IRA Required Minimum Distributions

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Required Minimum Distributions, often referred to as RMDs, are amounts that the federal government requires you to withdraw annually from traditional IRAs and employer-sponsored retirement plans

[edit] Lifetime Distributions

You[who?] are required to begin lifetime RMDs no later than April 1 of the year after you reach age 70½ (or, for most employer plan participants, after you retire). You do not have to take lifetime distributions from Roth IRAs, but after-death distributions (below) are required. You can always withdraw more than the minimum amount from your IRA or plan in any year, but if you withdraw less than the required minimum, you will be subject to a federal penalty. The IRS penalty is an excise tax equal to 50% of the amount you should have withdrawn.

The RMD rules are designed to spread out the distributions of your entire interest in an IRA or plan account over your life expectancy or the joint life expectancy of you and your beneficiary. The purpose of the RMD rules is to ensure that people don't just accumulate retirement accounts, defer taxation, and leave these retirement funds as an inheritance. Instead, required minimum distributions force you to withdraw at least some of the funds as taxable distributions during your lifetime.

Unlike most distributions from IRAs and qualified plans, RMDs are never eligible for rollover; they must be withdrawn. However, because the distributions are not rollover-eligible, taxes are not required to be withheld at the time of distribution, and may thus be postponed until the individual files an income-tax return for the year. Any amount withdrawn ABOVE the minimum required amount will be eligible for rollover within 60 days of the distribution. Income tax must be withheld from that portion if the rollover option is not elected.

Employer-sponsored qualified retirement plans, such as 401(k) plans, require the same distributions that IRAs do. However, the beginning date requirement may be later than the date for IRAs. While IRAs require RMDs to begin by 4/1 of the year after the individual reaches age 70½, participants in an employer-sponsored plan can usually wait until 4/1 of the year after their retirement (if later than age 70 1/2) to begin distributions UNLESS the individual owns 5% or more of the employer who is sponsoring the plan.

In addition, employer-sponsored plans differ from IRAs in rules relating to aggregation. A person with multiple IRAs may add the balances in each account to determine the total RMD for the year, then take that full amount from a single IRA, or split it in any manner between two or more IRAs. However, employer-sponsored plans must remain distinct; the RMD calculation for each is performed separately, and the distributions must be taken from each plan individually.

This site can calculate simple RMD's given appropriate information: http://www.acctsite.com/calcs/RetireDistrib.html

[edit] After Death Distributions

Distributions after death must be made to the named beneficiary of the decedent's IRA or qualified plan. Legislation passed in 2006 allows qualified retirement plans to be amended to offer a "nonspouse rollover." If the rollover is available, the beneficiary may make a direct transfer of the funds to an inherited IRA, which must be in the name of the decedent for the benefit of the named beneficiary. This became effective beginning in 2007.

IRA beneficiaries do not require a nonspouse rollover; an IRA beneficiary can have a decedent's IRA retitled in his/her own name without a "rollover" transaction. (Spouses have much greater rollover rights and can delay distributions until their own age 70 1/2 if they so choose.) A nonspouse IRA beneficiary must either begin distributions by the end of the year following the decedent's death (they can elect a "stretch" payout if they do this) or, if the decedent died before 4/1 of the year after he/she would have been 70 1/2, the beneficiary can follow the "5-year rule."

The 5-year rule does NOT apply to an IRA if the decedent died after having started his/her required minimum distributions (generally if he/she died later than 4/1 after reaching age 70 1/2). In that case, there is NO 5-year rule, and the beneficiary takes distributions over the longer of his/her own life expectancy or the remaining life expectancy that the decedent would have had (using government tables). Many taxpayers are misinformed by advice that they must take all of their distribution from an elderly relative's IRA in a 5-year period.

However, if the decedent died BEFORE age 70 1/2 and the beneficiary does not start a lifetime payout by the end of the year after death, the 5-year rule does apply. Also, if the decedent died before that date and had no beneficiary (for example if he/she named the estate as beneficiary, or a charity) the 5-year rule applies. Many retirement plans also trigger the 5-year rule.

The 5-year rule states that the entire account balance must be withdrawan over a 5 year period. It does NOT require a certain amount each year, or an even division between the five years. However, with the 5-year distribution method, the entire remaining balance becomes a required distribution in the fifth year. If a decedent has named his/her estate or a charity as beneficiary and the 5-year rule applies, no "stretch" payout is possible. If an estate or charity is beneficiary of a part of the account, the same holds true unless certain remedial measures are taken by September 30 of the year after death.

This is just a brief overview of rules based on Internal Revenue Code Section 401(a)(9). The rules take up dozens of pages of Treasury regulations at Treas. Regs. 1.401(a)(9)-1 to -9 and 1.408-8. (See TD 8987, Federal Register, volume 67, beginning at page 18988, dated April 17, 2002. The nonspouse rollover rules were passed in Section 829 of the Pension Protection Act of 2006, and interpreted by IRS Notice 2007-7, 2007-5 IRB 1.