IRS 新规则令 2019 年后 IRA 继承人头疼
New IRS Rules Create Headaches For Post-2019 IRA Inheritors

原始链接: https://www.zerohedge.com/personal-finance/new-irs-rules-create-headaches-post-2019-ira-inheritors

为了响应国会在 2019 年做出的改变,美国国税局 (IRS) 于 2022 年 7 月发布了关于 401ks、IRA 和自 2020 年以来继承的其他计划等退休账户的最低分配要求 (RMD) 的指南。这些规则主要影响非配偶受益人,要求他们在十年内完全耗尽遗产,并在这段时间内每年进行分配。 每年提取的金额是根据国税局预期寿命表确定的。 例外情况包括成为继承账户唯一所有者的配偶和符合资格的指定受益人 (EDB),例如残疾人、未成年人或比已故所有者年轻十岁以下的人。 这些规则不适用于 2020 年之前继承的账户。如果出现错误或错过分配,可能会被处以未付 RMD 25% 的罚款。 该立法结束了流行的“Stretch IRA”,允许在预期寿命期间最大限度地减少分配,取而代之的是在所有者去世十周年时账户完全耗尽。 例如,在 2021 年从已故父母那里继承账户的成年子女必须在 2031 年 12 月 31 日之前分配全部余额。虽然国税局最初宣布对 2021 年至 2024 年期间错过分配的处罚,但他们随后在此期间给予了宽大处理,但没有强制执行 罚款。 从 2025 年开始,执行新规定,处罚将恢复,但在豁免期内任何错过付款的行为都不会影响帐户所有者的截止日期。 近年来,先锋集团推出了一种在线工具来帮助受益人计算他们的 RMD。

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原文

It took them four-and-a-half years, but the IRS has issued final rules governing mandatory distributions from traditional 401k's, IRAs, and other retirement plans inherited in 2020 or later. To the great disappointment of beneficiaries and their financial planners, the agency embraced the most complex procedure possible as it interpreted a law passed by Congress in 2019. 

The new rules apply when the deceased IRA owner was old enough to be making required minimum distributions (RMDs) of their own before they died. Currently, that requirement starts at age 73, but in 2020, it was age 72. It's scheduled to rise to age 75 in 2033. (Yes, we're only in the second paragraph and things are already getting knotty. Bear down.)  

Good news: The new requirements do not apply to spouse beneficiaries, who will still be able to take over the inherited retirement plan assets and have them treated as if they had always been theirs. There's also forgiving flexibility for so-called "eligible designated beneficiaries," such as those who are disabled or chronically ill, minor children of the deceased owner, and others who are not more than 10 years younger than the deceased owner. 

Other beneficiaries, however -- such as an adult child of someone who was of RMD age -- are now condemned to mandatory distributions over a 10-year period, with requirements to draw money out each year. It's not one-tenth of the account per year -- rather, the amount is driven by an IRS life-expectancy table. Those who miscalculate the amount, or who neglect the chore altogether, will be penalized 25% of the amount that should have been withdrawn, but wasn't. 

The hassle springs from December 2019's SECURE Act, which, among many other retirement-account tweaks, killed the so-called "stretch IRA" -- which previously let beneficiaries minimize distributions by spreading them out over their life expectancies. The new law requires most non-spouse beneficiaries to completely empty an inherited IRA by Dec. 31 of the year containing the 10th anniversary of the account owner's death. For example, an adult child who inherited an IRA from a parent who died in October 2021 has until Dec. 31, 2031 to take all the money out. 

When the law was first passed, tax professionals and financial planners assumed that people covered by that "10-year rule" would be able to take out as little or as much as they wanted until the 10th year, when the entire account would have to be emptied. However, in 2022, the IRS caused an uproar when it said it would force withdrawals every year. The agency then took about two years to reconsider its stance, only to end up imposing the same complex requirement via final rules posted in July.  

The new provision applies to those who inherited an IRA from someone who died in 2020 or after. Between the SECURE Act's passage in 2019 and this summer's announcement, countless beneficiaries were subjected to a multi-year, rolling bureaucratic fiasco, unsure what they were supposed to do. In a rare display of mercy, the IRS said it wouldn't penalize anyone who didn't take a required distribution in 2021, 2022, 2023 or 2024.  

Armed IRS agents outside a building in Houston's Galleria area in 2022 (Brett Coomer/Houston Chronicle)

In 2025, however, it's game-on, and affected beneficiaries will have to start taking RMDs. There's no need to "make up" for the years when the IRS waived the penalty, and the 10-year clock is still based on the year of death. (Remember, if you inherited an IRA from someone who died in 2019 or earlier, these new rules do not apply to you.)

It could be in your interest to take out more than the RMD. For example, if the account is big enough, a large, single withdrawal in Year 10 could push you into a higher tax bracket, or have a domino affect on other elements of your tax return that key off your adjusted gross income. Then there's the question of what future tax rate you'll be subjected to in a late-stage empire that's $35 trillion in debt -- as the pending Jan. 1, 2026 expiration of the Trump-era tax cuts swings in the balances of the November election.  

In the first few years after the SECURE Act passed, many financial institutions threw up their hands on inherited IRA RMD calculations, merely telling investors to ask a tax advisor. Now, they're starting to come around. Vanguard, for example, offers an online, inherited IRA RMD calculator that anyone can access.  

As always, the maddening complexity of the income tax makes us wish 1913 never happened...

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