My husband's father died in 2004 leaving an IRA with no named beneficiary. His wife, my husband's mother, never rolled the IRA over to her own account. She died in 2006. My husband is the administrator & sole benificiary of her estate. The IRA was distributed to his mother's estate in 2007 and the money was then distributed to my husband's personal account. We received a 1099-R showing the IRA distribution to his mother's estate. How do we report this? Do we file a 1041 for the estate & then a schedule K-1 to my husband? How should it be reported on our 1040? Also, fed income tax was withheld on the distribution. Does the estate get this back as a refund or is there a way to pass this credit along to my husband?
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IRS Pub 590
Dear kimcm
Distributions from the IRA are taxable to the estate on F-1041, and the withholding also gets taken into account there.
Please see IRS Pub 590. You should find the answers to your questions on p.37. Special rules apply when the beneficiary is not an individual.Roland Slugg
"I do what I can."
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Appreciate your response, but actually no, page 37 of pub. 590 does not address my situation at all. First, the orginal owner of the IRA died AFTER his required beginning date and therefore was already taking distributions. Second, that fact is neither here nor there since I'm not trying to determine what should be done with the IRA. It has already been distributed in total and therefore no longer exists. I'm simply (ha!) trying to determine the best means of reporting the distribution to the IRS -- and of course, the means by which we will pay the least amount in tax! I believe that letting the estate pay the tax via form 1041 will result in a higher tax rate than showing the IRA passing through to the ultimate beneficiary and allowing him to pay the income tax. But if I'm mistaken someone please correct me! (Remember that regardless of whether the tax is paid via 1041 or 1040, my husband is actually the one paying the bill.)
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Pro Job
No disrepect intended, but this situation seems like a ditch digger attempting to put in the Suez Canal. You have enough variations, that you are asking about, that seem to need to make an appointment and discuss your problem with a tax professional that works with estates, etc.
Best of luck.Only in government or politics is a "cut in spending" really an increase. It's just not as much of an increase as they wanted it to be, therefore a "cut".
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Originally posted by kimcm View PostAppreciate your response, but actually no, page 37 of pub. 590 does not address my situation at all. First, the orginal owner of the IRA died AFTER his required beginning date and therefore was already taking distributions. Second, that fact is neither here nor there since I'm not trying to determine what should be done with the IRA. It has already been distributed in total and therefore no longer exists. I'm simply (ha!) trying to determine the best means of reporting the distribution to the IRS -- and of course, the means by which we will pay the least amount in tax! I believe that letting the estate pay the tax via form 1041 will result in a higher tax rate than showing the IRA passing through to the ultimate beneficiary and allowing him to pay the income tax. But if I'm mistaken someone please correct me! (Remember that regardless of whether the tax is paid via 1041 or 1040, my husband is actually the one paying the bill.)
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