"Ghost Story" Can Haunt Your IRA

Published Friday, December 7, 2012 at: 7:00 AM EST

The rules for contributing to an IRA are relatively simple. You put in the money for each tax year by the required deadline—the tax return due date for the year of the contribution—and tell the account custodian how you want the funds invested. In addition, you might roll over funds to an IRA from a 401(k) or another kind of “qualified plan” at work when you change jobs or retire. That way, your money can continue to grow without being eroded by taxes until you make a withdrawal.

The rules for distributions, in contrast, are extremely complex. In particular, complications may arise as you approach the time for taking “required minimum distributions” (RMDs) from your IRA. Make the wrong moves and your heirs might be forced to receive payouts based on your “ghost life expectancy.”

For IRA owners, the "required beginning date" (RBD) for RMDs is April 1st of the year after the year in which they turn age 70½. For instance, if someone reaches that age on June 1,of this year, the RBD is April 1 of next year. The amount of the RMD is based on the value of your accounts on December 31st of the tax year of the RMD and is calculated according to an IRS-approved life expectancy table. And here’s where things get complicated.

If you die before the RBD and have designated a “qualified beneficiary” such as a child or spouse, the RMDs are generally based on the beneficiary’s life expectancy. (Surviving spouses also have the option of rolling over the funds into their own IRAs.) However, if you haven’t designated a beneficiary or you named a “non-qualified beneficiary” such as your estate, the IRA must be emptied out in five years. Conversely, if an IRA owner dies after the RBD, payments to a beneficiary are still based on the beneficiary’s life expectancy, but payments to a non-qualified beneficiary must use the owner’s ghost life expectancy.

A ghost life expectancy isn’t as scary as it sounds. It’s how long the IRA owner would be expected to live—if he or she hadn’t already died. But using an older owner’s life expectancy table will still drain the IRA faster than usual.

Suppose that Walter Mason, age 80 and single, has $750,000 in his IRA. Walter named his estate as the beneficiary of his IRA. He dies on July 1 this year without taking an RMD for the current tax year.

Because Walter designated a non-qualified beneficiary, RMDs for the current and future years will be based on his ghost life expectancy. The payment under the single-life expectancy table is $40,107. Under this method, payments will be greater than the amounts that would have been required if Walter had designated a qualified beneficiary.

Good planning can minimize the impact of RMDs and help preserve your retirement nest egg.

This article was written by a professional financial journalist for G.W. Sherwold and is not intended as legal or investment advice.

© 2024 Advisor Products Inc. All Rights Reserved.