IRS delays rules for some inherited retirement accounts until 2023

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IRS delays rules for some inherited retirement accounts until 2023

Zinkevych | iStock | Getty ImagesIf you inherited a retirement account in 2020 or 2021, the IRS is waiving penalties for some heirs who needed to star

Zinkevych | iStock | Getty Images

If you inherited a retirement account in 2020 or 2021, the IRS is waiving penalties for some heirs who needed to start taking required minimum distributions right away, according to a notice issued Friday.

The new rule won’t apply until 2023.

Typically, there’s a 50% penalty when you skip RMDs or don’t take the full amount by the deadline, applying to the balance that should have been withdrawn.

Thanks to the Secure Act of 2019, certain heirs, known as “non-eligible designated beneficiaries,” have to deplete inherited retirement accounts within 10 years, known as the “10-year-rule.”

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Non-eligible designated beneficiaries are heirs who aren’t a spouse, minor child, disabled, chronically ill or certain trusts. The 10-year rule applies to accounts inherited on Jan. 1, 2020, or later.

However, there’s an even shorter timeline if the original owner already reached their “required beginning date” when their own RMDs needed to begin. In that case, heirs were expected to start taking RMDs immediately.

Owners of inherited IRAs and retirement plan beneficiaries have expressed confusion about the timeline for required RMDs, and asked for “transition relief” for missed 2021 and 2022 RMDs, according to the notice.

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As a result, taxpayers who skipped RMDs from inherited retirement accounts won’t owe a penalty for 2021 or 2022, the IRS says.

If you already paid the penalty for 2021, you can “request a refund of that excise tax,” the notice says.

These guidelines don’t apply to regular RMDs, eligible designated beneficiaries or heirs who inherited retirement accounts before 2020.

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