Karen Roberts | (TNS) Bankrate.com
If a loved one has named you as a beneficiary of their 401(k), knowing how to make the best use of the bequest is another way to honor them. How to best use an inherited 401(k) depends on a number of factors — first and foremost your relationship with the primary account holder.
Here are the key rules to know when inheriting a 401(k) and how to avoid some major penalties.
A 401(k) is an employer-sponsored retirement plan that workers can contribute to during their working life. If there’s money left in the account, it can be passed on to heirs, and you can inherit a 401(k) directly from a spouse or any account holder who has listed you as a primary beneficiary or a contingent beneficiary on the account. If listed as a contingent beneficiary, you would inherit the 401(k) if the primary beneficiary has passed away or cannot be located.
This article does not address options for heirs who end up with a retirement account as a result of asset distribution through probate, as different rules apply.
The rules for an inherited 401(k) differ, depending on whether the money was inherited from a spouse or a non-spouse. Depending on your relationship, you’ll have different options for what you can do with the money and how those options affect your tax situation.
Additionally, if you’ve inherited a 401(k) and you’re a minor child, chronically ill or disabled, or not more than 10 years younger than the decedent, you have different distribution rules. You can take distributions based on your own life expectancy and not be subject to the 10-year rule, which is described in further detail below.
Surviving spouses have four options to consider:
For any of these options, if you’re over age 59 ½, you won’t be subject to any penalty tax for early withdrawal.
Non-spousal beneficiaries have three choices, with the associated withdrawal rules below:
Prior to the passing of the 2019 SECURE Act, non-spouse beneficiaries had more options for the timing of withdrawals, particularly required minimum distributions. Now, most non-spouse beneficiaries have 10 years to deplete the inherited account, called the 10-year rule.
If the account owner died in 2020 or later, non-spouse beneficiaries must withdraw all funds by the end of the 10th year of the account owner’s passing or be subject to a 50% penalty on any remaining account assets. For account owners who passed in 2019 or earlier, beneficiaries also had the option to withdraw all the money by the end of the fifth year from passing. If the account owner passed in 2019 or earlier, RMDs could be based on your life expectancy.
For non-spouse beneficiaries inheriting in 2020 or later, only minor children of the account owner, disabled or chronically ill individuals, or those not more than ten years younger than the account owner at the time of their death can take RMDs based on their life expectancy. Once the minor child reaches the age of maturity based on their own state rules, then the 10-year rule kicks in. The 10-year rule will not kick in for the other two categories of beneficiaries.
Currently, the IRS does not require those subject to the 10-year rule for 401(k)s to take minimum annual distributions. So account owners could wait until the last year and take out the lump sum.
Dealing with an inherited 401(k) can bring a lot of complications, and your choices depend a lot on your relationship to the decedent, your age at inheritance, the account owner’s age when they passed and whether the account you inherited is pre- or post-tax. So it can be valuable to consult with a trusted financial adviser before making any decisions.
(Bankrate’s Rachel Christian contributed to an update of this story.)
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