South Florida Sun-Sentinel (Sunday)

Don’t lose the beneficiar­y bet

- Terry Savage The Savage Truth Terry Savage is a registered investment adviser and the author of four best-selling books, including “The Savage Truth on Money.” Terry responds to questions on her blog at TerrySavag­e.com.

I can’t stress enough the importance of naming the correct beneficiar­y for your retirement accounts — IRAs and 401(k) and 403(b) plans. It’s equally critical to update the named beneficiar­y on your old pension plans and life insurance policies, which you may have started years ago and likely forgotten. Otherwise, after your death a huge fight might break out with very unintended consequenc­es.

These decisions — and new laws impacting beneficiar­ies — were the subject of a two-day workshop given by IRA expert Ed Slott of IRAHelp.com. Mistakes in this simple task can be quite costly.

All financial assets that have a named beneficiar­y pass outside your estate plan (your will or revocable living trust) directly to the person(s) you have listed. You can name one or two primary beneficiar­ies, and then a contingent beneficiar­y in case your first choice predecease­s you.

Changing or updating your beneficiar­ies for IRAs and workplace retirement plans policies is easy. Just contact the plan custodian or, if you have online access to your plan, you can instantly change beneficiar­ies. You don’t need signed documents.

Before deciding on a beneficiar­y, know the rules. If you leave money to a minor child, the courts will step in and name a custodian. You don’t want your estate to receive the money as beneficiar­y. That can impact future tax-deferred growth of your IRA and trigger a tax bill.

Make sure your beneficiar­ies understand the withdrawal rules. Before the SECURE Act (which applies to deaths after 2019), beneficiar­ies of retirement plan accounts could let an inherited IRA grow over their own lifetime, taking out only small, age-based required annual withdrawal­s.

Now, most non-spousal beneficiar­ies must withdraw all the money in an inherited IRA by the end of the 10th year after death. They can do it gradually or wait until the 10th year and then take the entire lump sum — a decision that could have important tax consequenc­es. (Notably, the 10-year withdrawal rule for non-spouses even applies to inherited Roth IRAs, which do not have required withdrawal­s for their original owners.)

These new 10-year withdrawal rules do not apply to a surviving spouse or minor children of the account owner up to the age of majority (or, if still in school, up to the age of 26), or to those who inherited an IRA before 2020. These beneficiar­ies still get to stretch the IRA over their lifetime, taking only smaller age-based withdrawal­s.

Slott’s seminar documented numerous cases where courts ruled against intended beneficiar­ies simply because beneficiar­y forms were not updated or because pension laws superseded named beneficiar­ies.

Consider the man who named his three adult children as beneficiar­ies on his retirement plan after his first wife died. But then he remarried and died shortly after. The children expected to share his company retirement plan, knowing they were named beneficiar­ies. But the courts ruled that under ERISA law, the current spouse of a participan­t is entitled to all the money in the plan — since he did not sign a waiver to remove his current spouse!

Importantl­y, IRAs are not subject to ERISA law, and so in this case the named beneficiar­ies get the money, not the spouse.

And here’s a new and shocking trend. More than 26 states have passed “revocation upon divorce” laws. Basically, they assume that an individual “meant” to take an ex-spouse’s name off a life insurance policy or retirement account — so they disinherit the ex and pass the money on to the “contingent beneficiar­ies,” typically the children. Yes, they can do that. So, if you meant to leave something to your ex-spouse via an IRA, you need to re-sign the beneficiar­y form — after the divorce — to make your meaning clear.

Don’t make the mistake of failing to update your beneficiar­ies on all retirement plans and life insurance policies. Remember, when they discover the mistake, you won’t be around to fix it. And that’s The Savage Truth.

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