Special needs trust named as beneficiary

Participant dies after RBD. There are four beneficiaries named, one of which is a special needs trust. Am I correct in concluding that the three “regular beneficiaries” use the 10 year rule and, subject to IRS clarification may or may not need to take RMDs before the end of the 10 year window and the special needs trust beneficiary must take RMDs based upon the life expectancy of the original participant?



Participant dies after RBD. There are four beneficiaries named, one of which is a special needs trust. Am I correct in concluding that the three “regular beneficiaries” use the 10 year rule and, subject to IRS clarification may or may not need to take RMDs before the end of the 10 year window and the special needs trust beneficiary must take RMDs based upon the life expectancy of the original participant?



The separate account rules still apply as before Secure. Therefore, the 3 designated beneficiaries should create their separate accounts no later than the end of the year following the year of death in order to be free of possible negative consequences resulting from the trust beneficiary. For example, if the trust is not qualified for look through for any reason, that results in a non individual beneficiary left in the IRA along with any other beneficiary who did not create the separate account by the deadline. That remaining beneficiary would then need to base annual RMDs on the remaining LE of the decedent, but also drain the inherited IRA no later than the year their own divisor (if RMDs had instead been based on their LE) dropped to 1.0). This is another overly complex proposed Reg that may not survive. 
Secure Act explanations seem to assume that the trust is always the sole beneficiary and examples of that are numerous. To avoid unantipicated consequences it would be best to leave a separate IRA to a trust beneficiary, in other avoids avoid naming both trusts and individuals as the beneficiary of the same IRA.
If the trust was not affected by the other beneficiaries, the SNT RMD would be based on the longer of the LE of the trust beneficiary or of the decedent, assuming the trust is qualified for look through. If not qualified, then the LE of the decedent. but may also have to drain the account sooner as indicated above. 



Marion:  it’s nice to see you here.  It’s been a while.  I hope all is well.
If the special needs beneficiary is “disabled” (the test is the same as for Social Security), assuming that he/she is the only beneficiary during his/her lifetime, the trustees may stretch the distributions over his/her lifetime.  If the IRA owner has enough other assets, he/she could leave the IRA, or a larger share of the IRA, in trust for the special needs beneficiary, and other assets to (or in trust for) the other beneficiaries.
I’ll be speaking on this on June 1.  I’ll send you the announcement.
Bruce Steiner



Add new comment

Log in or register to post comments