Excerpt from: Forbes (click for full article)
Michael Twersky, a 26-year-old consultant in New York, asks:
I inherited a $15,000 traditional IRA from my father. As a child beneficiary, will I avoid income tax upon withdrawal if I wait until I’m 60? If not, would it be better to withdraw now while I’m still in a pretty low tax bracket?
You don’t have the option of waiting until you are 60 to take withdrawals. Generally, non-spousal IRA heirs must withdraw a minimum amount each year, starting by Dec. 31 of the year after the IRA owner died. Note: This is true whether it’s a traditional IRA or a Roth (a common misconception).
To calculate this distribution, you take the balance on Dec. 31 of the previous year and divide it by the inheritor’s life expectancy, as listed in the IRS’ “Single Life Expectancy” table. (You can find the table in IRS Publication 590, “Individual Retirement Arrangements (IRAs),” which downloads here as a PDF.) Unless the account is a Roth, there is income tax on this required payout.
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