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Preparing for the Death of the Stretch IRAPreparing for the Death of the Stretch IRA

What savvy financial professionals can do to protect their clients’ retirement savings

James Lange

January 27, 2016

11 Min Read
Preparing for the Death of the Stretch IRA

The term “stretching” an individual retirement account refers to the practice of partially sustaining the tax-deferred status of an IRA when, after the death of the owner, the account is left to a non-spouse beneficiary (typically a child or grandchild or perhaps more than one). Stretching an IRA, or a qualified retirement plan, such as an Internal Revenue Code Section 401(k) or Section 403(b) (hereafter all referred to as IRAs), can provide significant financial advantages for the owner’s heirs. These advantages can amount to hundreds of thousands of dollars for the first generation and sometimes millions of dollars for the second generation, if the stretch is sustained. 

In 2012, Congress introduced a formal proposal to eliminate the st...

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About the Author

James Lange

James Lange, CPA and attorney is the president of Lange Financial Group, Lange Accounting Group, and Lange Legal Group in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania.  He is a nationally recognized IRA, Roth IRA Conversion, and 401(k) expert, speaker, and best-selling author of retirement and estate planning books including: Retire Secure!The Roth Revolution, and Retire Secure! for Same-Sex Couples.  In addition, Jim has written articles and been widely cited in Kiplinger’s, Forbes, The Tax Adviser, Financial Planning, and has been quoted by The Wall Street Journal 32 times.