Answering Your IRA Inheritance Trust Concerns
An individual retirement account (IRA) is an important part of many retirement portfolios. If you have contributed the annual maximum over your adult life, you’ve probably grown a nice nest egg for your golden years.
When you die, however, that nest egg breaks open and passes to your listed beneficiaries. The two most common scenarios are (a) the kids spend it freely and get stuck with a huge tax bill or (b) creditors descend on the unprotected money.
The attorneys at Livens & Reed, PLLC can help you establish an IRA inheritance trust to protect those assets from claims, as well as protect your heirs from them. Our Bedford, Texas, law practice offers comprehensive estate planning solutions to clients across the Dallas-Fort Worth area and statewide. Call 817-591-7257 for a free consultation.
What An IRA Inheritance Trust Can Do
Upon your death, the assets in your IRA can be protected from your beneficiaries’ creditors, and the annual distributions may be distributed over your beneficiaries’ lifetime. For example, what starts as a $200,000 IRA can become literally worth millions.
Nonspouse beneficiaries (i.e., children) generally withdraw the entire amount of the IRA upon the death of the parent. The benefits of the IRA trust are that the children will have creditor protection for the IRA, and they have the option of withdrawing the annual distributions over their lifetime. A further benefit is that you can require the children to take distributions over their lifetime. The principal continues to grow and provides a predictable income stream, and only the annual distributions are taxed. If you have faith in your child’s fiscal restraint and financial sense, we can also establish the IRA inheritance trust as a beneficiary-controlled trust.
Example: Say that Joe’s daughter inherits his $200,000 IRA. Whether she spends it or reinvests, there will be a big tax bill the following year. With an IRA inheritance trust, the money stays put — the government, creditors and the beneficiaries themselves can’t get at it. Assuming an 8 percent annual return, Joe’s daughter would take out some $700,000 in minimum distributions if she lived another 30 years and still leave $300,000 to Joe’s grandchildren when she dies!
Our experienced professionals can also explain strategies for a 401(k) beneficiary and other qualified retirement plans. We will also create strategies that will help:
- Minimize IRA taxes
- Protect assets from creditors
- Continue providing benefits of an IRA for your heirs
Contact Us Today
For a plain English explanation of your specific scenario, contact us today by calling 817-591-7257 to schedule your free initial consultation with a lawyer.