By Ian Berger, JD
IRA Analyst
Question:
I inherited an IRA from a younger deceased spouse who wasn’t required to take required minimum distributions (RMDs) until this year. Can I take advantage of the new section 327 rules under SECURE 2.0 since the RMDs haven’t commenced yet?
Answer:
Yes. The recently-released IRS proposed RMD regulations say that section 327 can be used by a surviving spouse who inherits before 2024 as long as the deceased IRA owner would have reached age 73 (the current first year for RMDs) in 2024 or later. The advantage of section 327 is that you can remain an IRA beneficiary (as opposed to doing a spousal rollover) and use the IRS Uniform Lifetime Table (and your age) to calculate RMDs. This will produce smaller RMDs than if you were using the IRS Single Life Table, which was required before section 327. An added benefit of being a spouse beneficiary is that these RMDs will not start until the deceased spouse would have been age 73. (As an alternative, you could elect to have the inherited IRA emptied by the end of the 10th year following the year your spouse died. No annual RMDs would be required in years 1-9.)
Question:
My father passed away in March of 2018 and I inherited his 401(k). I rolled over the 401(k) to an inherited IRA. Do I have to liquidate this IRA by the end of 2028?
Thank you.
Rick
Answer:
Hi Rick,
No. The 10-year payment rule for inherited IRAs applies to most non-spouse beneficiaries (including adult children) of IRA owners who die after 2019. Since your father died in 2018, you aren’t subject to the 10-year rule. You can continue taking annual RMDs over your single life expectancy.
https://irahelp.com/slottreport/new-spousal-beneficiary-rules-and-effective-date-of-10-year-rule-todays-slott-report-mailbag/
Jim E. Sloan is the founder of Jim Sloan & Associates, LLC, a comprehensive wealth management firm located in The Woodlands, Texas. Jim is an Investment Adviser Representative providing investment advisory services through AE Wealth Management, LLC, an *SEC Registered Investment advisor. This relationship allows Jim Sloan & Associates, LLC to bring institutional-level experience, practices, and pricing to individual families. Jim is also a licensed insurance agent in Colorado and Texas. This is Jim’s sixth financial book and is aimed at helping investors become financially informed. Jim is a U.S. Army veteran, native Houstonian, and lives in the Woodlands, volunteers with several local charities, believes in the name of Jesus, loves to travel, and enjoys most things outdoors.