The passage of the SECURE Act in 2019 fundamentally altered the rules for inheriting retirement accounts. For decades, beneficiaries could stretch IRA distributions over their lifetime, creating powerful multigenerational wealth transfer opportunities. Those days are largely gone.
Our friends at Patterson Bray PLLC discuss how these changes affect estate planning strategies. A retirement benefits trusts lawyer can help you understand the implications for your specific situation.
What the Stretch IRA Used to Allow
Before 2020, non-spouse beneficiaries could take required minimum distributions from an inherited IRA based on their own life expectancy. A 30-year-old inheriting a substantial IRA could spread withdrawals over 50+ years, allowing the account to grow tax-deferred for decades. This created significant wealth accumulation potential for younger beneficiaries. The strategy worked particularly well for grandchildren and other younger family members.
The New 10-Year Rule
The SECURE Act replaced the stretch provision with a much stricter requirement for most beneficiaries. Now, non-spouse beneficiaries must withdraw the entire inherited retirement account balance within 10 years of the original owner’s death. You have flexibility in how you take those distributions. You can withdraw everything in year one, spread it evenly across the decade, or wait until year 10 and take it all at once. But the account must be emptied by December 31 of the 10th year following the year of death. This accelerated timeline often pushes beneficiaries into higher tax brackets, particularly if they inherit during their peak earning years.
Who Qualifies as an Eligible Designated Beneficiary
Certain beneficiaries still qualify for more favorable treatment under exceptions to the 10-year rule:
- Surviving spouses
- Minor children of the deceased (until they reach majority)
- Disabled individuals
- Chronically ill individuals
- Beneficiaries are not more than 10 years younger than the deceased
These “eligible designated beneficiaries” can still use life expectancy distributions in many cases. Surviving spouses have the most flexibility, including the option to treat the inherited IRA as their own.
The Minor Child Exception Has Limitations
While minor children can stretch distributions based on life expectancy, this benefit ends when they reach the age of majority (typically 18 or 21, depending on state law). Once they hit that milestone, the 10-year clock starts ticking. This means even minor children will eventually face compressed distribution timelines during what are often their highest earning years.
Required Minimum Distributions During the 10 Years
Initially, the IRS suggested beneficiaries only needed to empty the account by year 10 with no annual distribution requirements. That interpretation changed. According to proposed IRS regulations, if the original account owner had already started taking required minimum distributions before death, beneficiaries must take annual RMDs during the 10 years AND empty the account by year 10. This dual requirement caught many beneficiaries and advisors off guard.
Impact on Estate Planning Strategies
The elimination of the stretch IRA has forced a reconsideration of retirement account beneficiary designations. Leaving large IRAs to children or grandchildren now results in significant compressed taxation. Some families are exploring Roth conversions during the original owner’s lifetime to reduce the future tax burden on beneficiaries. Others are considering charitable remainder trusts or other sophisticated planning techniques. Naming trusts as IRA beneficiaries requires careful analysis under the new rules. What worked before 2020 may no longer achieve the intended results.
Planning Around the New Reality
If you have substantial retirement account balances, the SECURE Act changes should influence your estate planning decisions. The tax consequences of leaving IRAs to the next generation are now more severe for most families. Consider discussing your beneficiary designations and overall estate plan with someone who understands how these rules interact with your other planning documents. The right approach depends on your family situation, the size of your retirement accounts, and your overall wealth transfer goals.