The Savings Game: What to do with inherited retirement accounts
Q. My husband passed away in January, two weeks away from his 73rd birthday. I am 65, disabled and receiving disability payments from Social Security. My husband had a 401(k) plan in which I was the only beneficiary. My questions follow:
1. Can I roll over the 401(k) to my IRA account? If I can, when must I take Required Minimum Distributions?
2. Will I owe any federal inheritance taxes?
3. Am I entitled to any additional Social Security benefits?
A. Regarding the 401(k), you can roll over the account to your IRA account. Because your husband had not reached his required beginning date, after you roll over the account to your IRA, you will not have any required minimum distributions until you reach age 75.
You will not owe any federal estate taxes. A surviving spouse is generally not required to pay any federal estate taxes.
Regarding Social Security benefits, because you are older than 60, you are entitled to a survivor benefit of almost 100% of the Social Security benefit your husband was receiving. If you wait until your full retirement age of 67, you would be entitled to 100% of the benefit he was receiving.
Between age 60 and ages less than the full retirement age, the benefit to a surviving spouse is prorated from 71.5% at age 60 up to 100% of the deceased spouse’s benefit at the full retirement age. However, you are not entitled to both your disability payment and the survivor benefit; you are entitled to whichever amount is higher.
Q. Are non-eligible beneficiaries who inherited IRA accounts when the SECURE Act took effect in 2021 required to take Required Minimum Distributions if the deceased owner had reached his or her required beginning date? My understanding is that the IRS has not specifically stated that RMDs must be taken in 2024. Which is correct?
A. IRA expert Ed Slott and his staff recommend that you take RMDs in 2024 based on the single life expectancy table specified in IRS Publication 590-B. The IRS has not issued a final statement. For three prior years, the IRS has waived the required RMD; it has not done so for 2024.
If the IRS mandates the RMD later in 2024, and you have postponed taking it, you may have to make withdrawals at an inopportune time. Even if you are allowed to postpone taking RMDs now, and in subsequent years, you will be facing a large withdrawal 10 years after your inheritance, and your marginal tax bracket may be higher.
The bottom is that there is uncertainty regarding whether the IRS will waive the RMD requirement in 2024.
Q. I am self-employed, and file Schedule C reporting my income. I buy health insurance associated with the Affordable Care Act. I understand that I can deduct premiums associated with this insurance as well as long-term health insurance and other family health expenses on my tax return as long as the total deductions do not exceed my self-employed income.
However, I don’t believe these health-care expenses can be reported on Schedule C. Where would I report them?
A. You should report them on Schedule 1, line 17 of IRS Form 1040. You should fill out the self-employed health insurance worksheet associated with Schedule 1. You can include dental insurance premiums, long-term-health care insurance premiums and associated health-care expenses. See the instructions of the worksheet associated with health-care expenses for Schedule 1.
(Elliot Raphaelson welcomes your questions and comments at raphelliot@gmail.com.)