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Retirement and Financial Planning Services

Retirement Planning Services

Roth IRA as an Estate Planning Tool

The Roth IRA is not only one of the most significant developments in retirement planning in recent years, but it also can be an important part of your estate planning as well. If you have a Traditional IRA, converting it to a Roth IRA can be a wise estate planning strategy under certain circumstances.

Pay Now So Your Heirs Won't Have to Pay Later

Suppose you have an infant granddaughter and you want to leave her part of your estate. If you don't need the money for your retirement, you can convert all or part of your Traditional IRA to a Roth IRA as long as your adjusted gross income for the year is no more than $100,000. You can name a trust for your granddaughter as the Roth IRA beneficiary. The downside is that you would owe immediate federal income taxes on any accumulated earnings and any tax-deductible contributions made to your Traditional IRA. However, if you pay the taxes out of your non-IRA assets, you effectively prepay income taxes for your granddaughter without owing any gift tax or using up any of your $1,000,000 estate-tax exemption. In addition, by paying the taxes, you are reducing the size of your taxable estate.

A significant benefit of this strategy is that your granddaughter generally will owe no income taxes on any withdrawals although estate taxes may be due on the value of the account she inherits from you.

For as long as you're alive, the Roth IRA will grow tax free and you do not have to start making withdrawals at a particular age, unlike the Traditional IRA, which requires that you begin withdrawing from the account by April 1 of the year following the year you reach age 70 1/2.

After You're Gone

When you die, the Roth IRA then becomes subject to the same minimum withdrawal rules as regular IRAs. Your granddaughter must begin making minimum withdrawals based on her life expectancy. If she were still young when you die, she would be required to begin withdrawing only a small amount based on her relatively long life expectancy. Each year, the fraction she is required to withdraw would grow slightly. However, the rest of the money would continue to grow tax free and could result in a substantial nest egg over time.

More After-Tax Money Goes to Your Heirs

The major advantage of this strategy is that you can transfer more after-tax money to your heirs. Because of the power of tax free compounding, the younger the trust beneficiary, the greater the benefit because of the longer time the nest egg has to grow. If you have any questions about this or any other estate planning strategy, please give us a call.

Taking Employer Stock From a Retirement Plan

Before you take a distribution from a 401(k) or other employer-sponsored retirement plan, check into how the distribution will affect your taxes. You may have some choices that will result in a lower tax bill.

For Example

Assume you are eligible to receive a lump sum distribution from your company's 401(k)/profit sharing plan. You have the option to take part of the distribution in company stock rather than in cash. The stock is currently worth $300,000 - $250,000 more than its $50,000 value when it was added to your plan account.

If the stock were distributed to you today as part of a qualifying lump sum distribution, you could elect to pay income taxes on the stock's original $50,000 value instead of the full $300,000. If and when you later sold the stock for more than $50,000, any resulting capital gain would be taxed to you at that time.

Tax Benefit

Since tax rates on long-term capital gains are lower than on ordinary income, you could save a considerable amount of tax with this strategy. The risk, of course, is that the stock price might fall, leaving you with less than the $300,000 you could have received by cashing out today.

Individuals who want to take advantage of this tax deferral strategy for lump sum distributions of employer stock should avoid rolling over the stock to an IRA. All taxable distributions from an IRA are taxable as ordinary income rather than capital gains.

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A Private Pension Plan Without Contribution Limits

Isn't it frustrating and annoying? Your income may be well above average, but federal law, in effect, restricts you to an average-size 401(k) or other tax-qualified retirement plan account. Although your plan balance itself is not capped, the plan's annual contribution limit imposed by the tax law greatly restricts the growth of your account. That is why you may want to consider this practical counter strategy: Use a charitable remainder trust (CRT) as a private pension plan.

Unlimited Annual Contributions

With a CRT, you may add any amount you choose to the trust annually. Each year's contribution will be partially tax deductible, and the trust assets may accumulate without tax to become a source of future retirement income. The deduction is available because your trust agreement will require a future transfer of the trust assets to a charity. That will not occur, however, until the end of the trust's term at the time of your death -- or even later, if you name your surviving spouse or someone else as a subsequent income beneficiary.

Your contributions will be more advantageous if you are able to contribute appreciated securities instead of cash. The trustee can sell the securities without having to pay any capital gains tax and can then reinvest the money as desired, but your charitable deduction will be based on the appreciated value, not your cost.

Unlike a tax-qualified retirement plan, a CRT is not permitted to accumulate all its income until you retire. The trust generally must distribute some income to its beneficiary annually, and the distribution must be the lesser of the trust's annual income or a percentage (5% or more) of its assets. (There is also a maximum payout percentage.)

Reduce the CRT's Income and Early Distributions

How can a CRT accumulate retirement assets if it must pay you income before you retire? You simply arrange to minimize the trust's income. The trust will not have to distribute income it does not earn. To reduce the income, you can contribute low dividend stocks and mutual funds, real estate that generates limited income, or other low-income assets, or the trustee can invest in them. With well-chosen investments, the annual income distributions can be below the trust's minimum, or even zero. After you retire, the trust can begin to pay you the required 5% of assets minimum plus a supplement to make up the income you did not receive while working.

On the Other Hand…

A CRT strategy includes a significant risk you need to consider. You could die after a brief retirement, causing a premature transfer of the CRT assets to your chosen charity with nothing left for your family. There are ways around this difficulty, however. As mentioned above, you can extend the term of the trust beyond your lifetime by making your spouse or other family members your successor income beneficiaries. Or, you can establish a second trust to buy life insurance for you. Your family will receive the insurance proceeds free of estate taxes, as long as all the tax law requirements are met.

A second downside of a CRT: the limited tax deduction allowed for contributions, compared to the deduction permitted under a tax qualified plan. The CRT deduction is based on the current value of the charity's future interest in the trust as determined from IRS tables. The less the charity will benefit from the trust, the lower the deduction will be.

Please contact us if you want to discuss using a CRT to supplement your tax-qualified retirement plan.

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Did you know…?

Specialty Retirement Planning Services

When you're well-to-do, retirement planning involves much more than just making your funds last as long as you do. Do any of these frustrations sound familiar to you?

  • More capital than opportunity - The affluent, especially owners of closely held businesses, frequently complain that annual contribution limits for qualified plans don't allow them to set aside as much for retirement as they'd like.

  • More coordination required - Many wealthy individuals own not one but several different types of retirement plans that must be carefully coordinated to avoid tax penalties. And the wealthy are more likely to own stock from their employer in at least one of those plans - a situation that usually demands careful planning to prevent erosion by taxes.

  • A different agenda - Affluent persons may not need the income a qualified plan can generate after retirement and often would prefer to gift the plan's assets to future generations. Unfortunately, regulations that make distributions mandatory after age 70 1/2 can play havoc with this agenda.

Count on Our Experience

Over the past several decades, The Commerce Trust Company has developed special expertise in the areas of retirement planning that matter most to wealthy individuals. In addition to expertise in managing assets both before and after retirement, we can provide guidance on a wide range of topics, including:

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