Protecting
IRAs from Unnecessary Taxation
The extraordinary performance of the stock market during
the nineties, combined with increasing contributions to retirement
plans has led to a growing number individuals with very large
IRAs, 401(k) or other qualified accounts. In many households,
these accounts may represent the majority of their estate.
When these accounts exceed the Unified Exemption for Estate
taxes, which for year 2005 is $1.5 million, extra planning
may be necessary to protect your estate from unnecessary tax
erosion. Estate taxes can run as high as 49 percent on amounts
above the exemption and they are on top of any income taxes
that may be due.
Utilizing the Unified Tax Credit
properly
Let me demonstrate:
You have an IRA worth $2.5 million and it represents your
entire estate. If you die this year, you could leave it to
your spouse and it would escape both estate taxes and immediate
income taxes. Your spouse could roll it over into his or
her own IRA (only a spouse can do a rollover of an inherited
IRA). There is no problem until your spouse dies. Since
the exemption is individual, when your spouse dies (let's
assume it happens six months from now, for simplification
purposes), their heir now gets the IRA, but only the first
$1,500, 000 is protected from estate taxes, that means that
taxes are due on $1,000,000. At a 48-percent estate tax rate,
$465,000 [i] is due in estate taxes. Unfortunately, since this
is the only asset, some of the IRA will need to be liquidated
to pay that $465,000, but this money withdrawn from the IRA
to pay taxes will be subject to federal income taxes. Your
heirs will need to withdraw more than $800,000 from the IRA
(not including possible state taxes which will up the ante)
to pay all of the taxes due. Net return to the ultimate heir
is $1,700,000.
[ii]
This could have been avoided or minimized:
Instead of leaving the entire IRA to your spouse, you could
list your spouse as primary beneficiary and an irrevocable
trust (sometimes known as a bypass trust) as the contingent
beneficiary. Upon your death, your spouse would then disclaim
the amount of the exemption ($1,500,000 and rising over the
next few years) and that amount would revert to the trust.
This must be done within nine months of your death, the sooner
the better. Your spouse would still be able to have an income
and access to the principal of the trust (provided you have
made those provisions or given the trustee authority to do
so). When your spouse passes, your exemption would be preserved
and theirs would come into play and the entire $2.5 million
would bypass estate taxes.
Unnecessary liquidation of an
inherited IRA
There is no requirement that an IRA be liquidated upon your
death. In most cases, the beneficiary has up to five years
to empty the account, but if the account owner dies before
they are required to take Minimum Required Distributions,
the beneficiary may be able to adopt a distribution schedule
over their lifetime. For a young person, this could amount
to 30 years or more of continuing tax-deferred growth. Allowing
the balance to remain in the IRA could net the recipient considerably
more money.
Another point to note here is that if you have multiple beneficiaries
with a wide range in age (for example, your children and grandchildren),
it may be better to divide your IRA into several accounts,
one for each beneficiary. Otherwise the distribution schedule
will be based on the oldest heir, thus shortening the deferral
time for the youngest.
Note: The Roth IRA is not currently subject to Minimum
Required Distributions (MRD) for the account holder but a
beneficiary will need to set up a distribution schedule.
Failing to name a contingent
beneficiary
When you die, and your heir dies soon afterward, the IRA
becomes part of the estate and must soon be liquidated. If
it passes to a contingent beneficiary, the distribution schedule
elected by either you (if you had started MRDs) or your primary
beneficiary can continue and allow for additional years of
tax-deferral.
For more information on how to protect your IRA from unnecessary
taxes, order our
free booklet, “IRA Distribution Mistakes and How to
Avoid Them,” by clicking here.

[i] www.turbotax.com/calculators/index.html
[ii] calculations made using
turbotax.com
calculators. The $800,000 figure was reached after including
the estate taxes on $1 million, and adding in the cost of
federal income taxes on both the estate tax due and the
additional withdrawals necessary to pay all income taxes.
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