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152

Life and Death Planning for Retirement Benefits

benefits); though IRAs are subject to state-law spousal inheritance rights, those can generally can

be negated in a prenuptial agreement.

3.1.02

Road Map: Advising the Surviving Spouse

Here are the options available to a surviving spouse who is named as beneficiary of the

participant’s retirement benefits, either directly or through an estate or trust, and where to find the

details on each alternative. For ease of reference, the participant is referred to as “he” and the

surviving spouse as “she”; the same alternatives apply to the male surviving spouse of a female

participant.

A.

Spousal rollover.

The spouse can “roll over,” to another retirement plan, benefits left to

her by the deceased participant.

¶ 3.2

explains the advantages and drawbacks of the

“spousal rollover”

( ¶ 3.2.01 )

, as well as its requirements

( ¶ 3.2.02 , ¶ 3.2.03 )

and deadlines

( ¶ 3.2.06 )

; the types of plans from which

( ¶ 3.2.02 ¶ 3.2.03 )

and into which

( ¶ 3.2.04 , 3.2.07 )

the spouse can roll over or transfer such inherited benefits; special considerations

that apply if the surviving spouse is under age 59½

( ¶ 3.2.08 )

; when a spousal rollover is

allowed for benefits that pass to the spouse through the participant’s estate or a trust

( 3.2.09 )

; and the extent, if any, to which the surviving spouse’s executor can exercise a

deceased surviving spouse’s rights to initiate or complete a rollover

( ¶ 3.2.05 )

.

B.

Election to treat decedent’s IRA as spouse’s own IRA.

Se

e ¶ 3.2.03

regarding whether

and how the surviving spouse can elect to treat an

IRA or Roth IRA

inherited from the

deceased participant as the surviving spouse’s own IRA or Roth IRA. An election to treat

an inherited Roth IRA as the spouse’s own enables the spouse to “carry over” the

decedent’s holding period for purposes of computing her “Five-Year Period” (see

5.2.05 (

B)), while a rollover to her own Roth IRA presumably would not give her that right.

Except in that situation, there is no known planning reason to favor one approach over the

other; rollover and spousal election have identical effects.

C.

Life expectancy payout to spouse as sole beneficiary. By

leaving the benefits in the

inherited plan (or rolling them over to an “inherited” IRA in the name of the deceased

participant,

¶ 3.2.07 )

, the surviving spouse can hold benefits

as beneficiary

rather than

rolling them over to her own IRA or plan to hold them as

“owner” (participant).

For

why

a surviving spouse would choose to hold as beneficiary rather than as participant, see

3.2.01 (

D). As long as she holds the benefits as beneficiary (whether because she positively

chose to continue holding as beneficiary or because she simply did not yet get around to

rolling the benefits over to her own plan), she is subject to taking required minimum

distributions RMDs; see

Chapter 1 )

as beneficiary. For when she must commence taking

distributions as beneficiary, see

¶ 1.6.04 .

For how to calculate a payout based on the life

expectancy of the surviving spouse as sole beneficiary, see

¶ 1.6.03 (

D). For how to

calculate RMDs to the spouse’s successor beneficiaries if she dies while holding the

account as beneficiary, see

¶ 1.6.03 (

E) or

¶ 1.6.05 (

C).

D.

If spouse is one of multiple beneficiaries.

Even if the surviving spouse is not the sole

beneficiary of the account, she can still roll over distributions made to her as one of multiple

beneficiaries (option A above). T.D. 8987, 2002-1 C.B. 852. Also, if the surviving spouse

is not the sole beneficiary as of the date of death, but all the other beneficiaries are