Here’s an estate-planning technique that allows you to lower
the tax sting to your heirs, and that reduces your retirement income in case
you don’t think you will need all of your Individual Retirement Account funds in
retirement. It’s called a “stretch IRA,” or “Multi-generational IRA,” a complex
investment tools that allow you to extend the tax-deferred status of your IRA
long after your death.
By naming your
children and grandchildren as the beneficiaries of your retirement assets, you
enable them to stretch out the annual distributions of that IRA over the course
of their lifetimes.
Structuring the stretch
There are four primary approaches to structuring a stretch
IRA; the traditional, spousal-rollover, participant-direct and the mixed, or
combination, approach.
In the traditional set-up, your spouse is the
primary beneficiary and your children or grandchildren are the contingent
beneficiaries, however distributions and income tax deferral are extended only
through the life expectancy of the oldest beneficiary. By using the Spousal
Rollover Approach instead, your spouse remains the primary heir and children or
grandchildren become the beneficiaries with their own IRAs. This strategy
allows the distributions and income tax deferrals to extend through-out the
lifetime of the beneficiaries you name. That, in turn, provides significantly more
tax deferral and a much longer opportunity for that IRA investment to grow.
If neither you nor
your spouse need to dip into the IRA during your lifetime, you could also
consider structuring your multi-generational IRA using the Participant Direct
approach, which can provide the greatest tax benefit of all.
Using this strategy,
you’ll be asked to break up your retirement assets into several different IRAs
like the spousal rollover-except that your children and grandchildren, not your
spouse, are listed as the primary beneficiaries, so you can lower the amount of
the minimum distributions you are forced to take out once you hit age 70-1/2,
and leave more money behind for your heirs.
Lastly, there’s the
Mixed approach. A combination of strategies from the stretch IRA, it is
structured as a spousal rollover with the remainder under the participant
direct category. You may want to give this strategy a closer look if the
surviving spouse does not need the IRA assets, but reigns while he or she is
still alive. Consult a qualified financial planner experienced in Stretch IRAs
for more specifics on these plans and which approach is right for you and your
family.
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