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Understanding the SECURE Act & IRA Trusts

The Setting Every Community Up for Retirement Enhancement (SECURE) Act, passed in 2019, fundamentally changed inherited IRA rules. Previously, non-spouse beneficiaries could "stretch" IRA distributions over their lifetime, potentially extending tax-deferred growth for decades. This made IRAs one of the best assets to inherit.

The SECURE Act eliminated the stretch IRA for most beneficiaries. Now, most non-spouse beneficiaries must withdraw all IRA funds within 10 years of the account owner's death. This can create massive tax bills, forcing beneficiaries to take large distributions during their peak earning years when they're already in high tax brackets. A $1 million inherited IRA could generate $370,000+ in income taxes if withdrawn quickly.

IRA trusts (also called retirement benefit trusts) are specialized trusts designed to be beneficiaries of IRAs, 401(k)s, and other retirement accounts. When properly structured as "see-through trusts," they qualify for the same distribution rules as individual beneficiaries while providing asset protection, creditor protection, divorce protection, and control over distributions to spendthrift or vulnerable beneficiaries.

Two main types exist: Conduit trusts automatically distribute all IRA distributions to beneficiaries immediately, providing no asset protection but ensuring optimal tax treatment. Accumulation trusts allow trustees to hold distributions in trust, providing maximum asset protection and control, but distributions held in trust are taxed at compressed trust tax rates (37% bracket starts at just $15,200 in 2024). We help you choose the right structure balancing tax efficiency with protection and control based on your unique situation and beneficiary needs.

Protect Your Retirement Legacy

Tax Minimization

Structure distributions strategically to minimize income taxes on inherited IRAs under the new 10-year rule, spreading income across multiple years.

Creditor Protection

Use accumulation trusts to protect inherited IRA funds from beneficiaries' creditors, lawsuits, bankruptcy, and financial predators.

Divorce Protection

Keep inherited IRA funds in trust to protect them from beneficiaries' divorcing spouses, ensuring assets stay in your bloodline.

Spendthrift Protection

Control distributions to beneficiaries with addiction, gambling problems, poor money management, or vulnerability to manipulation.

See-Through Compliance

Ensure your IRA trust meets all IRS requirements to qualify as a see-through trust, preventing forced immediate taxation of the entire account.

Optimal Beneficiary Designations

Coordinate IRA beneficiary designations with your overall estate plan, using proper titling and contingent beneficiaries to maximize flexibility.

Our IRA Trust Planning Process

1

Account Analysis

Review retirement accounts, values, and current beneficiary designations

2

Strategy Selection

Choose between conduit/accumulation trust based on protection vs. tax goals

3

Trust Drafting

Create see-through compliant IRA trust with proper distribution provisions

4

Beneficiary Updates

Update IRA beneficiary designations to name trust as beneficiary

Frequently Asked Questions

How did the SECURE Act change inherited IRA rules?

The SECURE Act eliminated the "stretch IRA" for most beneficiaries. Now, most beneficiaries must withdraw all funds within 10 years of the account owner's death, potentially creating massive tax bills. Eligible Designated Beneficiaries (surviving spouses, minor children, disabled/chronically ill individuals, and beneficiaries within 10 years of age) can still stretch distributions.

What is the difference between conduit and accumulation IRA trusts?

Conduit trusts automatically distribute all IRA distributions directly to beneficiaries immediately, providing no asset protection but optimal tax treatment. Accumulation trusts allow trustees to hold distributions in trust, providing creditor protection, divorce protection, and control, but distributions held in trust are taxed at compressed trust tax rates (37% bracket starts at $15,200 in 2024).

What is a see-through trust for my IRA?

A see-through trust (qualifying trust) is an IRA beneficiary trust meeting specific IRS requirements, allowing the trust to be "looked through" to individual trust beneficiaries for distribution purposes. Naming a non-qualifying trust can force immediate taxation of the entire IRA within 5 years, making proper drafting critical for preserving tax-deferred growth.

Do I need an IRA trust or can I just name beneficiaries directly?

Direct beneficiary designation works for financially responsible adult children with stable marriages and no creditor issues. However, an IRA trust is essential if beneficiaries are minors, have disabilities, are in high-risk professions, have addiction or spending problems, are in troubled marriages, or when you want to ensure funds benefit grandchildren after children pass away.

Can I leave my IRA to my living trust?

Generally no - naming your revocable living trust as IRA beneficiary usually requires the entire IRA to be distributed and taxed within 5-10 years, losing all future tax-deferred growth. However, a properly drafted standalone IRA trust or specific see-through trust provisions in your living trust can preserve tax-deferred treatment while providing control and protection.

What are the tax implications of inherited IRAs?

Inherited traditional IRA distributions are taxed as ordinary income at beneficiaries' marginal tax rate. The SECURE Act's 10-year rule forces beneficiaries to withdraw all funds within 10 years, potentially creating large tax bills during peak earning years. Roth IRA inheritances are tax-free but still subject to the 10-year rule. Strategic planning can spread distributions to minimize taxes.

What happens to my IRA trust if I remarry?

Your IRA trust beneficiary designations remain in effect unless you update them. If you remarry and want your new spouse as beneficiary, you must submit new beneficiary designation forms to your IRA custodian. In community property states like California, your new spouse may have rights to IRA assets accumulated during marriage, making professional guidance essential for second marriages.

How much does IRA trust planning cost?

Standalone IRA trust planning typically costs $2,500-$5,000 for basic conduit trusts. More complex accumulation trusts with multiple beneficiaries, special needs provisions, or charitable components range from $5,000-$10,000. The cost is minimal compared to potential tax savings—a $1 million IRA could save $100,000-$300,000+ in taxes with proper planning under the SECURE Act.

Protect Your Retirement Assets

Don't lose your life savings to unnecessary taxes. Start planning your IRA trust today.

Schedule Consultation

Speak with an IRA Trust Planning Attorney:

(818) 291-6217

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