The SECURE Act
On December 20, 2019, President Trump signed the “Setting Every Community Up for Retirement Enhancement” (SECURE) Act into law. The SECURE Act, effective January 1, 2020, impacts people with retirement accounts.
There are three main ways that this impacts most people: 1) you will now be required to withdraw from retirement accounts at age 72 instead of 70 ½ ; 2) the Act removes age restrictions for contributions; and 3) any inherited retirement accounts will have a ten-year distribution limit for most people instead of the “lifetime stretch”. The SECURE Act does provide a few exceptions to this new mandatory ten-year withdrawal rule: spouses, beneficiaries who are not more than ten years younger than the account owner, the account owner’s children who have not reached the “age of majority,” disabled individuals, and chronically ill individuals.
Before the SECURE Act
Previously, any non-spouse beneficiary who inherited a retirement account was able to stretch out the required minimum distributions over his or her lifetime. Since the money was not taxed until it was distributed, it allowed beneficiaries to take minimum distributions, only pay income tax on that distribution, and defer paying income taxes on the balance of the inherited retirement account until actual distribution.
After the SECURE Act
Now, any non-spouse beneficiary is required to take all the distributions from the inherited IRA within 10 years. This means that the inherited retirement account will be taxed sooner and potentially at a higher rate over time.
Spouse beneficiaries: If you inherit a retirement account from your spouse, nothing will change from the previous law. You will still be able to roll over the deceased spouse’s retirement accounts into your own.
Planning for the SECURE Act
For married couples who have retirement assets, and plan to leave any remaining retirement assets to the surviving spouse, the SECURE Act does not change much for you. Your spouse can still rollover any inherited retirement assets from you. For those who are either unmarried or are currently the surviving spouse, and you plan on leaving retirement assets to someone who is not your spouse, then this means that your beneficiaries will have a much shorter time (a maximum of 10 years) within which to distribute the funds in the inherited retirement account. This may result in triggering income tax sooner than expected, and perhaps additionally losing creditor protection.
Contact us to discuss whether your current estate plan is impacted by the SECURE Act.