Post-SECURE: can surviving spouse take as bene, wait 10 years and then assume?
I’ve been hearing a lot of chatter about a post-SECURE IRA strategy whereby a surviving spouse could take the inherited account as a bene, defer for almost 10 years, then spousally assume.
Looking at SECURE’s additions to 401(a)(9), I’m not sure that option is clearly on the table? (B)(iii) – which is to be used in the cased of EDBs like a surviving spouse – states that the employee’s interest *WILL* be distributed over that beneficiary’s life expectancy. Not “can” or “may,” but “will.”
In other words, I am not sure SECURE makes it clear that a SS EDB has the option of taking the out-in-10 at all. Granted, the SS as bene can still delay RMDs until the employee/decedent would have turned 72 anyway. But is there any clear providence in the “new” 401(a)(9) that would allow a SS EDB to take the out-in-10 and then “flip” to spousal assumption right before the 10-year window closes?
Permalink Submitted by Alan - IRA critic on Mon, 2021-03-29 16:03
Secure does not appear to provide an option for an EDB to select the 10 year rule, although the IRS could possibly allow the spouse and perhaps even other non spouse beneficiaries to select the 10 year rule. The difference between this and the former 5 year rule for designated beneficiaries is that the former option only applied to deaths prior to RBD. Since Secure applies the 10 year rule regardless of owner’s age at death, such an IRS ruling could result in additional deferral of RMDs for beneficiaries of owners passing at advanced ages, and this runs counter to the intent of the Act. Will have to wait and see what the IRS does, but at this point I would bet against providing the 10 year option to EDBs.