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You cannot put your individual retirement account (IRA) in a trust while you are living. You can, however, name a trust as the beneficiary of your IRA and dictate how the assets are to be handled after your death. This applies to all types of IRAs, including traditional, Roth, SEP, and SIMPLE IRAs.
If you establish a trust as part of your estate plan and want to include your IRA assets, it is important to consider the characteristics of an IRA and the tax consequences associated with certain transactions. Learn more about putting an IRA into a trust.
In 1974 under the Employee Retirement Income Security Act, known as ERISA, was passed. Amongst other provisions, it set rules and standards for private retirement accounts. This led to the creation of IRAs to help workers save for retirement on their own. At the time, many employers could not afford to offer traditional-style pension plans, leaving employees with only Social Security benefits after they stopped working.
The new IRA accounts achieved two goals. First, they provided tax-deferred retirement savings for those not covered under an employer-sponsored plan. Second, for those who were covered, IRAs provided a place for additional tax-advantaged retirement savings as well as a place for retirement-plan assets to continue to grow when and if the account holder changed jobs via an IRA rollover.
As the name implies, individual retirement accounts can only be owned by an individual. They cannot be held jointly, nor can they be conducted by an entity, such as a trust or small business. Additionally, contributions can only be made if certain criteria are met. For example, the owner must have taxable earned income to support the contributions.
A non-working spouse can also own an IRA, but must receive contributions from the working spouse. The working spouse's income must meet the criteria.
Regardless of where the contributions originate, the IRA owner usually must remain constant, wither it is a traditional or a Roth IRA. Two cases were ownership can be transferred are divorce and death.
When an IRA account holder dies, the IRA will be inherited by the beneficiaries. Those can be people that it goes directly to or it can be trust. The trust would then distribute asset to human beneficiaries in the future. If transferred to a trust, IRA assets become taxable as this transfer is seen as a distribution by the IRS. In addition, if the owner is under age 59½ at the time of distribution, an early withdrawal penalty is imposed. The trust can accept IRA assets of a deceased owner, however, and establish an inherited IRA.
Naming a trust as the beneficiary to an IRA can be advantageous because you can dictate how beneficiaries use your savings. A trust instrument can be designed in such a way that special provisions for inheritance apply to specific beneficiaries—a helpful option if beneficiaries vary greatly in age, or if some of them have special needs to be addressed. Many people also believe the trust provides tax savings for beneficiaries, but that is rarely the case.
Important factors to consider are how beneficiaries take possession of the IRA assets and over what time period. Seek advice from a trust adviser well-versed in inherited IRAs. To gain the maximum stretch option for the distribution of the account, the trust must have specific terms such as "pass-through" and "designated beneficiary."
If a trust does not contain provisions for inheriting an IRA, it should be rewritten, or individuals should be named as beneficiaries instead.
Although moving all assets into the name of a trust and designating it as the beneficiary on retirement accounts is commonplace, it is not the best move for everyone. Trusts, similar to other non-individuals that inherit IRA assets, are subject to accelerated withdrawal requirements. They are required to empty the account by the end of the fifth year following the year of the account holder's death.
If the "pass-through" trust rules are applied by the IRS, the IRA assets must be withdrawn within a 10-year period. An exception is made if the trust beneficiary is an eligible designated beneficiary. An eligible designated beneficiary includes a surviving spouse, a disabled individual, a chronically ill individual, a minor child, or an individual who is not more than 10 years younger than the account owner. These eligible designated beneficiaries may also follow the 10-year rule and not the 5-year rule.
If the "pass-through" trust rules do not apply or the beneficiary is not an eligible designated beneficiary, the IRA assets will need to be withdrawn within a 5-year period.
Depending on the size of the account, this could place a burden on beneficiaries. Particularly detrimental is eliminating the spousal inheritance provisions by naming a trust instead of a spouse as the beneficiary.
While trusts can streamline most estate-planning areas, they can create more paperwork and even additional tax burdens for beneficiaries of an inherited IRA. Work closely with an estate planner, attorney, and accountant to maximize a legacy.
You can designate a trust as a beneficiary of a 401(k) as well. In this case, the trust inherits the account where it is maintained as a separate asset. Distributions are taxed according to the type of 401(k).
When you place your assets into a trust, you lose your ownership rights to them. Instead, those assets then belong to the trust. In certain situations, a trust may be subject to higher taxes than an individual. If you have a living trust, those assets will not be protected from creditors.
The IRA is maintained as an asset within the trust. Its distributions are taxed according to the type of IRA. If you have a traditional IRA, you will have to pay ordinary income taxes. If you have a Roth IRA, you will not have to pay taxes.
Moving an IRA into a trust is not permitted while you are living. However, you can plan to include your IRA in a trust by naming the trust as a beneficiary to when you die. Consider consulting with a professional financial advisor to review your options for meeting your financial goals.