home learn more WiserAdvisor University contact us help
Learn. Explore. Connect.
 
   
WiserAdvisor University  >  Subject: Retirement Planning  >  Topic: IRA  >  Article
About WiserAdvisor University

WiserAdvisor University is designed to provide you with high-quality information about investing and finance straight from those who know best: financial professionals. The University includes hundreds of informative articles on dozens of topics of interest to individual investors like you.
If you find an article informative and would like to be contacted by a financial advisor, we encourage you to fill out our simple form. The WiserAdvisor service is free, objective, accurate, and confidential, and will match you to qualified financial advisors who can help you reach your investment goals.


About WiserAdvisor.com

WiserAdvisor.com is an independent and unbiased matching service designed to help individuals find the best financial advisors for their unique needs. This easy-to-use system prides itself on its simplicity and accuracy. After you fill out a simple form, our algorithms search through the thousands of advisors in our system and provide you with up to three advisors who are best able to help you accomplish your goals.

Other Articles
Should You Consider a Rollover from Your Former Employer’s Retirement Plan?
Consider a Conversion
Consider Splitting Your IRA
Extending Your IRA's Life
What's So Special About a Roth IRA?
Withdrawing IRA Funds
Your Children and IRAs
Roll Over, Stay Put, or Withdraw?
Three Advantages a Roth IRA May Offer Your Estate Plan
The Top 10 Ways to Hand Over Your IRA to the IRS
The Ins and Outs of IRAs and Retirement Plans
Safety Leads to Penalty
IRA Rollovers Can Help Manage Change
IRAs: An Even Better Deal for the Long-Term Investor
Age 70˝: Remember that Age When It Comes to Your IRA
Have a regular IRA and would like to save by converting to a Roth IRA?
Approaching 70? Watch IRA Rules
What Roth Hath, Traditional Hath Not
Making IRA Withdrawals During Retirement
Multi-generational IRAs: A Strategy for Retirement Assets
Turn Retirement Savings Into a Powerful Wealth-Building Device
Wall Street Has One Answer to Wealth Creation; Another is Tax Reduction
A New Look at Stretch IRAs
Everyone Can Relax and "Stretch-out"
You Put What in Your IRA?
The Basics of IRAs
401(k)s & IRAs: Did You "Set It and Forget It?"
Roth IRA: The "Liquid" Retirement Savings Account
IRA Beneficiaries: What’s In A Name?
Maximizing Roth Conversions
Taxing Consequences: What to Do with a Large IRA that Has Been Inherited or Accumulated
Tax Traps in IRA Accounts
The Millionaire Lifestyle
Converting IRA Money to a Roth IRA in 2010
Ruminations on Tax Deductible vs. Tax Free
Individual Retirement Account: "Retirement" is Its Middle Name
Are You Leaving 70-90% of Your Ira to the IRS?
 

IRA

Tax Traps in IRA Accounts

By Steve Robbins
Certified Financial Planner ™, Steve Robbins, CFP, CSA



Designating an IRA beneficiary is almost an afterthought for most IRA owners. Lack of attention to this seemingly simple procedure can create costly tax impacts for beneficiaries.

The growth of IRA values in the last ten years has been staggering. It is not uncommon to see seven figure IRAs due in large part to the rollover of pension distributions to self-managed IRA accounts. Combined with a stock market that has grown at rates which can easily double an IRA account balance in four to six years, these larger accounts carry huge potential tax traps for the unwary.

The tax problems associated with IRA distributions have largely been overlooked as investors have concentrated on filling the accounts. Now, as age catches up, investors will come face to face
A Fast, Free and Easy Way to Find a Top-Notch Financial Advisor!
Select the services that you are looking for from a financial advisor and hit 'Go'. Fill out a short form and we will match you to the advisors that best suit your unique needs.
Portfolio Management Insurance
Retirement Planning Taxes
Estate Planning Business Finances
Educational Planning    
with the complex rules laid down by the IRS that can easily turn a golden nest egg into a rat’s nest of tax problems.

Here are a few tips for IRA distribution planning. To begin, it is helpful to understand taxation of IRA distributions. IRAs are subject to three taxes. First, every dollar taken out, regardless the circumstances or who withdraws the money is taxable as ordinary income to the owner who makes the withdrawal. Second, money taken out before age 59˝—except for hardship or substantially equal payments—is subject to a 10% excise tax in the year withdrawn. Finally, IRAs owned by a decedent are subject to inclusion in the estate for purposes of computing death, or estate taxes.

Spouses who inherit IRA accounts from a recently deceased spouse who has not begun mandatory distributions have the option of rolling the IRA into their own IRA or leaving it in the name of their spouse. If the spouse is younger than 59˝, once the IRA is rolled over into his/her account, the distributions are subject to the 10% excise tax rule if taken out before age 59˝. A better plan, for the spouse who may want to use this money early, is to leave it in the name of the decedent and withdraw over time as the beneficiary, without tax penalty or restrictions.

Non-spousal beneficiaries who inherit IRAs for an owner who has died before age 70˝ have two choices for distribution. They may take distributions either within five years from the date of death of the owner or they may elect to take minimum distributions over their life expectancy. For larger accounts, significant tax savings can result; and significantly more wealth can be realized by having the distributions made over a younger beneficiary’s lifetime. This election must be made by December 31 of the year after the owner’s death.

There is little downside to electing the lifetime option because the beneficiary may take out more than the minimum at any time.

IRAs have a special attraction for tax planning because they provide an envelope inside which the investments can grow tax deferred. This envelope can be collapsed, causing an unwanted distribution within a year of the owner’s death . . . and immediate taxation of the entire account balance if one of the following mistakes is made.

Name your estate as the beneficiary, and the estate, which has no life expectancy, will pay ordinary income taxes on the account balance within the year. Failing to name a beneficiary of an IRA or pension account can cause the same, unwanted, but completely taxed, results.

IRA distribution rules are complex. Before you begin minimum distributions at age 70˝, it will pay to seek professional advice to avoid unwanted tax results.



Click here to submit request>
Go Back to Topic Page>

If you are an advisor and would like to see your articles published, click here



Article reprinted by permission. Unauthorized reproduction of content prohibited.