1 Assuming the withdrawal is a qualified distribution, which generally means it is made after a five-year waiting period and the account owner is 59½ or older. Generally, for a distribution from a Roth IRA to be federal (and possibly state) income tax-free, it must be qualified. A qualified distribution from your Roth IRA may be made after a five-year period has been satisfied (this period begins January 1 of the tax year of the first contribution or the year of conversion to any Roth IRA) and you (i) are age 59½ or older, (ii) are disabled or (iii) use the distribution for the purchase of a first home (lifetime limit of $10,000). In situations where the original account owner is deceased, distributions to the beneficiary are also considered a qualified distribution. If you receive a non-qualified distribution from your Roth IRA, the earnings portion of such distribution generally will be subject to ordinary income tax, plus a 10% early withdrawal additional tax if received before age 59½ unless an exception applies. A 10% early withdrawal additional tax may also be owed on converted Roth IRA principal withdrawn before the end of the five-year period. Although RMDs are not required for the original account owner, RMDs would apply to the inherited IRA account.
2 Under SECURE 2.0, beginning in 2023, the required beginning date for RMDs is increased to 73 (note: those who turned 72 during 2022 are covered by the “old rules” — i.e., since they turned 72 in 2022, their first RMD is due for 2022). SECURE 2.0 also provides that beginning in 2033 the age will ultimately increase to 75. For those born in 1950 or earlier, there is no change. For those born from 1951 to 1959, required minimum distributions commence at age 73; and, for those born 1960 or later, distributions commence at age 75.
Source: “SECURE 2.0 provisions affecting retirement plans and IRA,” Chief Investment Office, January 2024.
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The Chief Investment Office (CIO) provides thought leadership on wealth management, investment strategy and global markets; portfolio management solutions; due diligence; and solutions oversight and data analytics. CIO viewpoints are developed for Bank of America Private Bank, a division of Bank of America, N.A., (“Bank of America”) and Merrill Lynch, Pierce, Fenner & Smith Incorporated (“MLPF&S” or “Merrill”), a registered broker-dealer, registered investment adviser and a wholly owned subsidiary of Bank of America Corporation (“BofA Corp.”).