CHAPTER 6: LEAVING RETIREMENT BENEFITS IN TRUST
Minimum distribution, income tax, and trust accounting
considerations when retirement benefits are left in trust.
6.1 Trust as Beneficiary: Preliminaries
This
¶ 6.1provides, first, a checklist for drafting a trust to be named as beneficiary of a
retirement plan. The rest of
¶ 6.1covers how trust accounting rules apply to retirement benefits
payable to a trust as beneficiary; the transfer of retirement benefit accounts into and out of trusts;
and the “individual retirement trust” (or “trusteed IRA” or “IRT”).
6.1.01
Trust as beneficiary: Drafting checklist
When the estate plan calls for naming a trust as beneficiary of retirement benefits, use this
checklist to review planning and drafting considerations uniquely applicable to such assets:
1.
Is there a strong estate planning reason to name a trust as beneficiary, or is there a way to
achieve the planning goals without incurring the risks and complications of naming a trust?
In view of the complications and other disadvantages involved in making retirement
benefits payable to a trust, the bias is in favor of leaving the benefits outright to the intended
beneficiaries unless there is a compelling reason to leave them in trust. The rest of this checklist
deals with drafting the trust, once it has been decided to name a trust as beneficiary.
2.
If the trust contains special provisions dealing with retirement benefits, be sure you define
“retirement benefits.”
3.
Draft the dispositive terms so they will operate on the retirement benefits in accordance
with the donor’s intent. For example: If the trust’s dispositive terms will distinguish
between “income” and “principal” consider how these terms will apply to the retirement
plan and to distributions from it. See
¶ 6.1.02 .If a beneficiary is given the annual right to
withdraw “five percent of the trust principal,” will the withdrawal power apply to the gross
value of any retirement benefit that is payable to the trust (with or without a reduction for
the built-in income tax “debt”)? Or will it apply only to amounts the trustee has actually
withdrawn from the retirement plan?
4.
If the trust is intended to qualify for the federal estate tax marital deduction, comply with
the requirements described in
¶ 3.3.02 – ¶ 3.3.09and
¶ 6.1.02 (D).
5.
Determine whether see-through trust status is important
( ¶ 6.2.01 ), and, if it is important,
make sure the trust complies with IRS’s RMD trust rules
. ¶ 6.2 –¶ 6.3
. “Precatory” language
urging the trustee to take steps to achieve the stretch payout is not enough; se
e ¶ 4.5.06 (A).
The trust should be drafted so that it qualifies as a see-through trust without the necessity
of any trust amendments or reformations after the client’s death.
6.
If the trust is to be divided into multiple shares or subtrusts for the benefit of different
beneficiaries upon the client’s death, see
¶ 6.3.01regarding whether, if retirement benefits
are allocated only to one particular share, beneficiaries of the other shares are disregarded
for RMD purposes, and
¶ 6.3.02regarding how the “separate accounts” rule applies to
trusts. If the benefits are to pass to multiple beneficiaries, and separate accounts treatment