IRAs and Qualified Retirement Accounts
- Evolving Retirement Landscape
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- Increased longevity
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- A 65-year-old can expect to live well into their 80s
 - Senior population expected to double over 30 years
 
 - Retirement income sources have evolved
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- Responsibility to save for retirement has been shifted to the employee
 - Increases in delayed retirement
 
 - Trillions of dollars in IRAs and Qualified Plans
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- Taxes must be considered when taking distributions
 - Consider: early withdrawal penalties, RMDs, distribution timing, etc.
 - BUT: only 56% of the adult population participates in workplace retirement plans. (US Bureau of Labor Statistics 2022)
 
 
 
Distribution Planning for Retirement Benefits
- Rules have evolved over the last 70+years:
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- 1950s Cash or Deferred Arrangement (CODA) profit sharing plans started to appear
 - 1974 Enactment of the Employee Retirement Income Security Act (ERISA)
 - 1978 The Revenue Act of 1978 created the foundation for the401(k)
 - 1981 IRS Regulations clarified that a portion of payroll could be deferred to a 401(k)
 - 2001 EGTRA introduced the Roth 401(k)
 - 2020 SECURE Act extended Required Beginning Date to 72 and eliminated the "stretch" for Inherited IRAs
 - 2023 SECURE Act 2.0 and corresponding regulations made major changes to Required Beginning Dates, inherited IRA rules, and catch-up contribution limits
 
 - SECURE Act 2.0 –Overview of Selected Major Changes:
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- Employees automatically enrolled in new 401(k) and 403(b) plans
 - Employee deferrals auto-escalate (initial: 3%; 1% increase annually up to 10%-15% max)
 - Employers may match qualified student loan payments as if elective deferrals
 - Required Beginning Date Age raised to 73 (plus staggered future increases)
 - Catch-up contributions beginning in 2025 are increased for 60, 61, 62, and 63 year olds
 - Reduced penalty for failure to take RMDs
 - Statute of Limitations for failure to take RMD is 3 years, triggered by the taxpayer's filing due date, with extensions (SOL used to be triggered by filing Form 5329 Additional Taxes on Qualified Plan form)
 - Expansion of exceptions to 10% early withdrawal penalty
 - 529 plan accounts can be transferred to the Beneficiary's Roth IRA (with limits)
 
 - SECURE Act 2.0 –Overview of Selected Major Changes(related to Roth Accounts):
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- There is no Required Beginning Date for Roth accounts, including employer Roth accounts
 - Employers may permit employees to elect that employer matching and non-elective contributions be made as Roth contributions
 - Employees making $145,000 or more per year who make catch-up contributions to employer-sponsored retirement plans, like a 401(k), will have to instead put that money into Roth accounts (extended effective date of this provision to 2026)
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- For now, ages 50 and older can continue to make catch-up contributions after 2023, regardless of income
 
 
 
To read the presentation slides in full, please click here.
Originally published December 06, 2023
The content of this article is intended to provide a general guide to the subject matter. Specialist advice should be sought about your specific circumstances.