Los Angeles Times (Sunday)

Rules have changed on inherited IRAs

- By Liz Weston Liz Weston, Certified Financial Planner, is a personal finance columnist for NerdWallet. Questions may be sent to her at 3940 Laurel Canyon, No. 238, Studio City, CA 91604, or by using the “Contact” form at asklizwest­on.com.

Dear Liz: My husband and I have a combinatio­n of traditiona­l and Roth IRAs naming our children and grandchild­ren as beneficiar­ies. With the passage of the Secure Act requiring distributi­on of inherited IRAs within 10 years, we want to revise our plan of leaving all of the investment­s to our children, as such inherited income would affect their tax bracket also. Do you have recommenda­tions to alter the inherited IRAs to avoid this issue? Our annual fixed income puts us at the top of our tax bracket, meaning we usually cannot manage a traditiona­l IRA to Roth conversion.

Answer: The Secure Act dramatical­ly limited “stretch IRAs,” which allowed people to draw down an inherited IRA over their lifetimes. Now most nonIf spouse inheritors must empty the accounts within 10 years if they inherited the IRA in 2020 or later.

There are some exceptions if an heir is disabled, chronicall­y ill or not more than 10 years younger than the IRA owner, says Mark Luscombe, principal analyst for Wolters Kluwer Tax & Accounting. These “eligible designated beneficiar­ies” can use the old stretch rules, as can spouses. Minor children of the IRA owner can put off withdrawal­s until age 21. At that point, the 10-year rule applies.

If you had a potential heir who qualifies, you could consider naming them as the beneficiar­y of a traditiona­l IRA and leaving the Roth money to the other heirs. (The IRA withdrawal­s will be taxable while the Roth withdrawal­s won’t.) Or you could leave the IRA to the children in lower tax brackets and the Roth to those in higher tax brackets.

you’re trying to divide your estate equally, though, these approaches could vastly complicate matters because the balances in the various accounts could be quite different. Plus, predicting anyone’s future tax brackets can be tough.

Another approach is to name your children along with your spouse as the primary beneficiar­y of your IRA. That way, the children would get 10 years to spend down this first chunk of your IRA money after you die. When your survivor dies, they would get another 10 years to spend down the remainder, giving them 20 years of tax-deferred growth.

Alternatel­y, you could focus on spending down the IRA to preserve other assets for your kids. The stretch IRA rules encouraged people to preserve their IRAs, but now it may make more sense to focus on passing down assets such as stock or real estate that would get a valuable “step up” in tax basis at your death.

Converting IRAs to Roths is another strategy for those willing and able. In essence, you’re paying the tax bill now so your heirs won’t have to pay taxes later (although they’ll still have to drain the account within 10 years). It may be possible to do partial conversion­s over several years to avoid being pushed into the next tax bracket.

There are a few other approaches that involve costs and trade-offs, such as setting up a charitable remainder trust that can provide beneficiar­ies with income. These are best discussed with an estate planning attorney who can assess your situation.

Figuring taxes on Social Security

Dear Liz: How will our Social Security payments be affected by any passive income such as from rental properties? We have two properties, which add $3,000 monthly to our current income. I plan on retiring at 72, which is six years away. My husband may retire earlier due to health problems. We will have savings as well as my 401(k) when I retire. Although my retirement income “pencils out,” I don’t know exactly what to expect from Social Security. How should I calculate my net income in retirement?

Answer: You could pay income taxes on up to 85% of your Social Security benefits if you have other taxable income. Examples of taxable income include wages, interest, dividends, capital gains, rent, royalties, annuities, pension payments and distributi­ons from retirement accounts other than Roths.

To determine how much of your benefit is taxable, you would first calculate your “combined income,” which consists of your adjusted gross income plus any nontaxable interest you receive plus half of your Social Security benefits. If you file a joint return, you typically would have to pay income tax on up to half of your benefits if your combined income fell between $32,000 and $44,000. If your combined income was more than $44,000, up to 85% of your benefits would be taxable.

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