To say that the world of inherited individual retirement accounts has gotten more complicated since the inception of the Secure Act on Jan. 1, 2020, is an understatement.
Add to this the Secure 2.0 legislation and now further updates on inherited IRAs for 2025 and beyond, and certainly many affected clients and even some advisors are confused.
Who Qualifies as an Eligible Designated Beneficiary?
The Secure Act created two classes of inherited IRA beneficiaries. Eligible and non-eligible designated beneficiaries have different sets of rules regarding how they handle inherited IRAs.
Eligible designated beneficiaries include:
- A surviving spouse
- A minor child younger than 21
- A disabled person
- A chronically ill person
- A beneficiary less than 10 years younger than the deceased account owner
- Some see-through trusts benefiting those listed above.
Who Is Considered a Non-Eligible Designated Beneficiary?
Generally, any beneficiary who does not qualify as an eligible designated beneficiary. This includes:
- Adult children
- Other non-spousal beneficiaries
- Some see-through trusts benefiting these beneficiaries.
A non-designated beneficiary is generally a trust, a charity or a non-see-through trust.
When Are RMDs Required From Inherited IRAs?
The Internal Revenue Service has issued final rules as to required minimum distributions from inherited IRAs that fall under the 10-year rule.
The IRS has waived RMDs for inherited IRAs where the account owner died after their required beginning date for 2024, having previously done so for IRAs inherited in 2020, 2021, 2022 and 2023.
Beginning in 2025, RMDs will need to be taken. The new legislation does not require those who inherited an IRA in prior years to go back and take RMDs for those years.
For 2025, clients will need to look at the life expectancy for the first year after the year in which the IRA was inherited. They would then subtract one year from the factor for that first year to get to their factor for 2025.
Clients need to have withdrawn the full amount in the inherited IRA by the end of year 10. If they use this method for the remaining portion of the 10-year period, clients could get hit with a big tax bill in the final year.
These rules beginning in 2025 apply only if the beneficiary subject to the 10-year rule inherited the IRA from an account owner who died on or after their own required beginning date to take RMDs. Beneficiaries who inherited an IRA from an account owner who died before their required beginning date are not covered by this rule; rather, they simply need to empty their inherited IRA within the 10-year time frame.
What About Spousal Beneficiaries?
Spousal beneficiaries have the most options when it comes to how to handle an inherited IRA. They can:
- Treat the inherited IRA as if it was their own by transferring the assets to a new or existing IRA.
- Transfer the assets into an inherited IRA in their own name.
- Transfer the assets into an inherited IRA subject to the 10-year withdrawal limits, available only if the original account holder had not reached their required beginning date at the time of death.
- Take a lump-sum distribution.
What Distribution Options Do Eligible Non-Spousal Beneficiaries Have?
Non-spousal beneficiaries who are considered to be non-eligible beneficiaries have a number of options for their inherited IRAs.