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Designating IRA Beneficiaries
Until 2001, the designation of a beneficiary for your IRA was extremely important. Why? Taxes, taxes, taxes. Due to large payouts from retirement plans, years of tax-deferred compounding, and successful use of a wise investment strategy, there is a lot of money currently stashed away in our collective IRAs. The ability to delay taxation of those proceeds means your heirs will keep more of what they deserve, and the sticky-fingered federal and state governments will just have to keep running lotteries to collect all that they want. Consequently, under old IRS rules, the selection of our beneficiaries was an important decision that we neglected at our family's peril, and that issue is of particular importance when we must begin taking an annual minimum required distribution (MRD) from those IRAs. Under the old distribution rules, IRA owners who reached age 70 1/2 had to select a beneficiary for those accounts. Then they had to decide whether to take withdrawals from IRAs using a joint or single life expectancy under a term-certain, recalculation, or hybrid method of withdrawal. All of those choices were irrevocable, and they determined how rapidly IRA balances had to be withdrawn by the owner during life or by the beneficiary after the owner's death. Up to eight different methods of calculating MRDs existed, and choosing the wrong method and/or beneficiary could and unfortunately often did cost the family huge losses to the taxman. Now, however, most of us can bid adieu and good riddance to those complex choices. The IRS has issued new IRA distribution rules. As of January 1, 2001, those who reach age 70 1/2 (or those who are have already started MRDs based on that age) have a choice of using the new rules or the old ones. "What," you ask, "do the new rules change?" Simply stated, they change a lot. First and foremost, they require the use of one uniform life-expectancy table. That table is based on the account owner's attained age, and it assumes the owner has a beneficiary who is 10 years younger than he or she is. Each year, the account owner finds a factor in that table based on his or her attained age in that year. That factor is then divided into the account balance as of the end of the previous year. The result becomes the MRD the person must take in the new year. The new method for calculating MRDs helps reduce the income taxes due currently, and prolongs both the tax-deferred compounding and the life of the IRAs for almost all families. Under the new rules, selecting a beneficiary when your MRDs begin is no longer critical. You may now change beneficiaries at will, because choosing a beneficiary will have no impact on how fast your retirement account must be paid out during your lifetime or after you die. In fact, when you finally meet your maker, the actual beneficiary doesn't even have to be determined until December 31 of the following year. That little proviso allows a primary beneficiary (such as a spouse) to disclaim the account in favor of a younger, contingent beneficiary (such as a child or grandchild). The newly named beneficiary could then take MRDs from what is left in the retirement account over his or her life expectancy in that year. Result? A significantly delayed payment of income taxes on the amount in the IRA. The old MRD rules forced an immediate payout of your IRA at your death whenever the beneficiary you had selected when MRD began was no longer living. That meant a $500,000 IRA, as an example, had to be paid out in one year to surviving children when a spouse, who was the original beneficiary, predeceased the IRA owner. It made no difference the IRA owner had named the children as the new IRA beneficiaries. Now children in a similar situation may elect to have the IRA paid out over their lifetimes, which significantly lessens the income tax impact on that IRA balance to those heirs. In fact, the only way the life of the IRA cannot be prolonged is by your failure to name an IRA beneficiary at all. In that event, and if you had not yet reached your required beginning date for MRDs, the account would have to be paid out to your estate by December 31 of the fifth year following the year of your death. If you die after MRDs have begun, then the account can be paid to your estate over time, based on your remaining life expectancy as calculated as of the year of your death. That life expectancy would be reduced by one in each subsequent year to calculate the subsequent year's payout. All in all, the new IRA distribution regulations seem to offer superb planning opportunities for families when it comes to how surviving family members must take MRDs from those IRAs. Smile. The IRS just gave all of us a gift. Now let's be wise by ensuring we and our heirs understand what that gift means. |
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