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Important To Read Ira Custodial Agreement |
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Reading the fine print of a
custodial agreement for an individual retirement
account is about as exciting as the idea of
having blood drawn. You’re probably more
focused on the IRA’s investment options
or rolling your 401(k) plan account into the
IRA without running afoul of tax rules. Those
are worthy issues, to be sure, but don’t
ignore that custodial agreement.
One reason to thoroughly read
your custodial agreement—or have your
financial planner read it and explain it to
you—is that custodial agreements don’t
necessarily have to match the Internal Revenue
Service rules and regulations. Custodial agreements
can be more restrictive.
For example, IRS rules allow
the beneficiary or beneficiaries who inherit
an IRA to name their own beneficiaries. Commonly
a parent will name a child the beneficiary on
an IRA inherited from the parent’s parent.
If Joe inherits his dad’s IRA, he can
“stretch out” the tax deferral by
making minimum distributions over his life.
By naming his daughter Sally as his beneficiary,
she can do the same thing after Joe dies, thus
continuing tax deferral.
But the custodian of the IRA,
such as a bank, brokerage firm, or mutual fund,
doesn’t have to permit the beneficiary
to name a successor beneficiary. When the owner
dies, some custodians require the IRA assets
to be paid out to the owner’s estate in
a lump sum, causing the loss of deferral and
an immediate, and potentially large, tax bill.
Fortunately, most custodians allow such stretch
IRAs, but not all do, so read the agreement
carefully.
Another provision to check
for is what happens if you have multiple beneficiaries
named to an IRA, such as your adult children,
and one of them dies before you do. The standard
language of custodial agreements
call for IRA assets to pass to the remaining
beneficiary or beneficiaries upon the owner’s
death “per capita.” That means the
assets are divided only among the surviving
beneficiaries.
But what if a prematurely deceased
beneficiary had children? Under the per capita
default, no IRA assets would pass to those children.
The assets would pass only to the surviving
beneficiaries. Essentially, you disinherited
some of your grandchildren.
This oversight can be avoided
if the language of the agreement says “per
stirpes” instead of per capita. Per stirpes
allows the share that would have gone to the
deceased beneficiary to be passed to the deceased’s
children (or other designated heirs of the deceased).
Some custodial agreements that
have the per capita provision as a default allow
you to check a box on the agreement form changing
it to per stirpes. In other cases, you may have
to draft a signed and witnessed custom addendum
instructing the custodian to distribute on a
per stirpes basis. It is a good idea to have
the custodian sign the addendum acknowledging
receipt. If the custodian won’t accept
addendums, you may want to consider a different
custodian.
Does the custodial agreement
allow multiple beneficiaries to your IRA? The
default language of some agreements limits owners
to a single primary beneficiary or is simply
silent on the issue. Furthermore, custodial
agreements that allow multiple beneficiaries
may prescribe equal distribution of the assets,
but you may prefer different percentages for
different beneficiaries. Again, if allowed by
the custodian, you may need to attach separate
language detailing multiple beneficiaries by
name and how you want the assets distributed
among them.
What is the agreement’s
default language regarding a divorce or legal
separation in which you forget to remove the
name of your former spouse as beneficiary? Agreements
typically are silent, though a few will automatically
revoke the divorced spouse as beneficiary unless
otherwise directed by a divorce decree.
Does the agreement allow the
custodian to discuss the IRA with the owner’s
estate executor or successor trustee who isn’t
a named IRA beneficiary? If not, you may have
to write that provision into an addendum.
Does the agreement allow the
beneficiaries to make a trustee-to-trustee transfer
of the IRA assets to another financial institution
after the owner dies (thus avoiding the payment
of income taxes)? If the custodian does not
permit the transfer, beneficiaries either are
stuck with that custodian or would have to cash
in the IRA and pay potentially substantial taxes
on the lump sum.
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