I have the copies of the checks that says they were distributions for the years. The checks were distributed. They had not been cashed. I asked for a copy of the 1099 for the 2018 check. She told me she would mail it to me when she got the letter from me. Its not right. I can do the 2018 return. It will be late. My parent was passing away early this year and so not done. It is my understanding that returns can be done late. no tax is owed.
Permalink Submitted by Alan - IRA critic on Sat, 2019-05-25 20:51
Sounds like they are replacing the checks, payable to estate instead of to decedent. That’s OK, but they should NOT be issuing another 1099R for this. This money has already been taxed and reported distributed. Any 1099R that they might issue for the replacement check this year will result in double taxation, so you need to make sure they understand that and agree not to issue the 1099R next January.
Permalink Submitted by CECI DEV on Sat, 2019-05-25 21:02
Hi, I will try to make them understand but what I said earlier is what they will do as of the phone call late yesterday afternoon. I have to talk to someone else in the bank, perhaps a compliance officer or lawyer. I also need to talk to the IRS, I think. I agree, its fine to issue the checks payable to the estate – its the same thing, either way they get deposited in the same account and split up according to the will. I want the checks replaced and no 1099 so that I can move forward and take take of the IRA and be done with this bank. I just don’t understand why they will not do it.
Permalink Submitted by CECI DEV on Sun, 2019-05-26 00:06
is it because they think that taxes were ot paid that they will not issue replacement checks? they do know that 1099s were issued. seems like that part is out of their scope. that is the responsibility of the taxpayer and the IRS not the IRA custodian, is that correct?
Permalink Submitted by Bruce Steiner on Sun, 2019-05-26 01:47
Permalink Submitted by CECI DEV on Sun, 2019-05-26 12:02
Hi, There is a lawyer who drew up the will in 2011. I met with him but he has not advised me further on the estate. I did not think it was that complicated because she had some bank accounts and that’s it. The IRA is the biggest thing and if another bank sets up a direct transfer and correct titling, that would handle the IRA as she wished. My bigger problem now is the checks. I made a mistake. I went to the bank and asked if the checks could be deposited into the estate checking account which was set up at a different bank. I wanted to make sure the checks were still good, I did not want to try to deposit them and then have them not be good. They told me I had to give them over and that we would handle it at the time we handled the IRA. I have since found out everything above. I think they never should have taken the checks, they should have told me they were good and that’s it. Now, I am stuck with trying to convince the bank to issue replacements checks with no 1099. I can get a lawyer to help. I can try with the lawyer who drew up the will. I really only want those checks re-issued as replacements and that is it. Plus I never told them to stop payment on the 2018 check and they did and they refuse to send me a copy of the 2018 1099. So the bank has made some mistakes as well. What was mentioned above sounds interesting – to keep the estate open and offset administration expenses against distributions. Would that be for 4 more years? She would have been 92 this month. The will stated she wanted things handled in a timely manner. I think I would rather have everything closed out if I can get the checks replaced. I don’t know how any accountant could show that the money they intend to distribute and tax is the same money that would distributed in prior years and taxed. Logically it seems there should be no tax due. By the way, I have found some copies of tax returns which were filed for the years of the checks. And I can file for 2018 and if there is a missing year, the tax return can be filed to the IRS. That is on their website and it does happen according to what is written there. Then I will have to file her final return in 2019. There is no tax due because the checks were her only income besides social security which was small and with the deductions her income is not taxed.
Permalink Submitted by CECI DEV on Sun, 2019-05-26 13:00
If the IRA bank did a death distriubtion to the estate for the amount of the checks and filed a 1099, that would be reportable on the estate returns as income in respect of a decedent, if I understand correctly.