December 2025
There have been important IRA changes affecting 2025 and 2026 of which an IRA accountholder or an IRA beneficiary should be informed.
The IRA limits for 2026 have increased because of the mandatory cost of living adjustments. The IRA contribution limits for 2026 for a person whose filing status is single or head of household and is not age 50 as of December 31, 2026 is increasing to $7,500 from $7,000. The IRA contribution limits for 2026 for a person whose filing status is married filing jointly or a qualifying widower and is age 50 or older as of December 31, 2026 is increasing to $8,600 from $8,000. The IRS has revised the deadline for an IRA accountholder who had not withdrawn their RMD for the year he or she died. The deadline used to be December 31 of the year the IRA owner died. In order to ease the administration of this situation the deadline was extended by the IRS to be December 31st of the following year. The IRS has also changed the rules for the IRA custodian/trustee to report on Form 1099-R (IRA Distributions) when the IRA accountholder or beneficiary makes a qualified charitable distribution (QCD). The IRA accountholder or beneficiary must still explain on their tax return that the distribution is not taxable because a QCD was made.
An IRA custodian/trustee which has not furnished an IRA amendment since 2020 is not performing its duties as it should. An IRA custodian/trustee is a fiduciary. The changes to the IRA contribution limits and the IRA income limits have been substantial. So too are the law changes impacting IRA beneficiaries. Many beneficiaries are now required to withdraw all of the inherited IRA funds within 10 years whereas the prior law allowed most beneficiaries to withdraw the funds over their life expectancy. If the accountholder has died on or after the required beginning date, then the non-EDB beneficiary must take annual distributions based on his or her age and must close the inherited IRA under the 10-year rule.
The governing IRA regulation requires an IRA custodian/trustee to furnish an IRA amendment when the IRA plan agreement provisions are changed or when one or more of the topics discussed in the IRA disclosure statement is no longer correct and it needs to be revised or amended to set forth a current and correct explanation. Regulation 1.408-6(4)(ii)(C) requires that an IRA amendment be furnished no later than the 30th day after the amendment is adopted or becomes effective.
A cardinal rule of IRA and pension law is, the terms of the IRA plan agreement control and in order for a person to benefit from a law change the plan document must be revised to set forth the new law. Individuals have the right to be informed and understand current laws and the particulars of the specific IRA plan agreement. Many individuals and possibly many IRA custodians might wish the law to be, since federal tax law authorizes a certain tax benefit, then a person should be able to realize a tax benefit regardless of what the IRA plan agreement provides. The law does not adopt this approach. For example, in order for a person age 74 to make an IRA contribution in 2025 or subsequent years to his or her traditional IRA or Roth IRA, the IRA plan agreement must be revised to authorize the person to make such a contribution.
The IRS in Notice 2024-2 extended the amendment deadline for IRAs to December 31, 2026. A user of IRS Model forms is permitted to continue to use these forms until revised by the IRS. The IRS has not explained why it is not able to follow its own regulation. The IRS probably should revise its regulation but for whatever reason chooses not to do so. The IRS many times will issue less formal guidance.
A long time ago (1986/1987) the IRS acknowledged that there are times that even though the IRA plan agreement has not been changed, a disclosure statement amendment must still be furnished. The IRS stated there needed to be a disclosure statement amendment discussing or explaining the deductible/nondeductible rules.
Each institution must make its own determination if an IRA amendment needs to be furnished because one needs to understand when was the IRA agreement last amended and how is it being amended. A primary question is, “when is the last time the financial institution furnished an amendment?” What do the current IRA plan agreements provide?
It is true that the IRS has not been very active in auditing whether or not IRA custodian/trustees are furnishing IRA amendments as required by the IRA regulation. We at CWF believe it is in the best interest of a financial institution to furnish the amendments. The governing IRA regulation provides that a $50 fine may be assessed an institution for each time it fails to furnish the IRA plan agreement and $50 each time it fails to furnish the IRA disclosure amendment.
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