Is an Estate account mandatory?
My brother in law died suddenly five days after finalizing a divorce. He had not removed his now ex-wife as beneficiary from four different retirement accounts. They are a 401(a), 457(b), Traditional IRA and a 403(b). Her beneficiary status was voided by Probate Court based on Florida law leaving no designated beneficiary. I was named Administrator.
At least one of the institutions (it rhymes with Ranguard) moved his personal 401(a) account into an Estate 401(a). The Probate Court has now declared five heirs with specific shares of the Estate. They issued an order to each of the institutions to rollover funds in specified shares to the heirs.
IRS pub 590-b appears to consider these heirs as non-designated beneficiaries subject to the five year rule. Interpretations of IRS 2007-7 indicate that assets moved to an Estate account cannot be subsequently rolled over.
Is there a way to distribute funds from an individual account to non-designated beneficiaries under court order in this situation without an intermediary Estate account? If so, should I ask for any estate accounts to be restored to individual accounts to accomplish the more favorable tax treatment that would come with each heir realizing income at their own tax rate over the five years?
Permalink Submitted by Alan - IRA critic on Sat, 2022-11-19 22:01