Spouse Inherits IRA
Facts – spouse 1, age 64, dies this year (2022). Spouse 2, age 72 this year is sole primary beneficiary. Options for Sposue 2 as I understand –
1. maintain inherited IRA and no RMDs required until Spouse 1 would have turned 72. At that time, the RMDs would be based on Spouse 2’s life expectancy using Table I. Is that correct?
2. claim as their own. If they claim as their own this year, they are assumed to have owned the entire year and they would have an RMD required on the Spouse 1 IRA in addition to any on their own IRA. RBD is Apr1 of 2023 for all RMDs due on their combined TIRA totals. RMDs would be calculated using Table III.
Am I missing anything? – m
Permalink Submitted by Alan - IRA critic on Mon, 2022-11-14 18:41
Permalink Submitted by [email protected] on Mon, 2022-11-14 20:14
Thank you. Confused by your part 2 answer. What does this mean in the IRS.gov site -Surviving spouse. If you are the surviving spouse who is the sole beneficiary of your deceased spouse’s IRA, you may elect to be treated as the owner and not as the beneficiary. If you elect to be treated as the owner, you determine the required minimum distribution (if any) as if you were the owner beginning with the year you elect or are deemed to be the owner. For details, see Inherited from spouse under What if You Inherit an IRA, earlier in this chapter. And, why doesn’t that mean that they would have an RMD this year, if they so elected to take as their own? Thanks, – m
Permalink Submitted by David Mertz on Mon, 2022-11-14 22:25
Permalink Submitted by [email protected] on Tue, 2022-11-15 14:20
OK, got it. Thanks much. -m