Eligible designated beneficiary
One of the criteria for being an eligible designated beneficiary (EDB) is “not more than 10 years younger” than the owner. If the beneficiary is OLDER (one year older), is the beneficiary considered an eligible designated beneficiary or just a designated beneficiary?
Permalink Submitted by Alan - IRA critic on Mon, 2023-11-06 15:59
An EDB. That includes any beneficiary who 10 years younger to the day or older. And if the beneficiary is actually older and the IRA owner passed after RBD, the EDB could use the remaining LE of the decedent for annual RMDs, but there is another new rule that in this situation, the EDB would still have to drain the inherited IRA in the year that their own divisor would reach 1.0 or less. A beneficiary falling under this latter set of circumstances using the younger decedent’s LE would therefore have to track the divisors for two lives to know when the inherited IRA must be drained. This particular provision is clearly overly complex and ill conceived.