Inherited Traditional IRAs

Inherited IRA choices

As a designated beneficiary, you have choices when inheriting a traditional IRA.

Surviving spouse
  • You can treat the IRA as your own IRA by designating yourself as the account owner.

 – To be treated as your own IRA you must be the sole beneficiary of the IRA and have unlimited right to withdraw amounts from it.

Individual Retirement Accounts - Beneficiaries of IRAs and Qualified Plans 2021
  • You can treat the IRA as your own by rolling it over into your IRA, or to the extent that it is taxable, into a:

– Qualified employer plan,

– Qualified annuity plan (section 403(a) plan),

– Tax-sheltered annuity plan (section 403(b) plan), or

– Deferred compensation plan of a state or local government (section 457 plan).

  • You can treat yourself as the beneficiary rather than treating the IRA as your own.
Required minimum distribution (RMD).

If you are the owner of the inherited IRA and not the beneficiary, you will determine the RMD (if any) as if you were the owner beginning with the year you elect or are deemed to be the owner.

Note: If you become the owner in the year your deceased spouse died, do not determine the RMD for that year using your life, rather, you must take the deceased spouse’s RMD for that year (to the extent it was not already distributed to your spouse before his or her death.

Inherited from someone other than a spouse

If you inherit a traditional IRA from anyone other that your deceased spouse, you cannot treat the inherited IRA as your own. This means you cannot make any contributions to the IRA. It also means you cannot roll over any amounts into or out of the inherited IRA. You can make a trustee-to-trustee transfer as long as the IRA into which the amounts are being moved is set up and maintained in the name of the deceased IRA owner for the benefit of you as beneficiary.

RMDs

The inherited IRA must generally be fully distributed by the end of the 10th calendar year following the year of the IRA owner’s death, except for the following eligible designated beneficiaries of IRAs.

  • Surviving spouse,
  • Disabled or chronically ill individual,
  • Individual who is not more than 10 years younger than the IRA owner, or
  • Child of the IRA owner who has not reached the age of majority
10% early withdrawal penalty

The 10% penalty for withdrawal before age 59½ does not apply to a distribution to you on or after the death of the participant. However, if a spouse chooses to roll the decedent’s IRA into his or her own separate IRA, any subsequent distribution will be subject to the 10% early withdrawal penalty assuming no other exception to the penalty applies.

IRA with basis

Any nondeductible contributions that gave the IRA a basis stay with the IRA after it is inherited by you. The basis cannot be combined with your basis in your own IRAs unless you are the decedent’s spouse and choose to treat the IRA as your own.

Inherited Roth IRA

When a Roth IRA owner dies, the minimum distribution rules that apply to traditional IRAs apply to Roth IRAs as though the Roth IRA owner died before his or her required beginning date.

Distributions to beneficiaries of IRAs

Generally, the entire interest in the Roth IRA must be distributed by the end of the 10th calendar year after the owner’s death. Exceptions apply for eligible designated beneficiaries of IRAs.

Spouse

If you are the sole beneficiary and the decedent’s spouse, you can either delay distributions until the year your spouse would have reached age 72 or treat the Roth IRA as your own.

Combining with other Roth IRAs

You can combine an inherited Roth IRA with another Roth IRA you maintain only if you either:

  • Inherited the other Roth IRA from the same decedent, or
  • Were the spouse of the decedent and the sole beneficiary of the Roth IRA and elect to treat it as your own IRA.
Distributions that are not qualified distributions

Distributions from inherited Roth IRAs are not usually taxed. However, if a distribution to you is not a qualified distribution, it is generally includible in your gross income in the same manner as it would have been included in the owner’s income had it been distributed to the IRA owner when he or she was alive. If the owner of a Roth IRA dies before the end of one of the following, the ordering rules for Roth IRA distributions determines which part may be taxable.

  • The 5-year period beginning with the first taxable year for which a contribution was made to a Roth IRA set up for the owner’s benefit, or
  • The 5-year period starting with the year of a conversion contribution from a traditional IRA or a rollover from a qualified retirement plan to a Roth IRA.
Beneficiaries of IRAs
Eligible Designated Beneficiary Designated Beneficiary Non-designated Beneficiary
(Stretch rule)
(10-year rule)
(5-year rule)
• Surviving spouse of the decedent.

• Individual who is disabled.

• Individual who is chronically ill.

• Individual not more than 10 years younger than decedent (e.g., a partner, friend, sibling).

• Minor child (not grandchild) of decedent.*
• Nonspouse.

• Individual who is 10 years (or more) younger than decedent.

• Certain see through trusts.
• Charities.

• Decedent’s estate.

• Non-qualified trusts.

*A minor child ceases to be an eligible designated beneficiary as of the date the child reaches the age of majority and any remainder of the portion of the individual’s interest shall be distributed within 10 years.

Designated Beneficiary Not Determined

If the IRA does not have a designated beneficiary as of the date of death, or the designated beneficiary disclaims his or her interest in the IRA, then the estate can designate one of the estate beneficiaries as the IRA designated beneficiary. The time limit for making this designation is September 30 of the year following the year of the IRA participant’s death. By making this designation, the estate can avoid having the IRA distributed under the 5-year rule.

Beneficiaries of Qualified Plans

Generally, you report pension or annuity income in the same way the plan participant would have reported it. However, some special rules apply.

Employee’s investment in contract

You as a beneficiary of an employee who was covered by a retirement plan can exclude from income a portion of non-periodic distributions received that totally relieve the payer from the obligation to pay an annuity. The amount that you can exclude is equal to the deceased employee’s investment in the contract (cost).

Survivor annuity

If you are entitled to receive a survivor annuity on the death of an employee, you can exclude part of each annuity payment as a tax-free recovery of the employee’s investment in the contract. You must figure the tax free part of each payment using the method that applies as if you were the employee.

Joint and survivor annuity

Benefits paid to a survivor under a joint and survivor annuity must be included in the surviving spouse’s gross income in the same way the retiree would have included them in gross income.