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IRS Issues Final Regs on Withholding Certain IRA DistributionsIRS Issues Final Regs on Withholding Certain IRA Distributions

The provisions apply to IRA recipients outside the United States.

Bruce D. Steiner, Attorney

October 30, 2024

2 Min Read
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The Internal Revenue Service issued final regulations on Oct. 21, 2024 regarding withholding on certain distributions to recipients outside the United States from retirement plans that aren’t eligible for rollover. The final regs clarify who’s considered a recipient outside the United States. They take effect on Jan. 1, 2026. However, taxpayers may apply it to distributions before that date.

A decedent’s estate and beneficiaries receive a new basis under Internal Revenue Code Section 1014(a) for most assets acquired from the decedent equal to the estate tax value.  However, pursuant to IRC Section 1014(c), assets that are income in respect of a decedent (IRD) don’t get a new basis. IRAs are a common type of IRD. As a result, ignoring any basis from nondeductible contributions, IRA beneficiaries are taxed on any IRA benefits they receive.

Withholding Requirements

When optional. A U.S. person who receives payments from employer plans, IRAs and commercial annuities that aren’t eligible for rollover distributions may generally elect to waive withholding on distributions. 

When required. A U.S. person may not waive withholding on distributions to be delivered outside the United States. That’s because many U.S. persons living outside the United States don’t file income tax returns.

Related:Adjusted for Risk: Time to Rethink 401(k)s and IRAs?

Final Reg Provisions

The final regs provide:

An Army Post Office Fleet Post Office or Diplomatic Post Office address is treated as an address located in the United States.

Notice 87-7 required withholding on payments to recipients with a residence address outside the United States. The final regs expand this to require withholding payments to recipients who provide a residence address in the United States but direct that the funds be delivered outside the United States.

The final regs don’t apply to distributions to nonresident aliens that are subject to the withholding rules for nonresident aliens. These distributions are generally subject to withholding at 30%, except when a lower rate or exemption under a treaty applies.

About the Author

Bruce D. Steiner

Attorney, Kleinberg, Kaplan, Wolff & Cohen P.C.

Bruce Steiner has over 35 years of experience in the areas of taxation, estate planning, business succession planning and estate and trust administration. He is a frequent lecturer at continuing education programs for bar associations, CPAs and other professionals. He is a commentator for Leimberg Information Services, Inc., is a member of the editorial advisory board of Trusts & Estates, is a technical advisor for Ed Slott’s IRA Advisor, and has written numerous articles for Estate Planning, BNA Tax Management’s Estates, Gifts & Trusts Journal, Trusts & Estates, the Journal of Taxation, Probate & Property, TAXES, the CPA Journal, the CLU Journal and other professional journals. Bruce has been quoted in various publications including Forbes, The New York Times, Wall Street Journal, Daily Tax Report, Lawyers Weekly, Bloomberg’s Wealth Manager, Financial Planning, Kiplinger’s Retirement Report, Newsday, the New York Post, the Naples Daily News, Individual Investor, TheStreet.com, and Dow Jones (formerly CBS) Market Watch. Bruce has served on the professional advisory boards of several major charitable organizations and was named a New York Super Lawyer in 2010, 2011 and 2012.