The Secure Act Ruins a Perfectly Good QCD
The SECURE Act, an owner of an Inherited IRA, who is over the age of 70 1/2 can make a Qualified Charitable Distribution from that Inherited IRA.
My initial research seems to imply that this is permitted, but it is not definitive. In an Article written by Ed Slott on January 22, 2020 entitled The Secure Act Ruins a Perfectly Good QCD stated the following:
“As a reminder, QCDs can be done by IRA owners (and inherited IRA owners) who are age 70½ or older. (The SECURE Act raised the age of RMDs to 72. However, the Act did not increase the age for QCDs – 70½ is the status quo.) IRA assets are transferred directly from an IRA to an eligible charity, and the dollar amount of the QCD is excluded from the account owner’s taxable income up to a maximum of $100,000 annually. Oftentimes, QCDs are leveraged to offset all or portion of a person’s required minimum distribution”.
I would be grateful if you could provide some clarity on this matter, and provide any authority supporting this interpretation.
Permalink Submitted by Alan - IRA critic on Thu, 2020-03-05 00:40
Permalink Submitted by Anthony Perrone on Fri, 2020-03-06 20:03
Can the owner of an inherited IRA, (who was the original benny), make a qualified chariatable distribution from that Inherited IRA?
Permalink Submitted by Alan - IRA critic on Fri, 2020-03-06 23:27
Yes, but only after reaching 70.5.