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Showing posts with label required minimum distributions. Show all posts
Showing posts with label required minimum distributions. Show all posts

How the IRS plans to get at more of your money (nerd's eye view at kitces.com)

President’s Budget Proposes Elimination Of Backdoor Roth, Stretch IRA, and Step-Up In Basis At Death!


Every February, the President formulates a budget request for the Federal government, which Congress then considers in coming up with its own budget resolution. And while many provisions of the President’s budget pertain to actual recommendations on appropriations for various government agencies, the proposals often include a wide range of potential tax law changes, recorded in the Treasury Greenbook.
Given that this is an election year and already within less than 12 months of the end of President Obama’s term, there is little likelihood that any of the President’s substantive tax changes will actually come to pass, from a version of the so-called “Buffet Rule” (a “Fair Share Tax” for a minimum 30% tax on ultra-high income individuals), an increase in the maximum capital gains rate to 24.2% (which would total 28% including the 3.8% Medicare surtax on net investment income), or a rewind of the estate tax exemption back to the $3.5M threshold from 2009.
However, the President’s budget proposals do provide an indication of what’s “on the radar screen” inside Washington, including a wide range of potential “crackdowns” and “loophole closers” that could appear in legislation (as was the case with the crackdown on Social Security file-and-suspend and restricted-application claiming strategies last year).
And in this context, it’s notable that the President’s budget proposal does include a wide range of potential crackdowns on individuals, from a new cap on the maximum gain to be deferred in a 1031 like-kind exchange of real estate, to the addition of lifetime Required Minimum Distributions for Roth IRAs after age 70 ½, the elimination of stretch IRAs and step-up in basis at death, shutting down the “backdoor Roth contribution” strategy, and more!

“Loophole Closers” And Other Retirement Planning Crackdowns In The Treasury Greenbook

Treasury Greenbook - Treasury Department SealWhen it comes to cracking down on retirement accounts, the President’s budget re-proposes a series of new restrictions and limitations, from killing the so-called “backdoor Roth IRA” to the stretch IRA.
Fortunately, the reality is that all of these crackdowns have appeared in prior proposals, and none have been enacted – which means it’s not necessarily certain that any of them will be implemented this year either, especially given that it is both an election year (which tends to slow the pace of tax legislation), and that there won’t even be any Tax Extenders legislation this December after last year’s permanent fix.
Nonetheless, the proposals provide some indication of what could be on the chopping block, should any legislation happen to be going through Congress that needs a “revenue offset” to cover its cost.
Key provisions that could be changed in the future include:

ELIMINATION OF BACK DOOR ROTH IRA CONTRIBUTIONS

The back door Roth IRA contribution strategy first became feasible in 2010, when the income limits on Roth conversions were first removed. Previously, those with high income could not make a Roth IRA contribution, nor convert a traditional IRA into a Roth. With the new rules, though, it became possible for high-income individuals ineligible to contribute to a Roth IRA to instead contribution to a non-deductible traditional IRA and complete a Roth conversion of those dollars – effectively achieving the goal of a Roth IRA contribution through the “back door”.
Arguably, completing a backdoor Roth IRA contribution was already at risk of IRS challenge if the contribution and subsequent conversion are done in quick succession, but the proposal in the Treasury Greenbook would crack down further by outright limiting a Roth conversion to only the pre-tax portion of an IRA. Thus, a non-deductible (after-tax) contribution to a traditional IRA would no longer be eligible for a Roth conversion at all (nor any existing after-tax dollars in the account).
Notably, a matching provision would apply to limit conversions of after-tax dollars in a 401(k) or other employer retirement plan as well, limiting the “super backdoor Roth” contribution strategy that was made possible by IRS Notice 2014-54.
If enacted, the new rule would simply prevent any new Roth conversions of after-tax dollars after the effective date of the new legislation.

INTRODUCE REQUIRED MINIMUM DISTRIBUTION (RMD) OBLIGATIONS FOR ROTH IRAS

Under the auspices of “simplifying” the required minimum distribution (RMD) rules for retirement accounts, the President’s budget proposal would “harmonize” the RMD rules between Roth and traditional retirement accounts.
This change would both introduce the onset of RMDs for those with Roth IRAs and Roth employer retirement plans upon reaching age 70 ½ (ostensibly the still-employed exception for less-than-5% owners would still apply to employer retirement plans).
Notably, this “harmonization” rule would also prevent any additional contributions to Roth retirement accounts after reaching age 70 ½ (as is the case for traditional IRAs).

ELIMINATION OF STRETCH IRA RULES FOR NON-SPOUSE BENEFICIARIES

First proposed nearly 4 years ago as a revenue offset for highway legislation, and repeated in several Presidential budget proposals since then, the current Treasury Greenbook once again reintroduces the potential for eliminating the stretch IRA.
Technically, the new rule would require that the 5-year rule (where the retirement account must be liquidated by December 31st of the 5th year after death) would become the standard rule for all inherited retirement (including traditional and Roth) accounts. In the case of a retirement account bequeathed to a minor child, the five year rule would not apply until after the child reached the age of majority.
In the case of beneficiaries who are not more than 10 years younger than the original IRA owner, the beneficiary will still be allowed to stretch out required minimum distributions based on the life expectancy of the beneficiary (since the stretch period would not be materially different than the life expectancy of the original IRA owner). A special exception would also allow a life expectancy stretch (regardless of age differences) for a beneficiary who is disabled or chronically ill.

LIMIT NEW IRA CONTRIBUTIONS FOR LARGE RETIREMENT ACCOUNTS (OVER $3.4M)

First introduced in the President’s FY2014 budget, this year’s Treasury Greenbook also re-proposes a rule that would limit any new contributions to retirement accounts once the total account balance across all retirement accounts reaches $3.4M. As long as the end-of-year account balance is above the threshold, no new contributions would be permitted in the subsequent year (though if the account balance dipped below the threshold, contributions would once again become possible, if otherwise permitted in the first place). All account balances across all types of retirement plans (not just IRAs) would be aggregated to determine if the threshold has been reached each year.
The dollar amount threshold is based on the cost to purchase a lifetime joint-and-survivor immediate annuity at age 62 for the maximum defined benefit pension amount of $210,000(which means the dollar amount could change due to both inflation-indexing of this threshold, and also any shifts in annuity costs as interest rates and mortality tables change over time).
Notably, the proposed rule would not force existing dollars out of a retirement account once the threshold has been reached. There are no requirements for distribution to get under the threshold, and the rule explicitly acknowledges continued investment gains could propel the account balance further beyond the $3.4M level. The only limitation is that no newcontributions would be permitted.

REPEAL OF NET UNREALIZED APPRECIATION RULES FOR EMPLOYER STOCK IN AN EMPLOYER RETIREMENT PLAN

In the section of “loophole” closers, the President’s budget proposes (for the second year in a row) to eliminate the so-called “Net Unrealized Appreciation” rules, which allow for employer stock in an employer retirement plan to be distributed in-kind to a taxable account so any of the gains in the stock (the unrealized appreciation) can be sold at capital gains rates.
Characterizing these NUA rules as a “loophole” is ironic, given that the strategy is explicitly permitted under IRC Section 402(e)(4), and has been in existence as an option for employees with holdings in employer stock since the Internal Revenue Code of 1954!
Of course, employee savings habits have changed significantly since the 1950s, as has our understanding of investing and portfolio diversification. The proposed justification for the elimination of NUA is that employer retirement plans now have many other tax preferences, and that at this point the NUA could be an inappropriate incentive for employees to concentrate their investment risks in their employer stock (which further concentrates their risk given that their job is also reliant on the same employer!). The proposal also specifically cites a concern that the NUA benefit may be ‘too’ generous when used with employer stock in an ESOP, which already enjoys other tax preferences.
To ease the transition for those who have already been accumulating employer stock in their retirement plan for many years, the proposal would only apply for those who are younger than age 50 this year (in 2016). Anyone who is already 50-or-older in 2016 would be grandfathered under the existing rules, and retain the right to do an NUA distribution in the future.

Ending GRATs and IDGTs, And Other Estate Planning Crackdowns In The President’s FY2017 Budget Proposal

The President’s budget proposal also includes a number of estate-planning-related crackdowns and loophole closers. As with most of the proposals for changes to retirement accounts, these potential “loophole closers” are not new, but do represent the broadest list yet of areas that the IRS and Treasury wish to target.

ELIMINATION OF THE GRANTOR RETAINED ANNUITY TRUST (GRAT) STRATEGY

The Grantor Retained Annuity Trust (GRAT) is an estate planning strategy where an individual contributes funds into a trust, in exchange for receiving fixed annuity payments back from the trust for a period of time. Any funds remaining in the trust at the end of the time period flow to the beneficiaries.
To minimize current gift tax consequences, the strategy is often done where the grantor agrees to receive a series of annuity payments that are almost equal to the value of the funds that went into the trust – for instance, contributing $1,000,000 and agreeing to receive in exchange payments of $500,000. To the extent any growth above those payments results in extra funds left over at the end, they pass to the beneficiaries without any further gift tax consequences.
In today’s low interest rate environment, this strategy has become extremely popular, because the methodology to determine the size of the gift is based on calculating the present value of the promised annuity payments. The lower the interest rate, the less the discounting, the more the assumed annuity will return to the original grantor, and the small the gift. In some cases, grantors will simply create a series of “rolling” GRATs that run for just 2 years and start over again, just trying over and over again to see if one of them happens to get good investment performance to transfer a significant amount to the next generation tax-free (as the remainder in the trust).
To crack down on the strategy, the President’s budget proposes that the minimum term on a GRAT would be 10 years (which largely eliminates the relevance of rolling GRATs and introduces far more risk to the equation for the grantor). In addition, the rules would require that any GRAT remainder (the amount to which a gift would apply) must be the greater of 25% of the contribution amount, or $500,000, which both increases the size of the GRAT that would be necessary to engage in the strategy and forces the grantor to use a material portion of his/her lifetime gift tax exemption to even try the strategy.
To further eliminate the value of the strategy, the proposal would also require that in any situation where a grantor does a sale or exchange transaction with a grantor trust, that the value of any property that was exchanged into the trust remains in the estate of the grantor – included in his/her estate at death, and subject to gift tax during his/her life when the trust is terminated and distributions are made to a third party. This would likely kill the appeal of the GRAT strategy altogether, as it would cause the remaining value of a GRAT distributed to beneficiaries at the end of its term to still be subject to gift taxes.
Notably, this crackdown on transfers via a sale to a grantor trust would indirectly also eliminate estate planning strategies that involve an installment sale to an intentionally defective grantor trust (IDGT), as the inclusion of the property exchanged into the trust would prevent the grantor from shifting the appreciation outside of his/her estate.

ELIMINATE DYNASTY TRUSTS WITH MAXIMUM 90-YEAR TERM

Historically, common law has prevented the existence of trusts that last “forever”, and most states have a “rule against perpetuities” that limits a trust from extending more than 21 years after the lifetime of the youngest beneficiary alive at the time the trust was created.
However, in recent years, some states have begun to repeal their rules against perpetuities – largely in an effort to attract trust business to their state – and creating the potential of “dynasty” trusts that exist indefinitely for a family, and allow the indefinite avoidance of estate (and generation-skipping) taxes for future generations of the family.
To prevent the further creation of new dynasty trusts, the President’s budget proposal would cause the Generation Skipping Tax exclusion to expire 90 years after the trust was created. As a result, the Generation Skipping Transfer Tax itself could then be applied to subsequent distributions or terminations of the trust, eliminating the ability for subsequent skipping of estate taxes for future generations.
Notably, the proposed rule would only apply to new trusts created after the rule is enacted, and not any existing trusts. However, new contributions to existing trusts would still be subject to the new rules as proposed.

LIMIT TOTAL OF PRESENT INTEREST GIFTS THROUGH CRUMMEY POWERS

IRC Section 2503(b) allows for an annual gift tax exclusion (currently $14,000 per donee in 2016) for gifts that are made every year. However, an important caveat to the rule under IRC Section 2503(b)(1) is that in order to qualify for the exclusion, the gift must be a “present interest” gift to which the beneficiary has an unrestricted right to immediate use.
The present interest gift requirement makes it difficult to use the annual gift tax exclusion for gifts to trusts, as contributing money into a trust that won’t make distributions until the (possibly distant) future means by definition the beneficiary doesn’t have current access to the funds. It’s not a “present interest” gift, and thus cannot enjoy the $14,000 gift tax exclusion.
The classic strategy to work around this rule has been to give the trust beneficiaries an immediate opportunity to withdraw funds as they are first contributed to the trust. The fact that the beneficiary has an immediate withdrawal power ensures that it is a “present interest” gift and eligible for the exclusion. However, the trust is commonly structured to have that beneficiary’s right-to-withdraw lapse after a relatively limited period of time, such that in the short run it’s a present interest gift but in the long run it still accomplishes the goals of the trust. This strategy has been permitted for nearly 50 years, since the famous Crummey Tax Court case first affirmed it was legitimate (such that these present-interest-lapsing powers are often called “Crummey powers”).
However, in recent years a concern has arisen from the IRS is that some trusts had a very large number of Crummey beneficiaries, all of whom would have Crummey powers, such that the donors could gift significant cumulative dollar amounts out of their estate by combining together all the beneficiaries. In some scenarios, there were even concerns that the Crummey beneficiaries had no long-term interest in the trust at all, and were just operating as ‘placeholders’ to leverage gift exclusions. Unfortunately, though, from the IRS’ perspective, the Service has been unable to successfully challenge these in court.
Accordingly, the new proposal would alter the tax code itself to impose limit the total amount of such gifts. The change would be accomplished by actually eliminating the present interest requirement for gifts to qualify for the annual gift tax exclusion, and instead simply allowing a new category of future-interest gifts, but only for a total of $50,000 per year for a donor (regardless of the number of beneficiaries). The new category of gifts would include transfers into trusts, as well as other transfers that have a prohibition on sale, and also transfers of interests in pass-through entities.
Notably, this rule wouldn’t replace the $14,000 annual gift tax exclusion. Instead, it would simply be an additional layer that effectively limits the cumulative number of up-to-$14,000 per-person gifts if they are in one of the new categories (e.g., transfers into trusts). For instance, if four $14,000 gifts were made to four beneficiaries of a trust, for a total of $56,000 of gifts, each $14,000 gift might have individually been permissible, but the last $6,000 would still be a taxable gift (or use a portion of the lifetime gift tax exemption amount) because it exceeds the $50,000 threshold.
It is also notable that since the new category includes “transfers of interests in pass-through entities”, the rule may be used to limit aggressive present-interest gifting of family limited partnership shares across a large number of family members!

Ending Step-Up In Basis And Other Income Tax And Capital Gains Proposed Crackdowns

In addition to the targeted retirement and estate planning crackdowns, it’s notable that the President’s budget proposal includes several additional rules that would impact general income tax strategies, particularly regarding planning for and around capital gains.

ELIMINATION OF STEP-UP IN BASIS, TO BE REPLACED BY A REQUIRED-SALE-AT-DEATH RULE

As a part of the Economic Growth and Tax Relief Reconciliation Act of 2001, Congress repealed the estate tax in 2010, and at the same time repealed the existing rules allowing for a step-up in basis, to be replaced with a rule for “carryover cost basis” from the decedent to the beneficiary.
The problem with carryover cost basis rules at death is that they are extremely problematic to administer. Beneficiaries (and/or the executor) don’t necessarily know what the cost basis was in the first place for many investments, or lose track of it, especially if the property isn’t sold until years later. In practice, step-up in basis at death functions as much as a form of administrative expediency for administering the tax code, as an intended “tax break” at death.
Accordingly, the President’s budget proposes a new way to handle the situation: simply tax all capital gains at death, as though the decedent had liquidated all holdings. The capital gains would be reported on the decedent’s final income tax year, and gains could be offset by any capital losses in that year, and/or any capital loss carryforwards. There would an exclusion for the first $100,000 of capital gains (eliminating any capital gains exposure for the mass of Americans with moderate net worth), in addition to a $250,000 exclusion for any residence. Any household furnishings and personal effects would also be excluded from consideration.
Assets bequeathed to a surviving spouse would still retain a carryover in basis, and any unused capital gains exclusion (the $100,000 amount for general property and the $250,000 for a residence) would be portable and carry over (thus making the exclusions $200,000 and $500,000, respectively, for a married couple, due at the second death of the couple). Any transfers to a charity at death would also not be subject to the capital gain trigger.
To avoid lifetime avoidance of the tax through gifting, the proposal would also eliminate carryover cost basis for gifts, and instead require the same capital-gains-upon-transfer rule for a lifetime gift (again with carryover cost basis applying only for gifts to a spouse or charity).

LIMIT 1031 LIKE-KIND EXCHANGES OF REAL ESTATE TO A $1,000,000 ANNUAL LIMIT

Under IRC Section 1031, investors are permitted to exchange a real estate investment for another “like-kind” piece of real estate, while deferring any capital gains on the transaction. For the purpose of these rules, “like kind” is broadly interpreted, even including the swap of unimproved real estate (i.e., raw land) for improved real estate (e.g., an apartment building) or vice versa.
Congress notes that historically, the rules for like-kind exchanges for real estate (and other illiquid property) were allowed primarily because such property could be difficult to value in the first place, such that it was easier to simply permit the exchange and tax the final transaction later, rather than try to set an appropriate value at the time of the transaction (if the investor wasn’t converting the property to cash anyway).
However, given that property is far more easily valued now than it was decades ago when the 1031 exchange rules were originated, the President’s budget proposes to limit the rule to only $1,000,000 of capital gains that can be deferred in a 1031 exchange in any particular year. Any excess gain above that amount in a particular year would be taxable as a capital gain, as though the property had been sold in a taxable event, with the proceeds separately reinvested.
The proposal would also eliminate the 1031 exchange rules for art and collectibles altogether.

ELIMINATION OF SPECIFIC LOT IDENTIFICATION FOR SECURITIES AND REQUIREMENT TO USE AVERAGE COST BASIS

Under the tax code, investors that hold multiple shares of property can choose which lots are sold. In the case of dissimilar property like multiple lots of real estate, this rule simply recognizes that only the actual lot being sold should be taxed. However, the case is less clear for portfolio investments, where market-traded securities are fungible and “economically indistinguishable” from each other.
Accordingly, the President’s budget proposes to eliminate the specific lot identification method for “portfolio stock” held by investors, along with any ability to choose a FIFO or LIFO default cost basis methodology,  and instead require investors to use average cost basis instead (in the same manner as is done for mutual funds. The rule would only apply to stocks that had been held for more than 12 months, such that they are eligible for long-term capital gains treatment, and would apply to all shares of an identical stock, even if held across multiple accounts or brokerage firms. However, it would only apply to “covered securities” that are subject to cost basis tracking in the first place (generally, any stocks purchased after January 1st of 2011).
Notably, this change was proposed previously in the President’s FY2014 budget as well. Its primary impact would be limiting the ability to “cherry pick” the most favorable share lots to engage in tax-loss harvesting (or 0% capital gains harvesting) from year to year.

APPLY THE 3.8% NET INVESTMENT INCOME MEDICARE SURTAX TO S CORPORATIONS

A long-standing concern of the IRS has been the fact that while pass-through partnerships require partners to report all pass-through income as self-employment income (subject to Social Security and Medicare self-employment taxes), the pass-through income from an S corporation is treated as a dividend not subject to employment taxes. Historically this has allowed high-income S corporation owners to split their income between self-employment-taxable “reasonable compensation” and the remaining income that is passed through as a dividend not subject to the 12.4% Social Security and 2.9% Medicare taxes. (Most commonly though, the strategy “just” avoids the 2.9% Medicare taxes, as reasonable compensation typically is high enough to reach the Social Security wage base anyway.)
Since the onset of the new 3.8% Medicare surtax on net investment income in 2013 (along with a new 0.9% Medicare surtax on upper levels of employment income), the stakes for this tax avoidance strategy have become even higher, as upper income individuals (above $200,000 for individuals or $250,000 for married couples) are now avoiding a 3.8% tax (either in the form of 2.9% Medicare taxes plus the 0.9% surtax on employment income, or the 3.8% tax on investment income).
To curtail the strategy, the President’s budget proposal would automatically subject any pass-through income from a trade or business to the 3.8% Medicare surtax, if it is not otherwise subject to employment taxes. This effectively ensures that the income is either reported as employment income (subject to 2.9% + 0.9% = 3.8% taxes), or is taxed at the 3.8% rate for net investment income instead.
In addition, in the case of professional service businesses (which is broadly defined to include businesses in the fields of health, law, engineering, architecture, accounting, actuarial science, performing arts, or consulting, as defined for qualified personal service corporations under the IRC Section 448(d)(2)(A), as well as athletes, investment advisors/managers, brokers, and lobbyists), the rules would also outright require that S corporation owners who materially participate in the business would be required to treat all pass-through income as self-employment income subject to self-employment taxes (including the 0.9% Medicare surtax as applicable).

NEW SCRUTINY OF LIFE SETTLEMENTS AND LIMITATIONS ON THE TRANSFER-FOR-VALUE RULES

The growth of life settlements transactions in recent years – where a life insurance policyowner sells the policy to a third party, who then keeps the policy ‘as an investment’ until the insured passes away – has brought a growing level of scrutiny to the area.
Under the standard rules for life insurance, IRC Section 101(a)(1) permits a life insurance death benefit to be paid out tax-free to the beneficiary. However, that tax preference is only intended for the original policyowner (who had an insurable interest in the insured), and not necessarily an investor. In fact, IRC Section 101(a)(2) explicitly requires that if a life insurance policy is “transferred for valuable consideration” (i.e., sold) that the death benefits become taxable. Exceptions apply for scenarios where the buyer is the insured (e.g., buying back his/her own policy from a business), or in certain scenarios where the policy is bought by a business or a partner of the business.
From the perspective of the IRS, the primary concern is that some life settlement investors may be evading these rules by forming “business” entities where they can be a partner of the insured (even if the insured just becomes a 0.1% owner), just to buy the policy in a tax-free context.
Accordingly, the President’s budget proposal would modify the transfer-for-value rules by requiring that the insured be (at least) a 20% owner of the business, in order to avoid having minimal partners added just to avoid the standard life settlements tax treatment.
In addition, the new rules would require that, for any insurance policy with a death benefit exceeding $500,000, that details of the life settlements purchase – including the buyer’s and seller’s tax identification numbers, the issuer and policy number, and the purchase price – be reported both to the insurance company that issued the policy, the seller, and the IRS so the Service can track life settlements policies. In addition, upon death of the insured, the insurance company would now be required to issue a reporting form for the buyer’s estimate cost basis and the death benefit payment, along with the buyer’s tax identification number, to the IRS so the Service can ensure (and potentially audit) that the gain was reported appropriately. (For those who actually do report life settlements gains properly, this part of the new rule would have no impact, beyond just confirming what was already reported.)

Silver Linings In The President’s FY2017 Budget Proposals

Notwithstanding all the looming “crackdowns”, it’s important to note that not everything in the Treasury Greenbook is “negative” when it comes to financial planning. There are some silver linings. Favorable provisions include:
– Elimination of Required Minimum Distribution obligations for those with less than $100,000 in retirement accounts upon reaching age 70 1/2
– Marriage penalty relief in the form of a new up-to-$500 two-earner tax credit
– Consolidation of the Lifetime Learning Credit and Student Loan Interest Deduction into a further expanded American Opportunity Tax Credit
– Expansion of the exceptions to the IRA early withdrawal penalty to include living expenses for the long-term unemployed
– Ability to complete an inherited IRA 60-day rollover
– Expansion of automatic enrollment of IRAs and multi-employer small business retirement plans
Of course, as with the proposed loophole closers, these silver lining proposals aren’t likely to see implementation in 2016 either. Nonetheless, they form the basis for potential points of change and compromise for tax reform in 2017… which means it’s not likely the last time you’ll be hearing about these potential changes either!

Inherited IRA Tips (Forbes Magazine)

Inherited IRA Rules: What You Need To Know
Many people who inherit IRAs are unfamiliar with the rules that apply to them. My article for Forbes magazine, “Five Rules For Inherited IRAs,” gives a broad overview of the subject. In this post I answer questions from two readers with concerns that affect other people, too.
Michael Twersky, a 26-year-old consultant in New York, asks:
I inherited a $15,000 traditional IRA from my father. As a child beneficiary, will I avoid income tax upon withdrawal if I wait until I’m 60? If not, would it be better to withdraw now while I’m still in a pretty low tax bracket?
You don’t have the option of waiting until you are 60 to take withdrawals. Generally, non-spousal IRA heirs must withdraw a minimum amount each year, starting by Dec. 31 of the year after the IRA owner died. Note: This is true whether it’s a traditional IRA or a Roth (a common misconception).


To calculate this distribution, you take the balance on Dec. 31 of the previous year and divide it by the inheritor’s life expectancy, as listed in the IRS’ “Single Life Expectancy” table. (You can find the table in IRS Publication 590, “Individual RetirementArrangements (IRAs),” which downloads here as a PDF.) Unless the account is a Roth, there is income tax on this required payout.
Don’t make the mistake, as some people do, of using the number from the table to figure a percentage. In subsequent years, you simply take the number you used in the first year and reduce it by one before doing the division.
If they choose to, IRA inheritors can draw out these minimum required distributions over their own expected life spans, as explained here. This is known as the stretch-out – a financial strategy to extend the tax advantages of an IRA. Stretching out the IRA gives the funds extra years and potentially decades of income-tax deferred growth in a traditional IRA or tax-free growth in a Roth IRA. This is a wonderful investment opportunity.
If you weren’t aware of the minimum distribution requirement and have not taken the required withdrawals, see my post, “What Happens When IRA Inheritors Miss A Key Deadline.”


6/09/2010 @ 6:00PM

Five Rules For Inherited IRAs

Before they inherited $3 million in retirement accounts from their father last year, the three middle-aged siblings didn’t know it was possible for heirs to stretch out the tax benefits of such accounts for decades. But what they also discovered after his death is that doing this is tricky–and in some cases impossible–if the original owner of the accounts didn’t fill out his beneficiary forms just so. Although their 78-year-old dad was a lawyer, “He may never have realized that it made any difference,” says a daughter, who has spent days trying to sort it all out.
Whether you’re inheriting an IRA or aiming to protect your own heirs, you’ve got to dance the IRS jig.
1. First, do no harm.
If you inherit a retirement account, don’t do anything until you know exactly what rules apply. With your own IRA you can take the money out and redeposit it in another IRA within 60 days without penalty. Not so an inherited IRA. All movement of money must be from one IRA custodian to another–be sure to specify a “trustee-to-trustee” transfer. Moreover, unless you’ve inherited from a spouse, you must retitle the IRA, including the original owner’s name and indicating it is inherited, e.g., “Daddy Warbucks, deceased, inherited IRA for the benefit of Little Orphan Annie, beneficiary.”
If two or more people are named as beneficiaries, ask the custodian to split it into separate inherited IRAs. That avoids investment squabbles and allows a longer stretch-out for the younger heirs.
2. Beneficiary forms rule.
The beneficiary form on file with the custodian of an IRA controls both who inherits it and its ability to be stretched out. If people other than a spouse are named as heirs, they must begin taking distributions from the account by Dec. 31 of the year after inheriting, but they can draw these out over their own expected life spans, enjoying decades of income-tax-deferred growth in a traditional IRA or tax-free growth in a Roth IRA. To give your heirs maximum flexibility, name both primary and alternate individual beneficiaries–say, your spouse as primary and kids as alternates or your kids as primary and grandkids as alternates. Your primary beneficiary then has the option of “disclaiming” or turning down the account, enabling it to pass to the younger alternate.
By contrast, if an estate is named as beneficiary, tax deferral is cut short. If it’s a Roth IRA, all funds must be withdrawn within five years. For a traditional IRA the same rule applies unless the former owner was already 70 1/2–the age at which a traditional IRA owner must begin cashing out. In that case the distribution rate for the heir is based on the age of the person who died, notes Rockville Centre, N.Y. CPA Edward Slott.
What if there’s no beneficiary form on file? Heirs are at the mercy of the IRA custodian’s default policy. Vanguard Group and Ameriprise award an IRA first to a living spouse and then to the estate. Merrill Lynch sends it straight to the estate. Few custodians will pass on an IRA directly to the kids without a beneficiary form.

3. Employer plans are different.
By federal law the money in a 401(k) goes to a spouse, unless he or she has signed a form waiving rights to it. But some employer plans will allow the funds to go straight to the kids if no spouse is living and no beneficiary form is on file. On the other hand, employers usually won’t let nonspouse beneficiaries stretch out 401(k) withdrawals. These beneficiaries should ask the employer to transfer the money into an inherited IRA. They can then divide it into separate inherited iras, says Natalie B. Choate, a lawyer with Nutter McClennen & Fish in Boston.
4. Spouses have more options.
A spouse who inherits–let’s assume it’s the wife–has an option not available to other inheritors. She can roll the assets into her own IRA and postpone distributions from a traditional IRA until she turns 70 1/2. The catch is, like other IRA owners she may have to pay a 10% early-withdrawal penalty if she takes money before age 59 1/2 from her own IRA. So a young widow should generally wait until after reaching 59 1/2 to do the rollover, says Brooklyn, N.Y. CPA Barry C. Picker. Meanwhile, she doesn’t have to take out any money until her late spouse would have turned 70 1/2.
5. Watch for distribution traps.
If the late IRA owner was 70 1/2 or older, beneficiaries must make sure the owner’s mandatory distribution for the year of death is withdrawn before doing anything else. When nonspouse beneficiaries take their own payouts, they should be aware of two quirks. First, if the estate paid estate tax, they may be able to take an itemized deduction to offset some IRA income. Second, the minimum is calculated differently than for your own IRA. You take the balance on Dec. 31 of the previous year and divide it by your life expectancy listed in the IRS’ “single life expectancy” table, rather than the table used by IRA owners. The next year you use the same life expectancy, minus a year. (With your own IRA, you take a new life expectancy from a table each year.)


Paying Less Taxes on IRA Withdrawals: In Kind Distributions (Morningstar)



2 Good Reasons to Consider an 'In-Kind' Distribution 
by Christine Benz | 06-13-13
In-kind distributions--meaning that an investor receives a payout of investment securities from an entity instead of cash--are more common than you might know, especially among very large, institutional investors.
Companies that pay out dividends may choose to issue in-kind distributions, paying out additional shares of stock rather than cash. Exchange-traded funds also may pay off departing shareholders by conducting "in-kind" transactions. When a large ETF investor, called an authorized participant, wants to sell its shares, the ETF can give the institution its money back in the form of securities held in the portfolio. In this way, the ETF can flush out highly appreciated securities in its portfolios (that is, those with a low cost basis), helping to improve the ETF's tax efficiency.
But in-kind distributions aren't just limited to institutions. Taking a distribution in the form of securities rather than cash may make sense for individual investors, too, especially from the standpoint of reducing taxes. If you inherit securities from another person, you'll usually have no choice but to receive those securities "in kind," though once you've inherited those investments you're free to make changes as you see fit.
Here are two of the key instances to consider a voluntary in-kind distribution rather than taking the cash instead.
You Need to Take RMDs in a Depressed MarketIf you find yourself with IRA holdings that are depressed in value and you need to take required minimum distributions, you can make lemonade by taking your RMDs in kind--that is, meeting your RMD requirements by receiving the actual securities rather than cash and moving those securities into a taxable brokerage account. You can't circumvent the income taxes on the RMD, of course. But by taking the securities out of your IRA when you believe their value is at a low ebb, you'll pay ordinary income taxes at a relatively low level. And when you move those same securities to a taxable brokerage account, any appreciation beyond today's relatively low prices will be taxed at the capital gains rate rather than your ordinary income tax rate.
Say, for example, a 75-year-old in the 30% tax bracket takes an in-kind RMD of a stock position worth $50,000 at the time of the distribution. He'd owe $15,000 in taxes on the distribution--ideally paying the taxes with separate assets--and his cost basis on those securities in the taxable account would be $50,000. If the stock appreciates to $80,000 during the next three years and he decides to sell, his tax bill would be $4,500--his $30,000 in appreciation multiplied by the 15% capital gains rate.
By contrast, say that same retiree opts to hang on to the depressed stock within the IRA and takes a distribution of $50,000 in cash from a money market fund instead. His tax bill on the RMD would be the same--$15,000. But if he were to eventually sell the once-depressed stock from the IRA at a market value of $80,000, his tax bill on that distribution would be $24,000.
Because the market has been on a tear, moving securities to a taxable account may not come in handy right now. But it's one to keep in your back pocket if a holding slumps but you still believe in its fundamentals.
You Hold Highly Appreciated Stock in a Company Retirement PlanLast week I mentioned that people holding company stock that has appreciated a lot since they acquired it have good reason to leave the money in their former employer's 401(k) plan rather than rolling it over into an IRA. The reason is that by forgoing the rollover, you can take an in-kind distribution of company stock from the 401(k), which in turn enables you to take advantage of the tax rules regarding net unrealized appreciation, or NUA. When you take the in-kind distribution and move the money into a taxable brokerage account, you'll owe ordinary income tax on your cost basis in the stock, plus a 10% early distribution penalty if you're under age 59 1/2. But you'll only owe capital gains taxes, which are lower, when you eventually sell the shares from your taxable account. That's often more advantageous than rolling the money into an IRA, where all distributions would be taxed at your ordinary income tax rate.
For example, let's say a 62-year-old recent retiree had $800,000 in company stock and a cost basis of $100,000; she's in the 25% tax bracket and has accumulated the stock with a combination of pretax 401(k) contributions and employer matching contributions. The appreciation above her cost basis, $700,000 is NUA. If she were to roll over that money into an IRA, she would owe ordinary income taxes on her distributions during retirement, nicking roughly $200,000 ($800,000 taxed at her 25% rate) from her account's value, assuming no appreciation in the shares and no change in her tax rate.
By contrast, using the NUA rules could allow her to realize significant savings. At the time of the in-kind distribution she would owe $25,000 in taxes (25% of her $100,000 cost basis). But when she eventually sells her shares from a taxable account, she would pay long-term capital gains taxes on her NUA of $700,000, bringing her total tax cost to $130,000--the $25,000 on her cost basis plus $105,000 in long-term capital gains taxes on her $700,000 in NUA. She would also owe long-term capital gains taxes on any appreciation after she transfers the shares from her 401(k) into her brokerage account.
Of course, there may be good countervailing reasons to roll over the money into an IRA, too. The big one is that having a sizable stake in company stock can leave your portfolio underdiversified, and that can outweigh the tax benefits of opting for NUA treatment. 



What NOT To Do When You Retire ( U S News )

New Retirees: Avoid These Mistakes

Don’t make these errors when transitioning into retirement

September 24, 2012 
Happy retired couple
It can be difficult to know when you are truly ready to retire. Even if you are relatively certain you have enough savings to last the rest of your life, there is still plenty that could go wrong. Here are some potential mistakes to avoid as you transition into retirement:
Moving to a place where you don't know anyone. Once you're no longer tied to a job, it's tempting to move to a location with better weather or more fun things to do. In some cases, you can even significantly reduce your retirement expenses by moving to a place with more affordable housing and a lower cost of living. But moving away from your friends and family and your support system of associates, including everything from a great dentist to a car mechanic you can trust, can be detrimental to your retirement. It's difficult to start from scratch and can take years to build a network of people who can help when you need it.


Quitting before you are vested in your retirement plan. You may not get to keep all of your employer's 401(k) contributions, stock options, or qualify for traditional pension payouts until you are fully vested in the retirement plan. Before you turn in your letter of resignation, look up the exact date you will become fully vested in the plan. If it's a matter of weeks or months, sticking around until you qualify for more lucrative retirement benefits could significantly improve your retirement finances. "If you are close to an anniversary date or if you have any stock options that are about to vest, you don't want to leave right before you are about to vest and lose out on money," says Laura Barnett Lion, a certified financial planner and president of Barnett Financial in Austin, Texas.

Retiring before you set up health insurance. Medicare coverage begins at age 65. If you want to retire before then, you'll need to find alternative health insurance coverage. Some employers offer retiree health insurance plans to former employees. If your company had at least 20 employees, you can also buy back into your former employer's group health insurance plan using COBRA continuation coverage, typically for up to 18 months. Other health insurance options for early retirees include joining a spouse's health plan, purchasing individual insurance, and seeing if you qualify for state insurance pools. Some organizations you belong to or part-time jobs may also provide health insurance. "If you are younger than 65 and you are retiring from a company plan, you want to pay special attention if you have any health issues," says Christopher Rhim, a certified financial planner for Green View Advisors in Washington, D.C. and Norwich, Vt. "Know what your benefits are and compare this to any new plan under consideration." Beginning in 2014, young retirees will be able to purchase health insurance through insurance exchanges, with tax credits for those with low and moderate incomes.

Thinking your health will hold out forever. Many new retirees are healthy and energetic, but it's important to plan for a day when you may not be. Proximity to medical care becomes increasingly important as you age. You also need to think about the possibility that you might require long-term care or extra household help from caregivers or family members. It's a good idea to put your medical requests in writing, and designate someone to make medical decisions for you if you cannot.

Taking Social Security too soon. You can sign up for Social Security beginning at age 62, but that doesn't necessarily mean you should. If you elect to begin receiving payments at 62, you will receive lower monthly payments than you would if you waited until an older age. "If you are retiring before your full retirement age, which is 66 for most baby boomers, and you are planning on taking Social Security before 66 at a discount, that can have a substantial negative impact on your retirement finances," says Terry Seaton, a certified financial planner for Seaton Financial Advisors in St. Augustine, Fla. "You can wait even after 66 up to 70, and it increases each year." Monthly Social Security payouts grow for each month you delay claiming up until age 70.

Forgetting to take required minimum distributions. Withdrawals from 401(k)s and IRAs become required after age 70½. People who fail to withdraw the correct amount will face a 50 percent tax penalty in additional to the regular income tax due on the amount that should have been withdrawn.


Spending too much on travel and new hobbies. Some expenses will decrease in retirement, such as commuting costs and workplace attire. But new costs may take their place or even surpass them. Travel costs can become a huge new retirement expense, and some new hobbies might also come with significant costs. Some retirees end up spending more on entertainment simply because they now have more time for it. You may find yourself dining out more to get out of the house or connect with other people. "When you have time on your hands, most people are fairly creative in finding ways to spend money. They play more golf and they go see the grandkids more often," says Seaton. "Find out how you want to spend your time in retirement, and find out what it's going to cost you."

 
Go ahead and enjoy!

Nine Most Common IRA Mistakes (the Dolans)

Are You Making These IRA Mistakes?
by Ken Dolan September 2, 2009 10:26 AM
Posted in: Invest Wisely IRA Retirement Center

For millions of Americans, an Individual Retirement Account is a critical piece of their retirement plan. If you are eligible for an IRA, you should be contributing to it each and every year, period.

But if you want to make the very most of your IRA, you must avoid the mistakes that cost many people dearly.

Let's take a look at the nine most common.



IRA Mistake #1:
Not Contributing Because of Stock Market Volatility
We heard from LOTS ofpeople over the last few years who stopped contributing to their IRA because of market volatility. DON'T you be one of them!

No matter what the market does, you should take advantage of the important benefits your IRA offers. First, you still get an important tax break on the dollars you are contributing. Plus, if you work for a company that offers matching IRA contributions, you are actually making money. Why on earth would you give up FREE money from your boss??

IRA Mistake #2:
Not Knowing the Contribution Limit
Sometimes the most common mistakes are also the easiest to correct. Not knowing your contribution limit is a common mistake that can cost you thousands.

On one hand, if you don't contribute the maximum allowable amount into your IRA, you are missing out on some good tax deductions and tax-deferred earnings. On the other, if you over-contribute, you will have to pay a stiff penalty.

For 2011, the IRA contributions limits are as follows:

If you are under the age of 50 by the end of 2011, you can contribute $5,000.? That amount can be split between a Roth and traditional IRA if you'd like.

If you are over the age of 50 by the end of 2011, you can contribute $6,000.


IRA Mistake #3:
Not Naming a Beneficiary
When you set up an IRA, you are not required to name a beneficiary. Name one anyway!

If there is no beneficiary on your IRA, the money in the account will typically have to go through probate, which can be an expensive and lengthy process. Also, the funds will be paid out over the remaining life expectancy of the deceased (or over five years), which will likely be shorter than a named beneficiary's life expectancy. This means the money is disbursed more quickly, putting a heavier tax burden on whoever receives the money.

Avoid this major IRA mistake and name a beneficiary so you can be certain where your IRA will go, and how quickly it will be distributed upon your death.

IRA Mistake #4:
Not Contributing to a Spousal IRA
A spousal IRA is an important retirement planning tool WAY too many people overlook. If you or your spouse does not work, or works part-time and has no company benefits, you can open a spousal IRA in addition to a regular IRA. You can double your overall IRA contribution by using a spousal IRA in addition to the standard IRA.

IRA Mistake #5:
Not Starting Your Withdrawals on Time
Traditional, SEP and SIMPLE IRAs all require you to take withdrawals annually after you turn 70-?. (Special note: If you have a Roth IRA, there is no mandatory withdrawal age.)

If you don't take a mandatory withdrawal on time, you'll pay dearly for this mistake. You will be required to pay a 50% penalty on the required withdrawal amount. Ouch! What a waste for an easy-to-avoid mistake! Make your withdrawal at the right time and keep your hard-earned money to yourself.

Remember: Your first withdrawal is due by April 1 the year after your turn 70 1/2, and you'll have to take another one by December 31 of that same year.




IRA Mistake #6:
Not Withdrawing Enough
So now you know that traditional, SEP and SIMPLE IRAs require you to take annual withdrawals after you turn 70 1/2. But you can't just take out five bucks and wait till next year! The amount you must withdraw each year is dictated by formulas based on your life expectancy, your current age and the amount of money in your IRA account.

Check with your financial advisor or use the tables found in Appendix C of IRS Publication 590 to determine your minimum withdrawals. Make a mistake and you'll face a stiff 50% penalty on the difference between what you withdrew and what your required minimum distribution really was!


IRA Mistake #7:
Forgetting the Contribution Deadline

December 31 is the last day of the year, right? But not when it comes to contributing to your IRA! You have until April 15 of the following year, or the day that you file your tax returns, to make a contribution to your IRA for that tax year.

Remember, to make the most of your IRA contribution, we recommend that you fully fund your IRA as early in the year as possible. But when it comes to making IRA contributions, late is better than never!

Don't make one of the key IRA mistakes by forgetting about that extended contribution deadline!

IRA Mistake #8:
Mishandling an IRA Rollover
If you are switching jobs or you are an IRA beneficiary, you'll need to roll over those IRA funds. IRA rollovers don't have to be confusing or complicated, but you do need to follow some very specific rules.

Here's how to avoid two common IRA rollover mistakes. First, your rollover must be completed no more than sixty days from when the money is withdrawn from the original account. Anything not rolled over within those sixty days becomes 100% taxable income. You don't want that to happen!

Second, remember that you are only allowed one rollover - into or out of an individual IRA - per year. There is no bending of this rule, so follow it closely or you'll get stuck paying a hefty penalty!

IRA Mistake #9:
Not Knowing Spousal/Non-Spousal Inheritance Rules
One of the big IRA mistakes is not realizing the difference between inheritance rules for spousal and non-spousal beneficiaries. If you are a spousal beneficiary, you can either switch the name on the IRA or roll the funds directly into an IRA you already have. Either way, the money is viewed as if it has been yours all along (you can contribute to it and will be required to withdraw from it).

If you are a non-spousal beneficiary, the money in the IRA is still yours, but you are not able to roll it over to your own IRA, and you are not allowed to contribute to it.

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