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May. 16, 2006
- CONSULT AN AGENT
- Listen
Let Your Beneficiaries Stretch Your
IRA Assets Over Their Life Expectancies
As more and more people select
IRAs for retirement funding, it's
important to know the options
available to your beneficiaries.
IRAs have become very popular retirement savings vehicles and play an increasingly important role in many people's overall retirement planning. Indeed, IRAs, with over $2.2 trillion of assets, have more money in them than any other type of retirement plan.(SPARK (Society of Professional Administrators and Recordkeepers) Market Place Update, 2003.)
Many IRAs are established when people roll over a lump-sum distribution from their employer's retirement plan. The growth of retirement plans, especially 401(k) plans, with over $1.47 trillion in assets, has allowed people to accumulate significant savings that are often rolled over to IRAs when they retire or change jobs.(SPARK (Society of Professional Administrators and Recordkeepers) Market Place Update, 2003.)
But while an IRA can be an important vehicle for funding your retirement years, it can also be an important part of the legacy you leave to your loved ones. However, when your beneficiaries inherit your IRA, they could be faced with a potentially huge tax burden.
Fortunately, the law provides IRA beneficiaries some flexibility that can ease this burden. There are different options for spouse and non-spouse beneficiaries that allow them to avoid the immediate taxation of a potentially significant sum of money. A spouse may be able to defer taxation to a later date by transferring the IRA into his or her own name. Non-spouse beneficiaries do not have this option. They can, however, choose to receive the money in the IRA slowly, via distributions over their own life expectancies, thereby spreading out the tax burden over a longer period of time.
Choosing Your Beneficiaries
Without a doubt, the most important
reason for choosing a beneficiary is
to ensure that your money goes
where you want it to go. However,
if you have the flexibility and if it
aligns with your legacy goals, you
may want to consider the stretch
IRA rules and how they may help
your IRA assets provide a substantial
benefit to your beneficiaries. For
example, leaving your IRA assets
to a beneficiary with a longer life
expectancy may allow more of your
IRA assets to remain in the account
with the potential to grow tax-deferred for a longer period of time.
If Your Beneficiary is Your Spouse
A spousal beneficiary has the most
options, since a spouse can roll your
IRA over to a new or existing IRA in
his or her own name and designate
new beneficiaries. If your spouse
has not yet reached the date by
which he or she is required to take
distributions from the IRA account
(age 70½), the assets can remain in
the account with the potential to
grow tax-deferred until he or she
reaches 70½. If your spouse is
several years away from age 70½,
naming your spouse as beneficiary
may be the best strategy to take
advantage of the stretch option.
Options for Other Beneficiaries
Although persons other than your
spouse have more limited distribution
choices, they can still extend the life
of your IRA. These beneficiaries may
be able to take distributions based on
their own life expectancies—stretching out distributions for over 30 or 40
years in some cases.
Here's an example that shows the effect of stretching out the distributions using an inherited IRA. Say a 36 year-old inherits an IRA worth $500,000 when his father dies, and let's assume that he chooses to stretch his receipt of the money over his lifetime by taking only the required minimum distribution each year (based on his life expectancy).
The first graph the year-by-year Required Minimum Distributions (RMDs), and these distributions increase each year as the individual gets older. The second graph indicates the value of the IRA over time. Notice that in the early years, the account grows at a faster rate than the person's annual withdrawals. However, the required withdrawals increase each year, and by age 65, they exceed the growth of the IRA. At that point, the balance in the IRA begins to decline from the RMDs that are taken.
Nevertheless, by age 75, the individual in this example has withdrawn $1,720,512 from the inherited IRA, and he still has over $900,000 left in the IRA account!
This is just one example of the legacy you can create for your IRA beneficiaries. Of course, the younger the beneficiary, the more time one has to stretch out distributions and the greater the potential legacy.
Leaving a Legacy
Things to Consider When
Choosing Beneficiaries
Naming beneficiaries for your retirement accounts may seem like an
easy task. Remember, though, it is
also one of the most important decisions you will make. Therefore, you
should give it the time and attention
it deserves. By working with your
insurance professional, you can help
ensure not only that your assets go
to the beneficiaries you want, but
also that the assets may have the
potential to grow tax-deferred for
years to come.
You can name your spouse, children, grandchildren, another individual, or favorite charity, or set up a trust—that's a choice you make. No matter whom you choose, though, it's important that you make that choice and complete the appropriate documentation. If you don't, the tax consequences for your beneficiaries could be devastating.
If you are not sure whether or not your spouse may need the assets in your IRA, consider naming your spouse as primary beneficiary and a child, grandchild, or another individual as contingent beneficiary. This will give you additional flexibility in planning your legacy strategy. For example:
- If you find out later that your spouse will not need the assets after your death, you can change your primary beneficiary to your child, grandchild, or another individual. This allows the new primary beneficiary to stretch out distributions over his or her own life expectancy—which is probably longer than your spouse's, thus reducing the amount of each distribution and leaving more assets in the IRA to continue to grow tax-deferred.
- Or, after your death, if your spouse doesn't need the assets, he or she can disclaim them (i.e., refuse to take ownership of the assets). The assets will then go to any other named primary beneficiaries or to the contingent beneficiaries (depending on your designations).
The following steps can help you organize your thoughts and start you on the path toward successful estate and legacy planning:
- Identify your retirement needs, goals, and options—Your financial professional can help you identify all of your retirement plan assets, determine an appropriate way to structure them so you can get the maximum benefit during your lifetime, and help you identify ways to maximize the benefits for your beneficiaries.
- Review all of your retirement accounts, and name primary and contingent beneficiaries—identify all your IRAs and employer-sponsored retirement plans. Then make sure you have named beneficiaries for each—make sure to name both primary and contingent beneficiaries.
- Make sure all paperwork is in order—Beneficiary designation forms must be completed for all IRA and employer-sponsored retirement accounts. Check with your IRA custodian or workplace plan administrator to see whether your beneficiary paperwork is on file. Keep copies with your other estate planning documents so your beneficiaries can find the forms after your death.
- Review documentation regularly—Review your beneficiary documentation at least once a year. If you've created any new retirement accounts, be certain you've named beneficiaries. Update any beneficiary preferences accordingly.
If you name more than one primary beneficiary, each beneficiary may move his or her share of the assets, after your death, to an Inherited IRA and begin taking distributions based on his or her own life expectancy. (However, the Inherited IRA must be established by December 31st of the year following the year of your death for your beneficiary to take payments over his or her own life expectancy.)
Another issue to consider is your estate tax exemption. Everyone is currently entitled to a $1,500,000 exemption from estate taxes. If you name a child, grandchild, or other individual, rather than your spouse, as beneficiary on your IRA, you may be able to use your full exemption.(Under the Economic Growth and Tax Relief Reconciliation Act of 2001 (EGTRRA), the estate tax exemption amount will be $1.5 million in 2004 and 2005, and will gradually increase to $3.5 million by 2009. In 2010, the estate tax will be repealed for one year. After 2010, the estate tax will be reinstated, and the rates and exemptions in effect pre-EGTRRA will again apply. Under pre-EGTRRA law, the exemption amount after 2010 will be $1 million.; Assets passing to your surviving spouse generally are not subject to estate taxes at the time of your death due to the Unlimited Marital Deduction. However, if you name your spouse as beneficiary of your IRA and utilize the Unlimited Marital Deduction, and you do not have enough other assets to pass to your non-spouse beneficiaries, then you may lose some or all of the benefit of your available estate tax exemption.)
Remember to let your beneficiaries know that you have named them, since there are deadlines they must meet in order to take distributions over their life expectancy. Otherwise, in the worst case, they may be forced to take the assets in a lump sum—resulting in a larger tax burden and depriving them of the opportunity to stretch out the assets.
Simple Strategies to Make
Your IRA Last Longer
- Make sure to name both primary and contingent beneficiaries. Naming both provides a clear line of succession in case something happens to your primary beneficiaries. It also provides part of a legacy strategy. After your death, your primary beneficiaries can take distributions, cash out the entire amount, or disclaim the assets altogether. Conversely, failing to name a beneficiary may result in your assets going to your estate, depending on the terms of the IRA. This could have negative tax implications, and may limit your beneficiaries' options.
- Consider rolling over employer-sponsored retirement plans, like 401(k)s, to an IRA. IRAs may provide more flexibility for non-spouse beneficiaries, and may allow your beneficiaries to stretch distributions over a longer period of time. Check your employer-sponsored plan documents and IRA agreements for available beneficiary distribution options.
- When you have multiple beneficiaries, each may have different stretch opportunities. If there is a large age difference between your beneficiaries, talk to your insurance professional about how you can help ensure each of them has the ability to stretch out distributions over his or her own life expectancy.
- Revisit your investment strategy.If your goal for your IRA is to enable your children or grandchildren to receive the IRA assets over their lifetimes, your assets may end up being invested with the potential to grow tax-deferred for another 40 or 50 years, depending on the ages of the beneficiaries. Therefore, your asset allocation strategy may be different than that of people expecting to use their assets in retirement in the near future.
SMRU 276865CV(10/03)




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