Don’t overlook 2021 required withdrawals from your retirement accounts

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Amid the hustle and bustle of the holiday season, don’t forget about required minimum distributions from your retirement accounts.

After being waived for 2020, those RMDs — amounts you must take each year from most retirement accounts once you reach a certain age — are again in force for 2021.

That’s sandwiched between the RMD age changing to 72 from 70½ as of last year and new IRS life expectancy tables — which are used to calculate those withdrawals — going into effect next year.

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RMDs apply to 401(k) plans — both traditional and the Roth version — and similar workplace plans, as well as most individual retirement accounts. Roth IRAs have no required withdrawals until after the account owner’s death.

If you had hit age 70½ before 2020, RMDs kicked in at that point. If you reached (or will reach) that age in 2020 or later, you get more time: Those withdrawals are required to start at age 72.

In other words, “Anyone born July 1, 1949, or later can wait until they’re 72,” said Ed Slott, CPA and founder of Ed Slott and Company.

The amount you must withdraw each year is generally determined by dividing the balance of each qualifying account by a “life expectancy factor” as defined by the IRS.

For example, if you’re 75, that number would be 22.9, according to the IRS. Divide your account balance — say it’s $100,000 — by that factor and your RMD would be about $4,366. So if your balance is $500,000, your RMD would be five times that, or roughly $21,830.

You can delay your first RMD until as late as April 1 of the year following the one in which you reach the RMD age. In all subsequent years, you must take the required amount by Dec. 31. If you don’t make those RMDs, you could face a 50% penalty.

However, if you’re working and contributing to a retirement plan sponsored by your employer (and don’t own more than 5% of the company), RMDs do not apply to that particular account until you retire.

Those waived 2020 RMDs

Generally speaking, if you already were taking RMDs before 2020 — i.e., you had already reached age 70½ — you would simply resume those distributions this year, using the current life expectancy tables, your age and your account balance at the end of 2020, Slott said.

“Some may be surprised and find their RMD is bigger,” Slott said. “Their balance on Dec. 31, 2020, may have been much higher [from stock market gains], so their RMD is higher.”

If you turned 70½ in the first half of 2019 and planned to take advantage of the April 1, 2020, deadline for taking out the RMD — and did not do it due to the federal waiver — this will be your first year of taking RMDs, Slott said. It must be taken by Dec. 31.



Source : CNBC