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December 12, 2024 • 9 minutes
Inherited IRAS? When you inherit an IRA, it’s more than just a financial windfall, it’s a responsibility. The rules governing inherited IRAs are complex and can significantly impact how much you’ll ultimately receive after taxes, as well as how you manage your finances long-term. Whether you’re navigating new SECURE Act regulations, balancing tax considerations, or planning for your own retirement goals, having a thoughtful withdrawal strategy is essential.
This article will guide you through the key factors to consider when taking distributions from an inherited IRA, ensuring you make the most of your inheritance while avoiding costly mistakes. Let’s break it down step by step, so you can align your decisions with your financial goals and obligations.
The rules for distributions on inherited IRAs depend on several factors, including:
When you model your inherited IRA in the Boldin Retirement Planner, you will see the distribution rules that must be applied to your account. Understanding the rules is important to avoid penalties.
An inherited IRA may be subject to required annual distributions and/or a 10 year distribution period. And, while a 10 year distribution period might sound like the highway to tax deferred growth, delaying distributions until the 10th year has the potential to push you into higher tax brackets and increase your tax bill.
Yu will want to follow the distribution requirements that are applicable to your account. Failure to do so can result in significant penalties (usually 25% of the missed distribution amount).
The Boldin Planner will also select a default distribution plan for your inherited IRA. However, you do have a few options for making the required withdrawals. You may wish to override the plan based on any of these criteria:
Tax implications: This is a big consideration. Required withdrawals from an inherited IRA can push you into a higher tax bracket. See below for more about minimizing taxes on distributions from an inherited IRA.
Your financial goals: If taxes are not a concern, you may be able to withdraw funds to optimize for your financial goals. Do you need immediate income? Or, can you let the account grow? Align your withdrawals with specific objectives such as paying off debt, funding retirement, or covering major expenses.
Within the distribution rules for inherited IRAs, you may have options. You may be able to withdraw the money in different amounts and over different time periods. And, the decisions you make about your distributions will have a big impact on taxes.
If you distribute the entire IRA in the first year, or delay distributions until the 10th year, you may be pushed into a higher tax bracket for that year as well as incur additional negative ripple effects. Looking for ways to spread inherited IRA distributions over the ten-year period can help you manage income taxes by taking advantage of lower tax brackets. And smart distribution strategies can potentially reduce the total income tax liability of the inherited IRA.
If any of the following circumstances apply to you, you may need a more customized approach to manage the impact of inherited IRA distributions:
If you don’t need the money Under certain circumstances, the money from an inherited IRA might not be needed, or you may want to avoid the tax hit. IRA beneficiaries can choose to disclaim, or not accept, the IRA and allow it to pass it to another beneficiary.
The Boldin Retirement Planner will assess the distribution rules you must follow for your account and model a default withdrawal strategy that meets the rules for your inherited IRA distributions.
However, if you want to model alternate withdrawal strategies, you can override the default distributions by adding transfers between accounts.
Managing an inherited IRA isn’t just about ticking boxes. It’s an opportunity to shape your financial future with care. By understanding distribution rules—like the 10-year guideline or stretching strategies—you can support your lifestyle, minimize taxes, and protect your legacy. The Boldin Retirement Planner now features an inherited IRA module that models these rules and shows how tax implications, timing, and your overall plan interact. This is about more than required withdrawals—it’s about making confident, multi-layered decisions that serve your goals today and tomorrow.
You typically must empty the account within 10 years unless you qualify as an eligible beneficiary. Using the inherited IRA feature in the Retirement Planner helps you model payout timing, taxes, and how distributions interact with your income and tax bracket.
Pre-SECURE Act assets may allow stretching over your life expectancy. But assets inherited after SECURE take different paths. Modeling both scenarios in the Planner reveals how tax strategies and your retirement timeline shift under each rule.
RMDs boost your taxable income in the year you withdraw. The Planner shows how larger distributions may push you into higher brackets or increase Medicare premiums. Then you can test if delaying or smoothing withdrawals makes more sense for your tax picture.
Each inherited IRA may follow different rules depending on death date and beneficiary type. The Retirement Planner lets you layer multiple scenarios so you can optimize timing, tax impact, and income flow across accounts just like a fiduciary would.
Conversions trigger taxes now but offer tax-free growth later. The Planner lets you test conversions alongside future distribution needs, tax trade-offs, and legacy goals. This makes Roth conversions with inherited IRAs a thoughtful, strategic move—not just a tax exercise.
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