The SECURE Act of 2019 caused great confusion around retirement planning, but a new notice from the IRS provides some clarity.
The SECURE Act of 2019 caused great confusion around retirement planning, but a new notice from the IRS provides some clarity.
The Setting Every Community Up for Retirement Enhancement (SECURE) Act of 2019 rewrote the rules for inherited retirement accounts, including traditional and Roth IRAs. Most beneficiaries inheriting qualified accounts in 2020 and after are required to liquidate the asset in 10 years. The biggest confusion around the issue was created by the requirement to take annual required minimum distributions (RMDs) from the account during the 10 years. Our discussion is focused on designated beneficiaries, because those beneficiaries are the ones who have been affected the most by the SECURE Act. Generally speaking, these are individual beneficiaries that are non-spousal or not a minor child of the account owner
When the SECURE Act was issued, most experts interpreted the 10-year rule in the Act the same way as the five-year rule: No need to take an annual RMD—just liquidate the account completely by the fifth or tenth year. However, in February 2022, proposed regulations from the Treasury Department caused panic and confusion. The proposed regulations separated beneficiaries of accounts based on the account owner’s age at death. Remember, as these are the proposed regulations, they apply from the effective date of the legislation—2020! And while 2020 was a “skip year” for RMDs because of the CARES Act, 2021 and 2022 were not. This sent the retirement-planning world into a spin as it was not clear if RMDs were required for 2021 and 2022. Notice 2022-53 provides guidance on this issue.
We now have the facts of the proposed regulations, and Notice 2022-53 has given us the comfort of not being penalized for missed RMDs.
Remember that regulations regarding inherited RMDs are not yet final. They are, indeed, still proposed. The Notice issued by the IRS was to simply answer the “what if” questions that many financial professionals and clients had. What if the client doesn’t want to take the RMD? Should the client take it just in case?
For more information about retirement-planning, please contact our Retirement Strategies Group at RSG@PacificLife.com or (800) 722-2333, ext. 3939. PacificLife.com
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