Most IRA Heirs Are Stuck With This Rule After SECURE Act — And It's Not Good
Why It Matters
The tightened 10‑year distribution window eliminates the stretch IRA, accelerating taxable income for heirs and reshaping retirement‑account estate planning.
Key Takeaways
- •Non‑designated beneficiaries still follow pre‑SECURE 5‑year rule after owner's death
- •Non‑eligible designated beneficiaries now face a 10‑year distribution limit
- •If IRA owner died after RMD start, annual RMDs continue
- •Trust beneficiaries lose stretch; must empty account within ten years
- •Estate and charity beneficiaries remain subject to original required beginning date rules
Summary
The SECURE Act overhauled inherited IRA distribution rules, creating distinct treatment for three beneficiary categories. The video walks through non‑designated beneficiaries, non‑eligible designated beneficiaries, and the timing of the original owner's required beginning date (RBD).
Non‑designated beneficiaries—estates, charities, and non‑qualifying trusts—remain under the pre‑SECURE framework. If the IRA owner died before the RBD, the 5‑year rule applies; if after, distributions follow the deceased’s single‑life expectancy, a so‑called “ghost life” calculation. By contrast, non‑eligible designated beneficiaries lose the classic stretch provision and fall under a 10‑year rule. When the owner dies before the RBD, no annual RMDs are required during the decade, but the account must be fully distributed by year ten. If death occurs after the RBD, a “mini‑stretch” of annual RMDs must be taken for years 1‑9, after which the balance must still be emptied by year ten.
The presenter highlights the IRS stance that once required minimum distributions begin, they cannot stop—likening it to the Rolling Stones lyric “If you start me up, I never, never, never stop.” He also uses the term “ghost life” to describe the odd scenario of calculating a deceased person’s life expectancy for RMD purposes.
These changes force heirs and advisors to revise estate‑planning strategies, accelerate tax‑able withdrawals, and consider trust structures carefully. Failure to comply can trigger penalties, while proper planning can mitigate the loss of the multi‑decade tax deferral once available under the stretch IRA.
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