Prior to his death, my husband took his RMD from his IRA. I inherited his IRA and had the balance transferred into an IRA at the same financial institution, but under my SSN. The 1099-R issued for the RMD and under his SSN shows this as a Total Distribution (ie. both boxes in 2b are checked).
The RMD distribution shown on the 1099-R was not a total distribution that closed out his account. His IRA balance was transferred to my IRA several months later.
Is this 1099-R correct (doesn't seem right) or should I ask for a corrected 1099-R?
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The marking of box 2b Total distribution is relatively meaningless to the IRS when the distribution is from an IRA and has no bearing on your tax return. In this case, the total distribution indication simply means that your husband's IRA had a zero balance at year-end, so the marking of this box on the Form 1099-R is fine in this respect.
Box 1 could have the total distribution but box 2 should only have his RMD. Because it was transferred to you, there was a total distribution but it was not a taxable event.
You may want to print from the IRS rules. link and take it to the bank.
Required minimum distributions after the account owner dies
For the year of the account owner’s death, use the RMD the account owner would have received. For the year following the owner’s death, the RMD will depend on the identity of the designated beneficiary.
Calculating required minimum distributions for designated beneficiaries
Beneficiaries of retirement accounts and IRAs calculate RMDs using the Single Life Table (Table I, Appendix B, Publication 590-B, Distributions from Individual Retirement Arrangements (IRAs)). The table shows a life expectancy based on the beneficiary’s age. The account balance is divided by this life expectancy to determine the first RMD. The life expectancy is reduced by one for each subsequent year.
I am so very sorry for your loss, best wishes.
The marking of box 2b Total distribution is relatively meaningless to the IRS when the distribution is from an IRA and has no bearing on your tax return. In this case, the total distribution indication simply means that your husband's IRA had a zero balance at year-end, so the marking of this box on the Form 1099-R is fine in this respect.
Amy: None of the mutual fund companies consider the transfer of my deceased husband's IRA balance to my IRA at the same institution as a reportable event and none are issuing 1099-R for these transfers. There is no question about the RMD being correctly handled; only the checking of box 2b. If this doesn't impact my taxes or create an issue with the IRS, then I don't care.
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