Estate planning…large IRA
Folks,
Newbie to this forum and find it extremely helpful already. Hoping for a response to this scenario, which I will try to simplify.
My dad recently passed with a roughly $5 million IRA as his primary asset. There are conflicting instructions in the will and beneficiary forms. The beneficiary forms states that my mom is to get 100% of the IRA with 4 kids acting as 25% contingent beneficiaries (were she not alive). The will states that the IRA is to be divided into 2 parts: 50% goes directly to my mother and 50% is directed to a pass through IRA trust that will distribute the larger of that portion of the IRA’s income or the RMD for the year to her, with the principal remaining intact. She does have access to the principal, if needed, but would not likely need it. In essence, the Trust was established to take advantage of the then $5 million exclusion in place at the time and to get at least $2.5 million out of my dad’s estate.
A few issues:
1) The discrepancy between the beneficiary form and the will: Is this going to be an issue in fulfilling the terms of the will if the beneficiary form dictates that 100% goes to my mother.
2) The IRA trust and all components of the will are very open ended in their language. There is a lot of verbiage describing flexibility to distribute funds in such a way as to take advantage of the various federal and state “exclusions” at time of death. The estate is not large enough to trigger federal estate taxes but is sufficiently large to trigger MA state taxes (over $1 million, so entirety of estate is taxes). Leaving $2.5 million of an IRA to an IRA trust will no doubt trigger the MA estate tax. It would seem better to me that the IRA or at least any amount over 1 million go directly to my mother to avoid the estate tax for the time being. Does that analysis sound correct?
3) 4 children are the ultimate beneficiaries of the IRA trust after my mother passes. It would seem that until this point, her RMDs will be based on her age, not those of any of the children. As a pass through trust, will she still be able to use the Uniform Life expectancy table or will she be forced to use the single life expectancy table (thus accelerating RMDs over her lifetime)?
4) Curious as to how one would have structured things differently given the onerous MA estate tax (and low exclusion), but generous Federal estate tax exclusion amounts. What should my mother be doing in preparation for the future to structure her estate when such a large component of it is the IRA? With the proposed elimination of the stretch IRA rules, does it make sense to structure something now (based on the open ended language of my father’s will) to take advantage of current stretch IRA rules before any changes go into effect?
I look forward to hearing from any and all of you with respect to these matters. This forum is a wealth of information and I thank you, in advance, for your time and expertise.
SR
Permalink Submitted by Alan - IRA critic on Sun, 2019-05-26 18:05
Permalink Submitted by Bruce Steiner on Sun, 2019-05-26 20:08
Permalink Submitted by Gregg Miller on Mon, 2019-05-27 01:23
Grateful for these responses. Confirmed what I suspected. Can’t thank you enough for your keen and erudite insight. SR
Permalink Submitted by Gregg Miller on Tue, 2019-05-28 12:19
One quick follow-up question:If my mother disclaimed say $500,000 of my father’s IRA to be distributed to the 4 children as inherited IRAs, would that $500,000 be included in my dad’s estate or my mother’s (for purposes of federal and state estate tax purposes).Thanks again for the great information!SR
Permalink Submitted by Bruce Steiner on Wed, 2019-05-29 03:48
It would all be included in your father’s estate, but his estate would get a marital deduction for the portion your mother keeps. The portion your mother keeps will then be included in her estate. The portion your mother disclaims will be taxable in your father’s estate (in other words, it will count toward his Federal and state exclusion amounts).
Permalink Submitted by Alan - IRA critic on Tue, 2019-05-28 15:31
Dad’s estate.
Permalink Submitted by Gregg Miller on Wed, 2019-05-29 11:14
if my mom disclaimed a portion of the ira and it reverted back to my dad’s estate, is there a way for the children to disclaim the disclaimed portion of the ira so it ends up in their far lower income children’s hands (grandchildren of the deceased). thanks! SR
Permalink Submitted by Alan - IRA critic on Wed, 2019-05-29 18:22
If Mom and the children both disclaim, the IRA will pass through Dad’s estate according to his will. The 5 year rule will apply if he passsed prior to his RBD, and his remaining life expectancy will apply if he passed on or after his RBD. If the trust inherits in this manner it will not be a qualified trust since it was not named on the IRA beneficiary clause. A minor inheriting the IRA would expose the RMDs to the kiddie tax as well.