Updated
Updated · The Motley Fool · Jun 12
RMD Rules Cut Penalties to 25% and Raise Starting Age to 73
Updated
Updated · The Motley Fool · Jun 12

RMD Rules Cut Penalties to 25% and Raise Starting Age to 73

3 articles · Updated · The Motley Fool · Jun 12

Summary

  • Retirees now face a 25% penalty for missing a required minimum distribution, down from 50%, and the charge can fall to 10% if the mistake is corrected within two years.
  • Age 73 is now the standard starting point for RMDs on traditional IRAs, SEP IRAs and SIMPLE IRAs, with the threshold set to rise again to 75 by 2033.
  • Roth 401(k)s no longer require RMDs for original owners, giving savers more flexibility than traditional 401(k)s and traditional IRAs still allow.
  • $111,000 can be donated through a qualified charitable distribution in 2026, up from $108,000 in 2025, letting retirees satisfy RMD obligations without adding that amount to taxable income.
  • April 1 of the year after turning 73 is the deadline for a first RMD, after which annual withdrawals are generally due by Dec. 31; inherited traditional accounts also carry separate 10-year drawdown rules for many non-spouse heirs.

Insights

New RMD rules delay taxes for retirees, but could this create an even bigger tax problem for their children?
With major tax hikes looming, is now the last chance for retirees to perform a strategic Roth conversion?
Inheriting an IRA can trigger a 'tax bomb'. What steps must you take within 60 days to avoid it?