Schedule a deduction for inherited IRA

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  • Kram BergGold
    Senior Member
    • Jun 2006
    • 2112

    #1

    Schedule a deduction for inherited IRA

    My client inherited an IRA and 403 (b). The estate valued these at $100,000. Only $23,000 of which got taxed as the rest was sheltered by the the unified credit. The estate tax paid was $10,000.

    If in year 1 she receives a $23,000 distribution does she get a $10,000 deduction

    amount received $23,000
    _______________________________________ X $10,000 = $10,000 Schedule A
    $23,000 deduction

    or should it be

    $23,000
    _________ X $10,000 = $2300 Schedule A deduction

    $100,000
  • JG EA
    Senior Member
    • Jul 2005
    • 2176

    #2
    Originally posted by Kram BergGold
    My client inherited an IRA and 403 (b). The estate valued these at $100,000. Only $23,000 of which got taxed as the rest was sheltered by the the unified credit. The estate tax paid was $10,000.

    If in year 1 she receives a $23,000 distribution does she get a $10,000 deduction

    amount received $23,000
    _______________________________________ X $10,000 = $10,000 Schedule A
    $23,000 deduction

    or should it be

    $23,000
    _________ X $10,000 = $2300 Schedule A deduction

    $100,000
    The basis remains with the IRA. So, I don't think she can just take the taxable part out first. See if you agree TTB 13-24 and Pub 590.
    As for the deduction it talks about this in pub 559
    The deduction for estate tax can be claimed only for the same tax year in which the income in respect of a decedent must be included in the recipient's income.
    So, it seems to me that this also would remain with the total IRA and be taken on the A as you go.
    JG

    Comment

    • Kram BergGold
      Senior Member
      • Jun 2006
      • 2112

      #3
      page 21-33

      JG EA

      we are not dealing with basis here, however thanks for pointing me in the right direction. I found in TTB page 21-33 that the denominator is the full value of IRA not the part that caused the tax.

      Comment

      • Kram BergGold
        Senior Member
        • Jun 2006
        • 2112

        #4
        Maybe not

        In TTB example both with and without the IRD the taxable estate income is beyond the exemption so the difference in tax is attribtable to the entire amount of IRA. In my case when I remove the IRD the estate would pay no tax. So here the estate tax is only on a fifth of the total IRA. I wonder if this makes a difference and the denominator should be $23,000 and not $100,000.

        Comment

        • Kram BergGold
          Senior Member
          • Jun 2006
          • 2112

          #5
          final answer I think

          I checked pub 559. The denominator seems to be the entire value of the IRA which in my case is $100,000.

          Comment

          • JG EA
            Senior Member
            • Jul 2005
            • 2176

            #6
            Yes I misunderstood. But I like these kind of things to think about. I ask myself where would I find the answer to this and then try. Sometimes I get the right answer and sometimes not.
            JG

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