by Christine | Jul 7, 2014 | Estate Planning, Inherited IRAs, Trusts |
So, just to be sure we all have this right, when you name a trust as the beneficiary of your IRA, how many beneficiaries are there of the IRA? You got it – ONE – the trust. If you are electing a trust as a beneficiary to an IRA or other retirement account, it is...
by Christine | May 30, 2014 | Estate Law, Individual Retirement Accounts (IRA), Inherited IRAs, Trustee, Trusts |
Worried about your adult children blowing through their inheritance? Two strategies can help holders of individual retirement accounts curb an heir’s impulse to “cash out.” You may have many assets to leave behind for your heirs. However, an IRA is unique enough to be...
by Christine | May 5, 2014 | Estate Law, Individual Retirement Accounts (IRA), Inherited IRAs, Trustee, Trusts |
Worried about your adult children blowing through their inheritance? Two strategies can help holders of individual retirement accounts curb an heir’s impulse to “cash out.” You may have many assets to leave behind for your heirs. However, an IRA is unique enough to be...
by Christine | Jan 9, 2014 | Beneficiary Designation, Elder Law, Estate Law, Individual Retirement Accounts (IRA), Inherited IRAs |
We say it over and over again. Check your beneficiary forms! Don't let your retirement funds go down the drain. Anything involving the court system is rarely quick and painless (probate anyone?). Fortunately, IRAs can easily be transferred to your loved ones...
by Christine | Dec 10, 2013 | Asset Protection, Bankruptcy, Estate Planning, Inherited IRAs, Supreme Court |
While the dispute over inherited IRAs has not arisen often, it may crop up more in the future. Does an "inherited" retirement account remain a retirement account for the intended heir? This may sound like a rhetorical question, but it is currently one before...
by Christine | Mar 29, 2013 | Estate Planning, Individual Retirement Accounts (IRA), Inheritance, Inherited IRAs |
Let's say that someone who is not your spouse recently died and named you as their IRA beneficiary. You now have what the IRS calls an “inherited IRA.” When you inherit money, once you receive it you can usually decide where it goes from there, such as a simple...