An Estate Planner’s Guide to Key Changes Under SECURE 2.0

(Tangentially, the penalty for not taking an RMD is reduced from 50 percent of the amount required to be withdrawn to 25 percent—and reduced even further to 10 percent if corrected within two years of the originally-scheduled withdrawal date).

This means that, beginning next year, if an older child has a qualifying 529 plan which has assets no longer needed for their education, then the funds from the 529 plan can be rolled into a Roth IRA for the child rather than he or she taking taxable distributions and incurring penalties by applying funds for purposes other than education. This provides tremendous opportunity for families who are planning for a young child’s future success and financial savings and encourages those making annual gifts to give greater consideration to gifting to 529 plans. An estate planner who recognizes any client’s underutilized 529 plan should alert him or her to this change and encourage them so have their financial advisors facilitate any such rollover.

Estate planners that frequently work in tandem with their clients’ financial planners, wealth managers, and CPA’s ought to review the SECURE Act (the initial SECURE Act, the regulations thereto, and the most recent SECURE 2.0) in its entirety to ensure their clients are receiving the most comprehensive tax and planning advise possible.