Inheriting an IRA From a Spouse
 
If you inherit an IRA directly from your spouse, you can choose to:
Roll over the inherited IRA assets into your own new or existing IRA and base the timing of minimum required distributions (MRDs) on your age1
Transfer your inherited IRA assets to an Inherited IRA Beneficiary Distribution Account
Disclaim all or part of your assets within nine months of your spouse's death so they pass to the next eligible beneficiaries
 
Roll Over Inherited IRA Assets to Your Own IRA
When you inherit your spouse's IRA directly, you have one option available that no other IRA inheritor has: as a surviving spouse, you can roll over your inherited IRA proceeds into your own new or existing IRA and treat these assets as if they were your own. The benefit of this option is that both the amount and the timing of required distributions are based on your own age1.
Better still, if you roll these assets into your own IRA, your MRD will generally be based on the Uniform Lifetime Table, which assumes that distributions would extend over two lives-yours, and a beneficiary 10 years younger than you. With this option, your minimum required distribution would be lower than if you transferred your assets to an Inherited IRA Beneficiary Distribution Account.
Considerations
  Rolling over your inherited IRA assets can be advantageous if you have not yet reached age 70½, but your spouse had, for it enables you to stretch out the tax-deferral of IRA assets by delaying distributions until you reach age 70½.
  If you are under age 59½, however, and you intend to take a distribution from your IRA, you will be subject to the 10% early withdrawal penalty in your IRA but would not be subject to this penalty in an Inherited IRA.
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Transfer Assets to an Inherited IRA
You have the option of transferring the IRA assets you inherit from your spouse to an Inherited IRA Beneficiary Distribution Account. With an Inherited IRA, the:
  Amount of your minimum required distributions (MRDs) will be based on your age and be recalculated each year based on the factors in the Single Life Expectancy Table
  Timing of the initial distribution may be based on your spouse's age at the time of his/her death; if your spouse was:
    Older than age 70½, you must begin taking MRDs by December 31 of the year following your spouse's death
    Younger than 70½, you may be able to delay MRDs until your spouse would have turned 70½
Considerations
Transferring your assets to an Inherited IRA Beneficiary Distribution Account can be advantageous if:
  You're older than your spouse, and your spouse died before age 70½, since this option would allow you to delay taking the MRDs until the year your spouse would have turned age 70½
  You're younger than age 59½ and you need access to these assets immediately, since you would not be subject to a 10% early withdrawal penalty
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Disclaim All or Part of Your Assets
  If, after consulting with your attorney and tax advisor, you find that you will not need all or some of your Inherited IRA assets during your lifetime, you may want to disclaim—or refuse to inherit all or part—of your IRA assets.
    Your disclaimed inheritance would then be passed on directly to the next eligible beneficiaries. Any required distributions would be based on the other beneficiary's age, rather than your own.
  If the other beneficiaries are younger than you, you would, in effect, be stretching out the potential for tax deferred growth on this IRA legacy. For example, if your spouse named you as the primary beneficiary of his IRA, and your son as the contingent beneficiary, if you disclaim your IRA inheritance (meeting all the necessary requirements), your son would inherit all of the IRA assets. Since the required distributions would now be based on his life expectancy, the minimum required distribution amount would be lower, leaving more assets in the account to potentially compound tax-deferred.
Note: Be sure to consult with a tax or legal advisor concerning this option.
Considerations
Disclaiming all or part of your IRA inheritance may be advantageous if:
  You don't need all or some of these assets and you'd like a younger beneficiary to be able to maximize the potential for tax-deferred growth by stretching distributions out over his/her lifetime, or
  The decedent's estate was not properly structured for estate tax purposes. A disclaimer may be used to allow assets that would otherwise be passed to the surviving spouse to go to other beneficiaries. While assets left to a spouse are generally not subject to estate taxes, they will be part of your estate upon your passing. If you can afford it and it aligns with your goals, you may want to consider disclaiming an amount up to the estate tax exemption limit in order to take advantage of your estate tax exemption.
Important: If you want to take advantage of this option, you must disclaim assets within nine months of the IRA owner's death-before you've actually taken possession of those assets. A disclaimer is an irrevocable decision to give up your right to inherit the IRA assets.
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1 After you reach age 70½, the IRS generally requires you to withdraw an MRD annually from your tax-advantaged retirement accounts (excluding Roth IRAs).
2 If no beneficiaries are named on a Fidelity Inherited IRA Beneficiary Distribution Account or survive the account owner, the Inherited IRA Beneficiary Distribution Account owner's estate is the beneficiary.
The information provided by Fidelity Investments is general in nature and should not be considered legal or tax advice. Fidelity does not provide legal or tax advice. Consult with a legal or tax professional regarding your unique tax situations.
 
 
 Next Steps
 
Fidelity IRA custodial agreements specify that when either a beneficiary is not named or no named beneficiary survives the account owner, the assets first go to the IRA owner's surviving spouse, then to the IRA owner's estate if there is no surviving spouse2.
Remember to update the beneficiaries for your IRA or your Inherited IRA Beneficiary Distribution Account.
 

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Inherited IRA
Relationship to Original Owner
Managing Your Assets
 Overview
 Spouse
 Parent or Other Person
 Trust, Charity, or Entity
 Spending vs. Investing
 Calculating Minimum
   Required Distributions
 Forms for Inherited IRAs
Overview
Spouse
Parent or Other Person
Trust, Charity, or Entity
Spending vs. Investing
Calculating Minimum
Required Distributions
Forms for Inherited IRAs