A Required Minimum Distribution (RMD) is the minimum amount that an individual must withdraw annually from certain tax-deferred retirement accounts, such as traditional individual retirement accounts (IRAs), traditional (pre-tax) 401(k) plans, 403(b) plans, and similar qualified plans (excluding designated Roth accounts in employer plans, which are exempt during the owner's lifetime like Roth IRAs), beginning at age 73, to ensure that deferred earnings are eventually taxed as income.[1][2]These distributions apply to account owners who reach the required beginning date without exception, though Roth IRAs and designated Roth accounts are exempt during the owner's lifetime, with rules applying only to beneficiaries after death.[1][2] The RMD amount is calculated by dividing the account balance as of December 31 of the previous year by a life expectancy factor from IRS-provided tables, such as the Uniform Lifetime Table for most owners or the Joint Life and Last Survivor Expectancy Table if the sole beneficiary is a spouse more than 10 years younger.[1][2]The first RMD must be taken by April 1 of the year following the attainment of age 73, with subsequent distributions due by December 31 each year thereafter; for defined contribution plans like 401(k)s, the start may be delayed until actual retirement if still employed, subject to plan rules.[1][2] Failure to withdraw the full RMD incurs a 25% excise tax on the undistributed amount, which can be reduced to 10% if corrected within two years, and penalties may be waived for reasonable cause upon application to the IRS.[1][2]Recent legislation, including the SECURE Act of 2019 and SECURE 2.0 Act of 2022, has updated RMD rules, with IRS final regulations issued in 2024 (effective for years beginning January 1, 2025) providing clarifications: the starting age increased from 72 to 73 for individuals born in 1951 or later, and to 75 for those born in 1960 or later; beneficiary rules shifted most non-spouse heirs to a 10-year depletion requirement post-owner's death (with annual RMDs required during the 10 years if the owner died on or after their required beginning date), while allowing certain "eligible designated beneficiaries" (e.g., surviving spouses, minors, or disabled individuals) to use life expectancy-based distributions.[2][3]
Introduction
Definition and Purpose
A required minimum distribution (RMD) is the minimum amount that a retirement account owner or qualified beneficiary must withdraw annually from certain tax-deferred retirement accounts, such as traditional individual retirement accounts (IRAs), 401(k) plans, 403(b) plans, and similar employer-sponsored retirement vehicles.[4][1] These withdrawals are mandated to begin at a specified age during the account owner's lifetime and continue annually thereafter, with the exact amount calculated based on the account balance and life expectancy factors.[4]The primary purpose of RMDs is to prevent the indefinite tax-deferred accumulation of retirement savings, ensuring that the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) eventually collects income taxes on the earnings within these accounts.[4] By requiring periodic distributions, the rules promote the use of these funds for retirement income rather than allowing perpetual deferral, thereby aligning with broader policy goals of taxation on deferred compensation.[2]RMD requirements originated with the Employee Retirement Income Security Act (ERISA) of 1974, which established federal standards for private pension plans, including minimum distribution rules codified in Internal Revenue Code (IRC) Section 401(a)(9).[5][6] This provision ensures that qualified retirement plans distribute benefits in a manner that qualifies them for favorable tax treatment while safeguarding against excessive tax avoidance through prolonged deferrals.[7]Failure to withdraw the full RMD by the applicable deadline incurs an excise tax penalty of 25% on the undistributed amount, though this rate is reduced to 10% if the shortfall is corrected within two years.[4][8] This penalty, reported via Form 5329, underscores the IRS's enforcement of compliance to maintain the integrity of the retirement savings tax incentives.[2]
Applicable Accounts and Legal Basis
Required minimum distributions (RMDs) apply to a variety of tax-deferred retirement accounts and plans designed to ensure that deferred earnings are eventually taxed. These include traditional individual retirement accounts (IRAs), simplified employee pension (SEP) IRAs, savings incentive match plan for employees (SIMPLE) IRAs, 401(k plans, 403(b plans, 457(b) plans, profit-sharing plans, and defined benefit pension plans.[1][9]Certain accounts are exempt from lifetime RMD requirements. Roth IRAs do not require distributions during the account owner's lifetime, though beneficiaries may face RMDs after the owner's death.[1] Similarly, designated Roth accounts within 401(k) or 403(b) plans are not subject to RMDs while the owner is alive. Health savings accounts (HSAs) are entirely exempt from RMD rules, allowing funds to remain invested indefinitely without mandatory withdrawals.[10] Certain employer-sponsored plans may offer waivers or delays for active employees, but the underlying accounts remain subject to RMD rules upon separation or retirement.[1]The legal framework for RMDs is primarily established under Section 401(a)(9) of the Internal Revenue Code (IRC), which mandates minimum distributions from qualified retirement plans to prevent indefinite tax deferral.[4] For IRAs specifically, IRC Sections 408(a)(6) and 408(b)(3) extend these requirements.[4] The Internal Revenue Service enforces these provisions through regulations codified in 26 CFR 1.401(a)(9), which provide detailed guidance on distribution methods and timing.(9)-1) Employer-sponsored plans are further influenced by the Employee Retirement Income Security Act (ERISA) of 1974, which incorporates IRC distribution standards to protect participant rights.[11]RMD rules encompass both pre-tax and after-tax contributions within qualified plans, ensuring the entire account balance is subject to distribution requirements over time. However, only the taxable portion of withdrawals—typically the pre-tax amounts and earnings—is included in gross income upon distribution, with after-tax basis recovered pro-rata.[1][2]
Lifetime Required Minimum Distributions
Eligibility and Starting Age
Required minimum distributions (RMDs) apply to owners of traditional IRAs, SEP IRAs, SIMPLE IRAs, and qualified employer-sponsored retirement plans, such as 401(k)s and 403(b)s, who have reached the applicable starting age.[4] These distributions must be taken annually regardless of the account owner's current employment status, financial needs, or whether they are still contributing to the account, ensuring that tax-deferred savings are gradually taxed over time.[2] However, for participants in employer-sponsored plans who are still working and are not 5% owners of the business, RMDs from that specific plan may be delayed until actual retirement, though RMDs from IRAs cannot be postponed under this exception.[4]The starting age for lifetime RMDs has evolved through legislative changes. Prior to the SECURE Act of 2019, individuals born before July 1, 1949, were required to begin RMDs at age 70½.[2] The SECURE Act raised this to age 72 for individuals who attain age 70½ after December 31, 2019 (generally those born on or after July 1, 1949), with their first RMDs due starting in 2021 or 2022.[2] Under the SECURE 2.0 Act of 2022, the age increased to 73 for individuals born between 1951 and 1959, meaning they must begin RMDs upon turning 73 starting in 2024.[2] For those born in 1960 or later, the starting age will further rise to 75 beginning in 2033.[2]The first RMD is due by the required beginning date (RBD), which is April 1 of the year following the calendar year in which the account owner reaches the applicable starting age; all subsequent RMDs must be taken by December 31 of each year.[4] For example, an individual turning 73 in 2024 has until April 1, 2025, to take their first RMD, but delaying it means they must also take the 2025 RMD by December 31, 2025, potentially resulting in two distributions in one tax year.[4] As of 2025, the IRS confirms that age 73 applies to most individuals nearing eligibility under current rules, with enhanced enforcement and guidance emphasizing compliance following the implementation of SECURE 2.0 provisions.[8]
Calculation Methods
The required minimum distribution (RMD) for an account owner during their lifetime is calculated using a straightforward formula: the account balance as of December 31 of the prior year divided by the applicable life expectancy factor, also known as the distribution period, derived from IRS tables.[12] This method ensures systematic withdrawals from tax-deferred retirement accounts, such as traditional IRAs and employer-sponsored plans like 401(k)s.[1]The IRS provides specific life expectancy tables in Publication 590-B to determine the factor. The primary table is the Uniform Lifetime Table (Table III), which applies to most account owners, including unmarried individuals, married owners whose spouses are not more than 10 years younger, and owners whose spouse is not the sole beneficiary.[12] For the relatively uncommon case where the owner's sole beneficiary is a spouse more than 10 years younger, the Joint Life and Last Survivor Expectancy Table (Table II) is used instead, yielding a longer distribution period.[12] These tables, revised in 2022 to reflect updated mortality data, remain in effect and are referenced in the annual Publication 590-B; for example, the factor for age 72 is 27.4, and for age 73, it is 26.5.[12]To compute the RMD, account owners follow these steps annually. First, identify the relevant account balance(s) as of December 31 of the previous year; for traditional, SEP, and SIMPLEIRAs, balances across all such accounts are aggregated to calculate a single RMD amount, which may then be withdrawn from one or more of those IRAs.[12] Second, determine the owner's age as of their birthday in the distribution year and select the appropriate table based on marital status and beneficiary designation.[12] Third, locate the corresponding life expectancyfactor from the table and divide the aggregated (for IRAs) or individual (for employer plans) balance by that factor to obtain the RMD.[12] For employer-sponsored plans, such as 401(ks, RMDs must be calculated and withdrawn separately for each plan, without aggregation across plans or with IRAs.[12] The factor is recalculated each year using the owner's current age, ensuring the distribution amount adjusts as life expectancy shortens.[12]For instance, an individual turning 73 in 2025 with an aggregated IRA balance of $500,000 as of December 31, 2024, would use the Uniform Lifetime Table factor of 26.5, resulting in an RMD of approximately $18,868 ($500,000 ÷ 26.5).[12] No aggregation is permitted between different account types, such as IRAs and 401(ks, to maintain distinct compliance requirements.[12]
Post-Death Required Minimum Distributions
Rules for Surviving Spouses
Surviving spouses of retirement account owners subject to required minimum distributions (RMDs) enjoy greater flexibility than other beneficiaries, allowing them to either treat the inherited account as their own or remain as a beneficiary to extend distributions over their life expectancy. This treatment applies to traditional IRAs, 401(k)s, and similar qualified plans under Internal Revenue Code Section 401(a)(9).[2][13]Under SECURE 2.0 Act Section 327, effective for deaths occurring after December 31, 2023, a surviving spouse who is the sole designated beneficiary and elects life expectancy payments may also choose to be treated as the deceased employee for RMD purposes if the death occurred before the employee's required beginning date (RBD). In this election, RMDs are calculated using the Uniform Lifetime Table based on the deceased employee's age in the year of death (adjusted annually), and distributions can be delayed until the date the deceased would have reached their RBD (age 73 for those born 1951–1959, or age 75 for those born 1960 or later). This option provides additional deferral compared to standard beneficiary rules but requires the spouse to remain the beneficiary without rolling over the account.[3][2]If the surviving spouse elects to treat the inherited account as their own, they may roll it over into their own IRA or retitle the account in their name as the owner. In this case, RMDs follow the standard lifetime rules based on the spouse's age, using the Uniform Lifetime Table to calculate annual distributions starting no later than April 1 of the year following the date they reach age 73 (for individuals turning 72 after December 31, 2022). This option defers required withdrawals until the spouse's own required beginning date and allows naming new beneficiaries, such as a new spouse, without triggering immediate distribution changes.[2][14][13]Alternatively, if the spouse does not roll over or retitle the account and does not elect employee treatment, they remain a beneficiary and must take RMDs based on their single life expectancy using the Single Life Expectancy Table (Table I in IRS Publication 590-B, Appendix B). Distributions begin by December 31 of the later of the year following the account owner's death or the year the owner would have reached age 73. The required minimum distribution amount is calculated by dividing the account balance as of December 31 of the prior year by the applicable life expectancy factor from the table, determined using the spouse's age in the first distribution year and reduced by one in each subsequent year.[2][15][14]The calculation varies depending on whether the account owner died before or after their required beginning date. If the owner died before their required beginning date, the spouse uses their own current age each year for the life expectancy factor, enabling potentially smaller annual distributions stretched over the spouse's lifetime. If the owner died on or after their required beginning date, the spouse may use either their own life expectancy or the owner's remaining life expectancy from the prior year (whichever is longer), continuing the owner's distribution schedule if beneficial.[2][15][14]Surviving spouses also have the option to apply the 10-year rule, requiring full distribution of the account by December 31 of the 10th year following the owner's death, though this typically results in larger distributions compared to the life expectancy method. Under final regulations effective for 2025, spouses may continue using the life expectancy method without the account needing full depletion by the end of year 10, providing relief from prior uncertainties and allowing smaller annual withdrawals; for 2024, the IRS waives excise taxes on certain missed RMDs for those reasonably relying on life expectancy calculations.[13][16][13]Remarriage does not alter the surviving spouse's beneficiary status, which is determined at the original account owner's death, but the account must be properly titled as an inherited IRA to maintain access to these beneficiary options and avoid commingling with the spouse's own assets.[2][13]
Rules for Non-Spouse Beneficiaries
Non-spouse beneficiaries inheriting retirement accounts, such as traditional IRAs or employer-sponsored plans, are subject to specific required minimum distribution (RMD) rules under the SECURE Act of 2019 and subsequent IRS regulations. These rules distinguish between eligible designated beneficiaries (EDBs) and non-eligible designated beneficiaries (non-EDBs), with the latter comprising most adult non-spouse inheritors. EDBs include minor children of the decedent, individuals who are disabled or chronically ill, and those not more than 10 years younger than the decedent at the time of death.[4][17]For non-EDBs, the SECURE Act mandates that the entire account balance must be distributed by the end of the 10th calendar year following the year of the account owner's death, regardless of whether the death occurred before or after the owner's required beginning date (RBD).[4] This 10-year rule replaced the previous "stretch IRA" provisions that allowed distributions over the beneficiary's lifetime. The IRS finalized regulations in 2024, effective for deaths occurring on or after January 1, 2025, which enforce annual RMDs during the 10-year period in certain cases, ending prior transitional relief such as Notice 2022-53 that had waived penalties for missed annual distributions in 2021 and 2022.[3] Specifically, if the decedent had reached their RBD and was subject to lifetime RMDs, non-EDB beneficiaries must take annual RMDs in years 1 through 9 of the 10-year period, with the account fully depleted by the end of year 10.[3][17]EDBs, by contrast, may stretch distributions over their life expectancy rather than adhering strictly to the 10-year rule. Distributions for EDBs begin by December 31 of the year following the owner's death and are calculated using the IRS Single Life Expectancy Table (Table I from Publication 590-B), based on the beneficiary's age as of December 31 in that first year, then reduced by one each subsequent year.[14][2] If a non-spouse EDB inherits multiple IRAs from the same decedent, they may aggregate the account balances for a single RMD calculation to simplify compliance.[2]Minor children classified as EDBs, however, transition to the 10-year rule upon reaching the age of majority (typically 21).[17]Unlike surviving spouses, who have the option to roll over inherited accounts into their own and delay RMDs until their own RBD, non-spouse beneficiaries face stricter timelines without such flexibility.[4]
Special Rules and Exceptions
The 10-Year Rule
The 10-year rule, enacted under the SECURE Act of 2019, requires that most inherited retirement accounts be fully distributed to non-eligible designated beneficiaries by December 31 of the tenth year following the account owner's death, regardless of whether the owner died before, on, or after their required beginning date.[16] This rule applies mandatorily to non-eligible designated beneficiaries, such as non-spouse adults, while eligible designated beneficiaries may instead qualify for distributions over their life expectancy.[4] The full depletion ensures that tax-deferred assets do not extend indefinitely beyond the owner's lifetime.For beneficiaries subject to the 10-year rule where the account owner had reached their required beginning date at death, annual required minimum distributions (RMDs) are mandated in years 1 through 9, with the entire remaining balance withdrawn by the end of year 10.[2] These annual RMDs are calculated by dividing the account balance as of December 31 of the prior year by the beneficiary's applicable single life expectancy factor from the IRS Uniform Lifetime Table (Table I), which decreases by one each subsequent year.[14] The 2024 final regulations confirm these annual RMD requirements for compliance starting in 2025.[3] If the owner died before their required beginning date, no annual RMDs are required during the 10-year period, though the full distribution deadline still applies.[16]Exceptions to the annual RMD requirement within the 10-year period include cases where the account owner died before their required beginning date, as noted above, and for minor children of the owner, who initially qualify as eligible designated beneficiaries but transition to the 10-year rule upon reaching the age of majority (typically 21).[2]In IRS Notice 2024-35, the agency announced non-enforcement relief from penalties for missed annual RMDs under the 10-year rule for deaths occurring in 2020 through 2023, extending prior relief through 2024 and providing time for custodians to update systems.[16] Final regulations incorporating SECURE Act changes were issued in July 2024 and apply starting in calendar year 2025, clarifying ongoing compliance for the rule.[3]Failure to take required distributions under the 10-year rule incurs a 25% excisetax on the undistributed amount, which may be reduced to 10% if corrected within two years of the missed distribution.[4] Taxpayers can request waiver of this penalty by filing Form 5329 with the IRS, demonstrating reasonable cause for the error.
Roth Accounts and QCDs
Roth individual retirement accounts (Roth IRAs) are exempt from required minimum distributions (RMDs) during the lifetime of the original account owner, allowing the funds to grow tax-free without mandatory withdrawals.[1] This exemption applies regardless of the owner's age, providing greater flexibility for retirement planning compared to traditional IRAs.[4]Designated Roth accounts in employer-sponsored plans, such as Roth 401(ks, were previously subject to lifetime RMDs starting at age 73, similar to traditional 401(ks, unless the funds were rolled over to a Roth IRA.[4] However, under the SECURE 2.0 Act, effective for distributions beginning in 2024, these Roth 401(k accounts are now exempt from lifetime RMD requirements, aligning their treatment more closely with Roth IRAs.[8] This change eliminates the need for pre-death withdrawals from Roth portions of 401(k, 403(b, and governmental 457(b) plans.[4]For inherited Roth IRAs, non-spouse beneficiaries must generally follow the 10-year rule, requiring the account to be fully distributed by the end of the 10th year following the original owner's death.[17] These beneficiaries are subject to the same RMD requirements as those for inherited traditional IRAs, potentially including annual distributions in certain cases, though the SECURE Act specifies full depletion within the decade.[4] Qualified distributions from inherited Roth IRAs remain tax-free, provided the account has satisfied the five-year holding period established by the original owner.[2]Qualified charitable distributions (QCDs) offer a strategy to satisfy RMD requirements from traditional IRAs without increasing taxable income, particularly beneficial for owners aged 70½ or older who wish to support charitable causes.[18] Under this provision, individuals can direct up to $108,000 annually (for 2025, adjusted for inflation) from their IRA directly to a qualified charity, with the amount counting toward their RMD obligation.[19] Starting with the 2025 tax year, IRA custodians must report QCDs using code Y on Form 1099-R.[20] QCDs are available exclusively from IRAs (including traditional, rollover, inherited, SEP, and SIMPLEIRAs held for at least 35 days), but not from employer-sponsored plans like 401(ks.[18] Surviving spouses who are the sole beneficiaries of an IRA may also make QCDs from the inherited account.[18] By excluding the QCD amount from gross income, this mechanism reduces overall tax liability while fulfilling RMD rules and avoiding associated penalties.[18]