The 10-Year Rule and Required Minimum Distributions: Today’s Slott Report Mailbag

By Andy Ives, CFP®, AIF®
IRA Analyst

QUESTION:

Good afternoon,

If a client passed this year with four adult children inheriting equally, and each beneficiary is using the 10-year rule, how do they determine yearly required minimum distribution (RMD) calculations? Is it based on life expectancy or on a number that will empty the IRA within the 10 years?

Thank you for your help.

Sherry

ANSWER:

Sherry,

When RMDs apply within the 10-year period (and assuming the four inherited IRAs are properly established), each beneficiary will use his own age to determine the appropriate RMD. Use the beneficiary’s age in the year AFTER the year of death (2025) to determine the initial factor from the IRS Single Life Expectancy Table. Then, subtract 1 from that factor for years 2 – 9 of the 10 years, and deplete the entire account by the end of year 10 (12/31/34). A beneficiary can always take more than the RMD, which could be a wise tax-planning decision.

QUESTION:

My wife’s mom, age 96, died in June and still has about $6,000 in IRA assets. She had been taking required minimum distributions (RMDs). Do we need to take an RMD for her in 2024, or can the remaining funds pass to her beneficiaries?

Thanks,

Michael

ANSWER:

Michael,

All (or whatever portion remains) of your mother-in-law’s year-of-death RMD becomes the responsibility of the beneficiaries. To avoid a late penalty, Mom’s final RMD must be taken by December 31 of the year AFTER the year of death (12/31/25) – this is the new extended deadline. To help streamline tax reporting, a custodian will typically establish an inherited IRA for the beneficiary and pay the year-of-death RMD from that inherited account. Note that if there are multiple beneficiaries, the year-of-death RMD does not need to be spread equally among them. As long as the full amount is taken, the IRS will be satisfied.

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