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Follow on Google News | The 10 Fundamental Laws of RMDs1. RMDs start at a particular time. The starting point for lifetime required distributions is approximately age 70½. 2. Annual distributions must be taken by December 31 each year. Once RMDs begin, the participant must take a distribution every calendar year, no later than December 31. Reg. § 1.401(a)(9)-5, A-1. There are several exceptions to this rule. First, the five-year rule does not require annual distributions. Second, in the case of certain lifetime RMDs, the distribution for the first Distribution Year can be postponed until the Required Beginning Date. Finally, there are even more unusual situations in which an RMD can be delayed beyond December 31. 3. Each year’s RMD is determined by dividing the prior year-end account balance by a factor from an IRS table. RMDs are computed by dividing an annually-revalued account balance by an annually-declining life expectancy factor. Reg. § 1.401(a)(9)-5, A-1(a). The factor obtained from the applicable IRS table is sometimes called the Applicable Distribution Period (“ADP”) or divisor. 4. There is no maximum distribution. The formula tells you the minimum required distribution. The rules impose no maximum distribution; 5. Taking more than the required amount in one year does not give you a “credit” you can use to reduce distributions in a later year. Each year stands on its own. Reg. § 1.401(a)(9)-5, A-2. Taking larger distributions in one year indirectly reduces later RMDs by reducing the account balance. 6. The plan may be stricter than the regulations. Just because a participant or beneficiary qualifies for the life expectancy payout method under the law does not mean he will actually get to use it; the plan must allow it as well. 7. The RMD cannot exceed 100% of the account balance. “…[T]he required minimum distribution amount will never exceed the entire account balance on the date of the distribution.” 8. Distributions before the first Distribution Year don’t count. The first year for which an RMD is required is called the “first Distribution Year.” Distributions in years prior to that year have no effect on the computation of the RMD for the first (or any other) Distribution Year. Reg. § 1.401(a)(9)-2, A-6(a). 9. Distribution period does not involve an election. With one exception, determination of the ADP for benefits, either during life or after death, does not involve an “election” 10. The regulations “overrule” You cannot compute an RMD simply by following the Internal Revenue Code. The IRS regulations have fundamentally altered the Congressional scheme in several ways. For example, the Code dictates that lifetime distributions must be made over the life expectancy of the participant or the joint life expectancy of the participant and his beneficiary. § 401(a)(9)(A)( ———————————————————— The above list was an excerpt taken from a book I refer to almost daily, and I highly recommend you purchase if you do any estate planning, or see retirement accounts in your practice – which most of you do. The book is Life and Death Planning for Retirement Benefits (http://www.ataxplan.com/ End
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