Ever since the SECURE Act created a 10-year payout rule for most IRA beneficiaries, that topic has garnered the bulk of conversation. Despite the upheaval of the IRA beneficiary payout rules, one thing has remained unchanged: the payout rules applicable when a non-designated beneficiary (or a “non-person” beneficiary – like an estate) inherits an account. In the scenario, there are only two possible outcomes: the “ghost rule” or the 5-year rule.
Whether the ghost or the 5-year rule applies depends upon when a person dies in relation to his required beginning date (RBD), which is when RMDs are officially “turned on.” The RBD is April 1 of the year after the year a person turns 73. (Prior to the RMD age being raised to 73, the RBD was April 1 of the year after a person turned 70 ½ or 72, depending on what RMD age was in effect at the time.) The RBD is a definitive date on the calendar, and everyone has one. A person can either die before that date, or they can die on or after that date. And if there is a non-person (like an estate) as the IRA beneficiary, WHEN a person dies in relation to the RBD matters.
BEFORE: If a person dies BEFORE the RBD with a non-person beneficiary (assume a person’s estate), the 5-year rule applies. This is the only time the 5-year IRA beneficiary payout rule presents itself. Year One starts in the year after the year of death. There are no annual RMDs within the 5-year period. The only stipulation is that the estate-owned inherited IRA account must be emptied by the end of the fifth year. NOTE: all Roth IRA owners, no matter how old they might be, are always deemed to die before the RBD, because Roth IRAs do not have lifetime RMDs.
ON or AFTER: If a person dies ON or AFTER the RBD with a non-person beneficiary, the “ghost rule” applies. The estate-owned inherited IRA will have annual RMDs based on the deceased IRA owner’s remaining single life expectancy, had he survived. One thing to remember – the IRS uses the IRA owner’s age in the year OF death to calculate the first RMD factor, and then minus one for each year thereafter. This is different than the standard stretch IRA RMD calculation where the beneficiary’s age in the year AFTER the year of death is used.
Ghost Rule Example: Roger dies at age 87 and leaves his IRA to his estate (a non-person beneficiary). RMDs from this estate-owned inherited IRA are predicated on Roger’s remaining single life expectancy factor, minus one each year. The first RMD in the year following the year of death is based on Roger’s 6.1-year remaining single life expectancy factor (7.1 for an 87-year-old in the year OF death, minus one).
Bottomline: The Ghost vs. the 5-year rule – the calendar dictates which will apply.