Updated
Updated · OregonLive · Jul 11
Liz Weston Warns $1 Million Bequests to Minors Can Backfire Under Kiddie Tax
Updated
Updated · OregonLive · Jul 11

Liz Weston Warns $1 Million Bequests to Minors Can Backfire Under Kiddie Tax

1 articles · Updated · OregonLive · Jul 11

Summary

  • $1 million inheritances routed to young children may not cut taxes on inherited retirement accounts because unearned income above $2,700 is generally taxed at the parents’ rate under the kiddie tax.
  • Retirement-account timing also works against the strategy: when minors inherit from someone other than a parent, the 10-year withdrawal clock starts immediately rather than stretching until age 21.
  • $3 million in retirement funds can be especially tax-inefficient because those accounts get no step-up in basis at death, unlike taxable assets whose capital gains can be wiped out.
  • Weston cites alternatives including spending down retirement accounts first, converting some assets to Roth IRAs if the parents are in a lower bracket, or using trusts to delay distributions beyond age 18.
  • Those options carry trade-offs—trusts can face complex rules and high tax rates—so she says the family should consult both an estate-planning attorney and a tax professional.

Insights

Is a Roth conversion the secret to defusing a multi-million dollar inheritance tax bomb for your children?
Could a million-dollar gift to your kids from their grandparents actually backfire because of the 'kiddie tax'?