Boomer Wealth

Inheriting an Ira? What You Need to Consider

Author: Cathy Pareto


Receiving an inheritance can be a nice windfall. But, when it comes to inheriting an IRA, the tax rules can be tricky and your decisions regarding this asset can have far-reaching tax implications. Mistakes can be very costly. So, before you decide what to do with it, find out what your options are so you can maximize the dollars you keep.

One of the greatest benefits of inheriting an IRA is the ability to stretch out the account over long periods of time. Stretching defers the income taxes due on the account, allowing your IRA to grow in a tax favorable environment. If you don't need the current income to survive, this is usually your best option. However, everyone's financial situation is unique.

There are important factors that will determine a beneficiary's choices when inheriting an IRA:

1) Who did you inherit the IRA from?

2) What is the timeframe regarding your transfer options?

Inheriting an IRA from a spouse gives you flexibility not available to other beneficiaries. You can put the IRA in your name or you can roll over the funds into an IRA you have already set up. The IRS will treat this as if the inherited IRA assets were yours all along.

Assuming that you are younger than 70 ½, as a spouse not only are you not required to take any distributions from the inherited money, but it also means that you can make additional
contributions to the IRA (assuming you qualify). Converting the IRA into your name will also allow you determine your own beneficiary.

Your other choice is to leave the IRA in your deceased spouse's name. If you are older that your deceased spouse and your objective is to defer the account as long as possible, this a good option because the RMD's will be based on the younger spouse's age. However, if you are younger than your deceased spouse and do not currently need the IRA income, then this option may be less tax efficient that converting the IRA as your own.

This option forces you to take the RMD as required, with the first minimum withdrawal taken no later than:


  • December 31st of the year your spouse would have turned 70 1/2 had he or she continued to live, or



  • December 31st of the year following the year your spouse dies (if your spouse was already 70 ½). So if your spouse died in 2003 this year, the earliest possible date for a required minimum withdrawal is Dec. 31st of 2004.




Heirs may base the distribution amount either on their life expectancy or that of the deceased owner.

For surviving spouses who are younger than 59 ½ and depend on the income from the IRA for survival, leaving the IRA in your spouse's name is the best option. It allows you to take distributions without incurring a 10% early withdrawal penalty. But, because the IRA remains in your deceased spouse's name, the future beneficiaries cannot be changed.

As a spousal heir, one of the flexibilities of an inherited IRA is that you can split the account. So, let's say you needed some current income from the account (which you will be forced to take for the rest of your life), but don't want to exhaust the whole account, you can split the inherited account into one that generates income (stays in deceased spouse's name) and the other (converted to your own IRA account) to grow, deferring distributions until your RMD age.

Non spouse heirs do not have the option of treating inherited IRAs as your own. This doesn't mean that the money isn't yours; it simply means that you can't make any contributions to that IRA or roll it over to another IRA. Nevertheless, you have choices.

If the decedent was age 70 ½ or greater (and taking distributions out of the IRA when he/she died), then you may start taking money out using the same distribution method. This option is
typically not recommended, unless you desperately need the money. If the decedent was not yet taking distributions out of the IRA, you have two IRA distribution options:


  1. All of the interest from the IRA must be distributed to you by December 31st of the fifth year after the year the decedent died, (not the best choice) OR



  2. All of the interest must be distributed over your life expectancy



This situation is further complicated when a decedent leaves the IRA to multiple beneficiaries. Let's assume that a father leaves his IRA to his three adult children. Those children must first establish three new "inherited IRA" accounts.

The transfer from the decedent's IRA must be made directly from the old IRA into the three new IRA's by way of a "trustee to trustee transfer". Releasing the funds directly to the beneficiary will prohibit the future rollover of those assets into the inherited IRA, which forces full taxation on the amount distributed (but does not garner a 10% early withdrawal penalty since it was inherited).

In previous years, RMD's were based on the life expectancy of the oldest child, cheating younger heirs out deferral time. However, if the new inherited IRA accounts are established in the year after the year of the owner's death (so if died 2003, then Dec.31 of 2004), then each
child will be able to use his/her own life expectancy going forward on their RMD's.

In all of the above scenarios, income taxes are not due until distributions are actually taken. However, a 50% tax penalty can be assessed for failing to take the required minimum distribution in a timely fashion. So be mindful of your deadlines, because Uncle Sam will be.

Nobody said inheriting money was easy. The rules are quite complex and ignorance can translate into costly mistakes. Do your homework before your act. Remember, as with any other delicate financial matter, you should probably consult your advisor and/or tax professional first.

About the Author:

Cathy Pareto, MBA, CFP®, AIF® is the Founder and President of Cathy Pareto & Associates, Inc. a fee-only financial planning and investment management firm.

www.cathypareto.com
Blog http://cathypareto.blogspot.com/

Article Source: ArticlesBase.com - Inheriting an Ira? What You Need to Consider


Baby Boomers Wealth Creation - Take Advantage of Hidden Riches


Author: Ken Little

Wealth creation belongs to you as a baby boomer. You served your time in the workplace or you've had enough business failures to write a bestseller on the subject

As baby boomers who shun the traditional gravitating to the grave model of existence you need to be clear on the nature of your "refirement".

They key issue for all baby boomers whose desires to refire is - "How can I use my life and work experiences to create streams of income to keep me in the lifestyle to which I have become accustomed?"
You can use the ideas below . They'll change your outlook on baby boomers wealth creation forever.

1. Where are The Hidden Riches?

The truth is your hidden riches can be found in skills you've used to earn a living for decades. Consider the example of a farrier who works with horses' hooves for most of his life. As one of the refired baby boomers he decides that it's too hard to continue working with horses every day and seeks to find a way to profit from his knowledge.

Also think of another of the baby boomers - gardener who longs to share his love of plants with others but he's been laid off because he can't move as fast as he once did. What of one of the many baby boomers who has given his life to a car manufacturing plant only to have his job sent offshore?

Let's not forget the business owner who faces a baby boomers mid life experience with a business that has been forced to the wall by cheap imports.

Where are the hidden riches in the lives of the farrier, the gardener, the auto worker and the business owner? And in your life? They are in the knowledge held by all baby boomers .

You will have seen this confirmed in your own work life when you were last hit by a wave of restructuring and your boss asked you to prepare a user manual for your position.

It's too late for you and me but whenever you have loved ones faced with this request please advise them to take as long as possible.

You see, experience has shown me, their last day in the workplace will be the day after they hand in their manual.

Why? Because they have just handed their boss the power - The Knowledge - to send their job offshore and have their work done, based on all they've done and recorded in the manual.

So how do you fight back as baby boomers whose business was lost to overseas competitors or whose job was offshored? Learn from the experience and develop your own K.I.D.S program.

2. What To Do With the Hidden Riches When You Find Them?

You will have much greater success with your K.I.D.S program when you take the time to consider the steps it requires of all baby boomers who want to benefit from it. K.I.D.S stands for Knowledge, Information, Dollars and System.

You take Knowledge you gained in one area over the years in the workplace, convert it into saleable "packets" of Information, which you market for Dollars and then you repeat the process as you find another area of knowledge and develop the process into a System.

3. How to Make the Hidden Riches Work Best for You

The secret, to make the baby boomers hidden riches work best for you as you develop your K.I.D.S system, is to create an ebook or electronic book based on your area of knowledge.

Warning - do not stop reading now as you are challenged by the suggestion of writing a book. I want to encourage you by telling you the writer of this article, and of three books, began his writing when afflicted with many of the learning challenges know to man, and even one that didn't have a name.

You get the picture. Working with words was not easy for me to begin with. It was hard but now it's a labor of love for me and many baby boomers.

My prayer is that you will join the ranks of baby boomers who are fighting back against those who have robbed them of their livelihoods or forced them to retire well before they were ready.

Use your hard-earned knowledge to be blessed by your hidden riches in secret places as you create multiple streams of income to secure your financial future
Enjoy your new found hidden riches.

About the Author:
Ken Little is a writer, teacher, public speaker and publisher of a classic - Get your Free ebook "How I Became Young at Sixty" by going to: http://www.Young-at-Sixty.com/get-your-f-r-e-e-ebook.htm

Article Source: ArticlesBase.com - Baby Boomers Wealth Creation - Take Advantage of Hidden Riches

No TrackBacks

TrackBack URL: http://www.millionbabyboomers.com/cgi-sys/cgiwrap/davidau/managed-mt/mt-tb.cgi/558

Leave a comment



David & Julie.jpg

David & Juliana
aushukan@rogers.com


Site Build It!AWeber - Email Marketing Made Easy








How to make money online
Laptop/Notebook Computer Reviews
Best Buy Guide
黃川田神父的網誌
Fund Charts/Globe Fund
Realtor.ca