For professional advisors, your clients’ retirement accounts may represent a significant portion of their wealth. Retirement benefits are unique and warrant our attention as advisors for many reasons: asset protection purposes, timing income taxation on the distribution of these benefits to individual beneficiaries, and if directed to a trust, retirement benefits invoke a number of complicated rules. Retirement plan benefits also open the door for a number of charitable planning techniques for clients who wish to support charity as part of their legacy.
Over the past few years, major changes in tax law, including SECURE Act of 2019 and SECURE 2.0 Act of 2022, have reshaped the rules for planning for retirement benefits. With the release last year of final IRS regulations further clarifying the rules for inherited IRAs, it is more important than ever to understand how these changes impact your clients’ estate plans, their beneficiaries, and charitable planning strategies.
Why the 10-Year Rule Matters
A key change under the SECURE Act is the elimination of the "stretch IRA" for most non-spouse beneficiaries. In the past, heirs could spread required minimum distributions (RMDs) from an inherited IRA over their lifetime, reducing their annual tax burden, and allowing the account to grow tax-deferred.
Now, most non-spouse beneficiaries must withdraw the entire balance of an inherited IRA within 10 years of the original account holder’s passing. While this rule seems straightforward, new IRS guidance has added complexities:
For heirs inheriting large retirement accounts, these changes portend adverse tax consequences, especially if withdrawals push them into a higher tax bracket.
What This Means for Estate Planning
Professional advisors are now recommending that their clients reassess their beneficiary designations and distribution strategies to align their objectives with the new regulatory landscape. The changes to retirement benefits underscore the importance of proactive planning to minimize tax burdens and preserve wealth across generations. For advisors of clients who are charitably inclined, consider the following charitable planning strategies for retirement assets.
Learn More at Our Upcoming Event
Understanding these changes is crucial for individuals with retirement assets and their professional advisors to make informed decisions about retirement assets. Join the Community Foundation for Southeast Michigan on May 1, 2025, at St. John’s Resort in Plymouth, Michigan, for a deep dive into charitable planning techniques for retirement benefits with Professor Christopher Hoyt, one of the nation’s leading experts in tax law and estate planning.
Seats for this event are limited, and registration closes April 17, 2025. Do not miss your chance to gain expert insights, connect with your peers, and ensure you are prepared for the retirement planning landscape of 2025 and beyond.