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Please consider the following:
- The
primary beneficiary of the IRA would be the surviving spouse.
- The
secondary or first contingent beneficiary could be a trust where the
surviving spouse gets the income and at the death of the surviving
spouse the proceeds go to the children equally.
(A “B” or unified credit or exemption equivalent trust).
So far, this is identical to one of my
standard “old rule” plans where I did not name children or
grandchildren as primary beneficiaries on separate IRAs.
Now, I am suggesting:
- The third beneficiary or second
contingent beneficiary would simply be the children equally “per
stirpes.”
- The fourth or third contingent
beneficiary could be a special trust for the grandchildren to
protect against inappropriate spending or investing at a young age.
Under the cascading scheme, the
surviving spouse could either keep everything or disclaim all or a
portion to a “B” trust. A
“B” or unified credit shelter trust specifies that the income from
the trust will be paid to the surviving spouse and at the surviving
spouse's death, the principal is divided equally among the children.
The advantage of disclaiming to a B trust is that it keeps the
proceeds of the trust out of the estate of the second spouse when he
or she dies.
Alternately the surviving spouse could
disclaim all or a portion to their children.
The children, if they desired, could keep the inherited IRA and
take minimum required distributions based on their individual life
expectancies. That means
the child would likely have a much lower minimum required distribution
than the surviving spouse. As
a family, you are paying far less in federal income taxes than if the
surviving spouse or the trust was the beneficiary.
We call this series of disclaimer
possibilities “cascading beneficiaries” and we have produced a
“master document,” that serves as the beneficiary designation of
the IRA or retirement plan. With our help anyone can make the plan a
reality.
If you are intrigued by the idea of an
extended tax deferral period for the children based on their long life
expectancies, consider the potential for the phenomenal benefits for
the grandchildren. If the second-generation children were in a
suitably strong financial position and they disclaimed all or a
portion of their inherited IRA to their children (the IRA owner's
grandchildren) then the third generation children could then take MRD
over their quite long life expectancy.
This would lead to enormous income tax deferral.
In addition to the tax benefits, it is possible to safeguard
the money for the grandchildren through extensive trust provisions
that will not allow a grandchild to have access to a large amount of
an inherited IRA when they were 18 or 21.
Unlike
conventional trusts, the trust we offer is designed specifically for
IRA or retirement plan assets. The trust pays out the income (in the
form of minimum required distributions) and the trustee has the right
to invade principal (retirement assets still in the plan) for the
beneficiary's health, maintenance and support, education and
post-graduate education (and, if you are a sport, one summer in
Europe). At intervals between the ages of 25 and 35 the beneficiary
can request percentages of the principal, still in the form of the
inherited tax-deferred "stretch" IRA. The beneficiary can
then terminate the trust and have direct access to the retirement
assets at any point after attaining age 35. Of course variations of
the described trust are easily accomplished, but this is a good
starting point.
Under the old rules you could have had
cascading beneficiaries, but it was not helpful in terms of slowing
down the minimum required distribution of the beneficiary.
The critical date for determining a distribution pattern for
both the IRA owner and under many circumstances the distribution
pattern for his heirs was the IRA owner's required beginning date,
April 1 of the year following the year the IRA owner turned 70 ½.
For example:
Harold names
Wilma primary beneficiary.
Harold lives past his required beginning date.
Harold dies.
Wilma disclaims to her children and they disclaim to her
grandchildren.
Under the old rules, Harold's
grandchildren must take minimum required distributions based on
Wilma's life expectancy. Under
the new rules, the grandchildren could take minimum required
distributions based on their own life expectancy.
Under
the new rules, the critical date for determining the minimum required
distribution pattern is December 31 of year following the year the IRA
owner dies. The extended
time frame allows a family to leave options open for getting the
longest “stretch IRA.” However,
if circumstances dictate, it also preserves the safety net for the
natural heir of the IRA owner, i.e., the surviving spouse.
The cascading beneficiary idea could maximize the value of an
IRA or retirement plan for many IRA owners and their families.
Return
to: The
Ideal Solution: "Lange's Cascading Beneficiaries Plan" with
Disclaimer Options
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