November 21, 2014
![Optimizing IRAs and Retirement Plan Distributions Optimizing IRAs and Retirement Plan Distributions](https://eu-images.contentstack.com/v3/assets/bltabaa95ef14172c61/bltadf6760f4f3f9e28/6734795d6476523513515618/lange-promo.jpg?width=1280&auto=webp&quality=95&format=jpg&disable=upscale)
In my article in the September 2014 issue of Trusts & Estates,1 I discussed how marriage affects the Social Security benefits available to a couple addressing their retirement and estate-planning options. Let’s expand on that idea and see what happens to retirement plans and individual retirement accounts when a couple marries. There can be significant advantages if your client leaves an IRA or retirement plan to his spouse, as opposed to his unmarried partner.
Table 1 vs. Table III
Traditionally, married couples have always enjoyed the security of knowing that they have the ability to extend the tax deferral of their deceased spouse’s retirement accounts by doing a trustee-to-trustee transfer or rolling them into their own IRA. For exam...
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