Beneficiary IRA or not?
I have a mildly complicated question. I have a client whose daughter passed away from cancer. Daughter had a 401(k) at her job but failed to name a beneficiary. Daughter had three kids when she passed. Given that estates always go up first (i.e. to the parents) and then down (i.e. to the kids next) and then to anyone else, my client as Mom is the beneficiary of the 401(k). My client (Mom) wants the proceeds from the 401(k) to benefit the kids (her grandkids).
It would seem obvious that the first step is to set up a beneficiary IRA for Mom (my client) and roll the proceeds from 401(k) into that account – or am I wrong in that assumption? Once the money is in the beneficiary IRA, what is the best sort of account to set up for the kids (none are over the age of majority yet) to make transfer of assets from Mom to grandkids easiest? If I am thinking this through correctly, there is no way to transfer the money without paying taxes on the distributions so just setting up custodial accounts for each of the three kids seems most logical.
Am I missing anything here? Can anyone offer me any creative or viable alternatives?
Thanks!
Alan R. Myers, CFA
Permalink Submitted by David Mertz on Thu, 2024-01-11 17:04
Permalink Submitted by Alan Myers on Thu, 2024-01-11 17:38
Thanks for the corrections! You are, of course, correct that estates go down and then up so the kids are first in line followed by Mom. When I called my custodian about setting up an estate account for this, they do actually have an “inherited IRA for an estate beneficiary” account option. So the 401(k) would roll to an IRA with the estate as the owner of the IRA. From there, it would be disbursed to the kids and I am now calling an estate attorney to figure out how to best handle this part of my questions. Thanks again for all of the help!
Permalink Submitted by Alan - IRA critic on Thu, 2024-01-11 19:01