Heirs Get More Time to Keep Their Money in Inherited Retirement Accounts [View all]
Many Americans who inherited retirement accounts since 2020 wont be required to start pulling money out this year after the Internal Revenue Service said it was further postponing enforcement of a law passed in 2019.
Part of the law required most inheritors other than spouses to empty IRAs within 10 years, not over their lifetimes, as was previously allowed. Many heirs interpreted this to mean that they could hold off pulling money out until year 10, allowing them to time their withdrawals to lower their taxes while the balances continued to grow. Then, in February 2022, the IRS proposed rules mandating annual withdrawals for these inheritors during that 10-year period, if the original account owner had already been taking distributions.
After complaints from taxpayers and financial-services companies over how to follow the new rules, the IRS said it wouldnt impose penalties for missing required minimum distributions, or RMDs, until the details could be finalized, essentially allowing these inheritors to skip taking money out. That reprieve has now been extended through 2024. The penalty for failing to take required IRA payouts is assessed at 25% of the amount that should have been taken out.
(snip)
Withdrawals from traditional inherited retirement accounts are treated as income by the IRS, so the timing of these distributions matters for tax strategy. For someone on the cusp of retirement, the delay could reduce taxes.
(snip)
Things get even more complicated for successor beneficiaries, those who inherit an inherited account.
Consider a 75-year-old grandmother who inherited an IRA before 2020 from an older brother. She started taking annual distributions based on her life expectancy. Then she died in 2020 and left her inherited IRA to her granddaughter. The granddaughter is required to continue taking annual distributions and deplete the inherited IRA by the end of 2030, using the grandmothers life expectancy. She will get the reprieve for 2021, 2022, 2023 and 2024, leaving six years to empty the account.
If the brother had been younger than the grandmother and died while taking distributions, the granddaughter would still have to empty the account by the end of 2030, but she would take annual distributions based on his longer life expectancy, increasing the amount the IRA could grow tax deferred.
More..
https://www.wsj.com/personal-finance/retirement/inherited-retirement-account-ira-irs-c3c95273?st=veahuligmhk5fsj&reflink=desktopwebshare_permalink
===
(Don't ask me, I just post it here..)