A widower inherits his late wife’s Roth IRA. The balance shows $250,000, and he assumes the entire account is his to use tax-free. Then his accountant flags a problemA widower inherits his late wife’s Roth IRA. The balance shows $250,000, and he assumes the entire account is his to use tax-free. Then his accountant flags a problem

He Inherited $250,000 in His Wife’s Roth, and Then Taxes Wiped Out Part of It

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  • A widower inherited his late wife's $250,000 Roth IRA but discovered the earnings portion faces unexpected taxes because the account was only three years old.
  • The Roth five-year rule is commonly misunderstood and actually governs two separate situations: earnings tax-free withdrawal and conversions.
  • The five-year clock for inherited Roth accounts starts when the original account was first opened, not when it was inherited by the beneficiary.
  • Beneficiaries can always withdraw original Roth contributions tax-free, but earnings pulled before the five-year mark become ordinary income.
  • Spouse beneficiaries can treat an inherited Roth as their own, which preserves the five-year clock tied to the original account's opening date.
  • The IRS treats all of a person's Roth IRAs as a single account for five-year rule purposes, which may help inherited accounts if the beneficiary already owns an older Roth.
  • The practical solution is to identify the cost basis of the inherited Roth by separating contributions from earnings before making any withdrawals.
  • Baby Boomers have average IRA balances of $257,002, and many newly opened accounts are creating taxable surprises for beneficiaries unaware of the five-year rule.
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A widower inherits his late wife’s Roth IRA. The balance shows $250,000, and he assumes the entire account is his to use tax-free. Then his accountant flags a problem. The Roth was only opened three years before his wife passed away. The earnings portion of that account has not yet met the five-year holding period, and withdrawing those earnings now would trigger a taxable event. The contributions are available immediately. The earnings remain subject to the holding period.

This situation is more common than most beneficiaries realize. A Baby Boomer’s average IRA balance sits at $257,002, putting many inherited accounts right around the headline figure. With Roth conversions accelerating across that generation, plenty of those accounts are newer than the people inheriting them assume.

What the Five-Year Rule Actually Does

The Roth IRA five-year rule has two separate functions, and they get confused constantly. One version determines whether earnings in a Roth are distributed tax-free. The other governs Roth conversions specifically. For an inherited account, the relevant version is the first one. The Roth must have been open for 5 tax years before death for the earnings to be tax-free.

Contributions follow a separate path. A Roth owner can always withdraw the original contributions without taxes or penalties, because those dollars were already taxed on the way in. That treatment carries over to beneficiaries. As Suze Orman has explained on her podcast, “you can take out your contributions, the original contributions that were paid tax on by your parents at any time without taxes or penalties. It’s the earnings on the inherited IRA that has to be in there for at least five years.”

Why the Spouse Rule Does Not Save Him

Spouses get options that non-spouse beneficiaries do not. A sole-beneficiary spouse can treat the inherited Roth as their own, which usually solves the required-distribution problem and lets the account keep growing. Rolling the account into his own name is powerful because he can apply his own five-year clock if he already owns a seasoned Roth. If he does not have an older Roth, he is still tied to the deceased’s original opening date. If he taps the earnings now, those dollars are ordinary income. If he waits two more tax years before touching the growth, the whole account becomes tax-free. Either way, the contributions remain available at all times.

Splitting the $250,000 Into Two Buckets

The practical step is to determine the cost basis. That means identifying how much of the $250,000 came from original contributions or conversions, and how much is investment growth. Brokerage statements and old tax returns are the source documents. Once that split is known, the beneficiary can withdraw up to the contribution amount without tax consequences and leave the earnings alone until the five-year mark is hit.

Suze Orman framed the order of operations directly: “know how much is contributions and only withdraw contributions. Then, when the account has met the five-year rule, you take out your earnings.” That sequence preserves the tax-free status of the growth without forcing the beneficiary to leave money locked up that they may actually need.

The Aggregation Wrinkle

One detail worth checking before assuming a clock has not run out. The IRS treats all of a person’s Roth IRAs as a single account for the five-year rule. If the surviving spouse already has a Roth of his own that he opened more than five years ago, the inherited balance, once rolled into his name, adopts that older vintage for five-year purposes. This means the entire $250,000 may effectively be seasoned. The IRS guidance on this is clear, and documentation of the rollover matters if the question ever comes up in an audit.

What to Do With an Inherited Roth

  1. Pull the original account opening date and confirm when the five-year clock started. That single date determines whether earnings come out tax-free today or whether part of the balance is still on the clock.
  2. Separate contributions from earnings before taking any distribution. Contributions are always available without tax. Earnings inside the holding period are not.
  3. For a spouse, decide whether to treat the account as your own or keep it as an inherited Roth. The choice affects required distributions, future contributions, and how the five-year rule interacts with any existing Roth.

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The post He Inherited $250,000 in His Wife’s Roth, and Then Taxes Wiped Out Part of It appeared first on 24/7 Wall St..

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