Boston Herald

IRA BENEFICIAR­Y QUIZ. CAN YOU PASS THIS TEST?

- This report provided by Ed Slott & Company LLC.

Most people think it is easy to leave an IRA to their heirs. But is it? The following is a quick quiz, and the answers follow at the end.

QUESTIONS

1. The IRA owner has four children. He names the oldest child as the beneficiar­y of his IRA and the executor of his will, which divides all his assets equally among the four children. Who gets the IRA?

2. The IRA owner has met with an attorney who recommends that he establish a trust for his spouse and that he names the trust as the beneficiar­y of his IRA. Who gets the IRA?

3. The IRA owner and his spouse are both wealthy. They decide that he has enough assets to leave to their heirs and that they will leave her assets to charity. Her will is set up to leave all her assets to charity. The beneficiar­y form for her IRA says the beneficiar­y is her spouse. Who gets the IRA?

4. The IRA owner and his spouse get divorced. He remarries and 10 years later he dies. His estate goes to his new spouse. His IRA beneficiar­y form names his exspouse. Who gets the IRA?

5. The IRA owner establishe­d her IRA 20 years ago. Today, after numerous bank mergers, she dies. No beneficiar­y form can be found. Who gets the IRA?

6. The IRA owner is divorced. He names his minor children as the beneficiar­ies of his IRA. While they are still minors he dies. Who gets the IRA?

ANSWERS

1. The oldest child gets the IRA, and most likely the tax liability. He may be able to disclaim the IRA or gift some of the Required Minimum Distributi­ons to his siblings. A disclaimer generally means that the IRA will go to the estate before going to the siblings, which results in much less favorable distributi­on options.

2. The trust gets the IRA, not the spouse, even if the spouse is the trustee of the trust. RMDs will have to go to the trust first and then to the spouse in accordance with the terms of the trust.

3. The spouse gets the IRA. IRAs do not pass through the will unless the estate is the beneficiar­y of the IRA.

4. The ex-spouse gets the IRA. IRAs pass by the beneficiar­y form, not the will.

5. Unless the beneficiar­ies have a copy of the beneficiar­y form acknowledg­ed by the bank, the IRA is going to pass in accordance with the default options in the IRA agreement. Some IRA agreements default to the spouse and if no spouse to the children; many agreements default to the estate. The distributi­on options for beneficiar­ies who inherit through the estate are far less favorable than the options for beneficiar­ies who are named on a beneficiar­y form.

6. Minor beneficiar­ies cannot sign paperwork for inherited IRAs, cannot manage the investment­s and cannot request RMDs. The IRA custodian may require that someone be appointed by a court to handle the inherited IRA for the children until they reach the age of majority or state laws could apply. The court could possibly name the ex-spouse to handle the inherited IRA for the children.

Email your IRA, 401(k), 403(b),

457 and pension questions to ttriquier@unitedplan­ners.com. Material discussed is meant to provide general informatio­n and it is not to be construed as specific investment, tax or legal advice.

Securities and advisory services offered through United Planners Financial Services. Member: FINRA, SIPC. The Retirement Financial Center and United Planners are independen­t companies. Thomas T. Riquier, a certified financial planner profession­al and president of The Retirement Financial Center, has been helping people with financial questions for more than 46 years. Riquier is a member of Ed Slott’s Master Elite IRA Advisor Group.

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