Estate and Tax Planning Use of Trusts for Qualified Plan Assets

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IRA, retirement
IRA, retirement

Credit: designer491/Shutterstock.com[/caption] Estate planners are often frustrated when clients defer estate planning despite potentially adverse financial consequences for their family members. The reluctance to confront one’s own mortality and the deferral of timely and appropriate action can lead to unnecessary tax problems and other unintended consequences. This is particularly true with regard to the one asset (other than a principal residence) that most middle- to upper-income taxpayers possess: tax-deferred retirement accounts such as traditional IRAs, 401(k)s and 403(b)s. With the exception of Roth IRAs, where income tax has already been paid, all other tax-qualified accounts have complicated distribution rules and potentially significant income tax issues that must be fully considered in any estate tax plan. In general, the receipt of property by inheritance does not normally expose beneficiaries to income tax. Under recently adopted estate tax laws, wealth passing down to family members may not be subject to estate tax. In the case of retirement accounts, however, all such accounts (other than Roth IRAs) represent income that the government has not previously subjected to income tax. After a taxpayer’s death, the beneficiaries usually will owe income tax on the amounts withdrawn from the decedent’s retirement account. When dealing with retirement accounts, the primary goal for the tax professional is to allow the beneficiaries the opportunity to defer income tax. Estate planning for retirement assets addresses many of the same issues that are taken into account generally: taking advantage of applicable estate tax exemptions, qualifying transfers to a surviving spouse for the marital deduction, minimizing GST taxable transfers and holding assets in trust for beneficiaries who, because of age or disability, should not receive outright distributions. But planning for retirement assets generally adds the additional goal of deferring income tax on benefits for as long as possible, consistent with other estate planning goals. Subject to the possible complications outlined below, it may be desirable to use a trust to hold retirement assets which otherwise would be distributed to a surviving spouse, children or others. In light of the U.S. Supreme Court’s recent decision in Clark v. Rameker, 134 S.Ct. 2242 (2014), that an IRA inherited by a non-spouse beneficiary may not be shielded from creditors for federal bankruptcy purposes, the use of trusts to protect retirement funds from creditors has received increased focus. Naming a trust as the recipient of the retirement asset may be deemed to be essential, depending upon the client’s circumstances. For example, if the intended beneficiary has special needs and must rely upon the continuation of government benefits, a special needs trust may be required. A trust may be necessary when the beneficiary is a second spouse and the client wants to restrict the spouse’s access to the trust principal. A parent may wish to use a trust if the beneficiary is a minor, is a spendthrift or has substance abuse problems. Finally, retirement account assets can be used to fund a credit shelter trust. To achieve these objectives, the planner might consider a “conduit trust,” an “accumulation trust” or even a “modified accumulation trust.” Natalie B. Choate had an excellent summary of the IRS rules for these trusts in her handbook. To say the least, it should be evident that planning with retirement assets can be challenging. What about the income tax consequences of naming the trust as a beneficiary? Until the passage of our new tax law in 2018, the need to avoid estate taxes may have trumped possible increased exposure to income tax that an irrevocable trust might present. But now, greater exposure to income tax and lessening of estate tax exposure may call for the reconsideration of what may best serve the interests of qualified plan assets beneficiary. In any such planning exercise, the professional assisting the account holder (“taxpayer” or “participant”) in formulating the estate plan must take into account the Required Minimum Distribution (RMD) rules applicable to qualified plan assets. There is an opportunity to assist the client in fixing certain mistakes in beneficiary designations prior to September 30 of the year after the year in which death occurs. These rules are complex and must be fully incorporated into the estate’s tax plan: