More on IRA Beneficiary Designation Planning

It is probably safe to say that most IRA owners really don’t put much thought into who they designate as their IRA beneficiary, but even IRA owners who do may very well have not done their planning correctly. This is especially true in that the IRA beneficiary designation rules are so complex.

With traditional IRAs (not Roth IRAs) one must generally start taking minimum required distributions when the beneficiary reaches age 70.5. Because investments held in IRAs grow tax-free, many taxpayers try to structure their affairs so that the bulk of the funds can remain in the IRA for the longest period of time.

The number of clients who ask about these planning opportunities seems to be on the rise. The facts are typically something like this: The husband owns the majority of the couple’s assets, which includes a couple of million dollars held in the husband’s IRA. Both the husband and the wife own their house jointly and it is now valued between $1 or $2 million. The husband and wife are younger than 70, so they haven’t begun taking minimum distributions from the IRA.

The husband wants to prepare his estate plan. His primary concern is how to leave the IRA funds to a trust so that his wife can benefit from the funds and not have any obligation to manage the funds and upon the wife’s demise the funds will pass to the couple’s children.

After running through the options with the husband and encouraging the husband to merely name his spouse or his children or a charity as the IRA beneficiaries, the husband almost always wants to name a trust as the beneficiary (see http://www.irstaxtrouble.com/2005/10/trust-as-ira-beneficiary.html>Trust As IRA Beneficiary post for more info).

One of the ways to structure this, the one that is outlined in the IRS’ recent Revenue Ruling (Rev. Rul. 2006-26), is to designate a marital trust created under the husband’s will as the IRA beneficiary.

If structured properly, if the husband predeceases the wife the husband’s executor can elect to treat the IRA as qualified terminable interest (QTIP) property for estate tax purposes. This allows the IRA to qualify for the 100% estate tax marital deduction upon the husband’s demise, which allows the IRA assets to avoid estate taxes upon the husband’s demise (the rest of the husband’s estate passes to a spousal trust created under the husband’s will, to use up the husband’s estate tax unified credit or applicable exclusion amount - thereby making that portion free of estate tax).

As outlined in the Revenue Ruling, the surviving spouse will be considered the sole beneficiary of the IRA if he or she has the right to the trust income at least annually and/or an equivalent power to demand access to the income and there are no non-individuals who are beneficiaries of the trust. This is a pretty common arrangement.

The problem lies in situations where there are distributions from the IRA to the trust that are not currently distributed to the spouse. In that case, the spouse is not considered the sole beneficiary of the trust. Depending on the terms of the trust, this can cause the IRA payout to have to use the measuring life for purposes of IRA distributions of that of the oldest - i.e., the wife - beneficiary - even after the wife’s demise. This can significantly reduce the number of years that the IRA can have continued tax-free growth and reduce the amount that will pass to the couple’s children.

In addition, taxpayers would still have to examine each individual beneficiary, rather than just the spouse, to ensure that the IRA beneficiaries are all individuals and not trusts or other entities.

The interesting tax issues that the Revenue Ruling addresses is what happens if the trustee, under state law, has the power to adjust between principal and income and/or convert the trust to a unitrust (for the non-tax folks, this allows the trustee to decide how much income to distribute to the wife during her lifetime, essentially regardless of what the trust provides).

The Revenue Ruling concludes that the trustee can in fact make such allocations between principal and income or can convert the trust to a unitrust and these decisions will be respected for tax purposes.

While most estate and trust attorneys are very familiar with the trust principles, I don’t think many have planned for whether the trustee could or should convert the trust to a unitrust and/or make allocations between income and principal.

This seemingly presents yet another planning opportunity where the attorney - working with the IRA investment advisor and trustee - should be able to structure the trust and IRA so that they achieve one or more of the IRA owner’s goals in a very tax efficient manner.

Of course, given the complexities of the IRA rules it is imperative that IRA owners speak to their trusted financial advisors. This is especially true for owners of larger IRAs.

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IRS to Cut Estate Tax Compliance Personnel

The IRS is planning to cut the number of estate tax lawyers and audit staff it employs.

With the efforts of the Bush administration to reduce the number of people liable for the estate tax, the IRS will cut the jobs of 157 of the agency’s 345 estate tax lawyers, and an additional 17 support personnel. The cuts are expected to occur within a two month time period.

Kevin Brown, IRS Deputy Commission explained to the New York Times that the cuts have been made necessary because there are far fewer taxpayers subject to the estate tax.

This year, estates worth over $2 million for singles and $4 million for couples are taxed at a maximum 46% tax rate. Under legislation passed in 2001, the exemption will rise to $3.5 million in 2009. The rates are set to decline to 45% for 2009. The tax will then be repealed for 2010. However, in 2011, the tax will then be reinstated at a pre-2001 rate of 55%.

House Ways and Means Committee Chairman Rep. Bill Thomas (R-CA), says that the compromise legislation he drafted would permanently eliminate the estate tax for 99.7% of Americans. It would increase the exemption amount to $5 million per person. Estates between $5 million and $25 million would be taxed at a rate equal to the capital gains tax rate. Estates worth over $25 million would be taxed at double the capital gains rate.

Some tax lawyers that will be cut have suggested that the cutbacks aren’t made to save money, they are being made to protect wealthy individuals with political links to the Bush administration. According to the Times, these lawyers are claiming that the agency is reluctant to pursue cases involving complex schemes to understate the value of assets.

Critics say that the Bush administration is bypassing Congress to eliminate the estate tax where it lives — in the IRS.

However, Brown says the IRS has no intention of letting down its guard over wealthy taxpayers. Brown explains that the money saved by reducing the estate and gift tax compliance department will be used to hire extra staff to audit tax returns of over $1 million.

Martin Lukac represents http://www.RateEmpire.com and http://www.1AmericanFinancial.com, a finance web-company specializing in real estate and mortgage rates. We specialize in daily updates, mortgage news, rate predictions, mortgage rates and more. Find low home loan mortgage interest rates from hundreds of mortgage companies!

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House Estate Tax Compromise is Uncertain in the Senate

The measure approved last week by the US House of Representatives that would eliminate the estate tax for all but the wealthiest families faces an uncertain future in the Senate.

The Permanent Estate Tax Relief Act of 2006 was drafted by Chairman of the House Ways and Means Committee Bill Thomas (R- Calif). It was passed through the house by a bipartisan vote of 269-156 on Thursday of last week.

Thomas says that the bill would give Americans “permanency and certainty for their estate tax planning.” However, he admitted that the Senate vote may be tough.

“I, along with the majority of House members, have voted time after time in a bipartisan manner to fully repeal the estate tax,” said Thomas. “So far, those efforts have died in the Senate.”

Senate Majority Leader Bill Frist (R-Tenn) asked Thomas to draft the compromise bill earlier this month. The goal is to grab the 60 Senate votes needed to avoid a Democratic filibuster.

The legislation is reported to eliminate the estate tax for 99.7% of all Americans. It increases the exemption amount to $5 million per person, and will charge a capital gains tax rate for all estates worth between $5 million and $25 million. Estates over $25 million would be charged a tax rate double the capital gains rate. The current capital gains tax rate is 15%.

The bill is designed to unify the estate, gift and generation-skipping transfer tax. The Joint Committee on Taxation has estimated that the bill will cost $283 billion in ten years.

Currently, the estate tax is gradually declining until it is fully eliminated in 2010. In 2011, the tax will return in full force, with an exemption of $1 million per person and a tax rate that tops at 55%.

There is no word as to when the proposals will be before the Senate, though Frist would like to schedule a vote before the summer recess.

Martin Lukac represents http://www.RateEmpire.com and http://www.1AmericanFinancial.com, a finance web-company specializing in real estate and mortgage rates. We specialize in daily updates, mortgage news, rate predictions, mortgage rates and more. Find low home loan mortgage interest rates from hundreds of mortgage companies!

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