Inheriting a retirement account sounds like a windfall, but the inherited IRA rules are a maze of deadlines and tax traps that have quietly tightened since 2019. If you were named a beneficiary, what you do in the first year matters, and doing nothing can cost you real money in 2026. This is the plain-language version of who owes what, and when.
What changed in 2026
The big shift traces back to the SECURE Act of 2019, which killed the old "stretch IRA" for most people who inherit from someone other than a spouse. The messy part landed later.
- The 10-year rule is the default. Most non-spouse beneficiaries must empty the entire account by the end of the 10th year after the owner died. Stretching withdrawals across your whole lifetime is gone for this group.
- Annual RMDs inside the 10 years are now enforced. The IRS waived penalties from 2021 through 2024 while it finalized the rules. Starting in 2025 and continuing into 2026, if the owner had already begun required minimum distributions (RMDs), you generally must withdraw something every year and still empty the account by year 10.
- The missed-RMD penalty is lower but real. SECURE 2.0 cut it from 50% to 25%, and to 10% if you fix it quickly. Lower is not zero.
Rules and dollar thresholds shift with IRS updates, so confirm current figures before acting.
Which kind of beneficiary are you
The rules hinge entirely on your category. Getting this wrong is the most common expensive mistake.
| Beneficiary type |
Who it covers |
What generally applies |
| Surviving spouse |
Married to the owner |
Most flexibility: roll into your own IRA, or stay a beneficiary |
| Minor child of owner |
The owner biological or adopted child, under majority |
Stretch until majority, then 10-year rule starts |
| Disabled or chronically ill |
Meets IRS disability definition |
Can still stretch over life expectancy |
| Not more than 10 years younger |
A sibling, partner, or friend close in age |
Can still stretch over life expectancy |
| Everyone else (non-spouse) |
Adult children, grandchildren, most others |
10-year rule, often with annual RMDs |
| Non-person (estate, most trusts) |
No named living beneficiary |
Often faster 5-year payout or life expectancy of owner |
The first four rows are "eligible designated beneficiaries" and get gentler treatment. Most adults inheriting from a parent fall into the fifth row.
The 10-year rule, decoded
You have until December 31 of the 10th year after death to bring the balance to zero. What trips people up is whether you must also take something each year in between.
- Owner died before starting RMDs: No forced annual withdrawal. Let it grow and pull it all in year 10, or spread it out however you like.
- Owner died after starting RMDs: You generally must take an annual RMD in years 1 through 9, then clear the rest by year 10.
Even when annual withdrawals are not required, emptying a large account in a single year can spike you into a higher tax bracket. Spreading withdrawals across the decade is usually smarter.
If you inherited from a spouse
A surviving spouse has choices no one else gets. You can do a spousal rollover, moving the money into your own IRA so it is treated as always yours, which resets RMDs to your own timeline (age 73 under current rules). Or stay a beneficiary, which can help if you are under 59 and a half and might need penalty-free access. SECURE 2.0 also lets a spouse elect to be treated as the deceased owner, delaying withdrawals further. The right pick depends on your age versus your late spouse age.
Inherited Roth IRAs are different
A Roth changes the math because the original owner never had RMDs. Non-spouse heirs still face the 10-year rule, but there are no forced annual withdrawals along the way. Better still, qualified withdrawals are typically tax-free if the account met the five-year rule. So letting an inherited Roth grow tax-free for the full 10 years is often the optimal move, the opposite instinct from a traditional inherited IRA.
What to skip
- Do not lump-sum a traditional inherited IRA on impulse. A six-figure balance withdrawn in one year is taxed as ordinary income and can push you into a much higher bracket.
- Do not roll a non-spouse inherited IRA into your own IRA. Only spouses can do that; for everyone else it counts as a full taxable distribution.
- Do not assume the old penalty waiver still applies. For 2026, the annual-RMD relief is over.
FAQ
Do I pay taxes when I inherit an IRA?
Not at the moment of inheritance. You owe ordinary income tax on withdrawals from a traditional inherited IRA as you take them. Roth withdrawals are usually tax-free.
What happens if I miss a required withdrawal?
You face a penalty on the amount you should have taken, now 25% and dropping to 10% if you correct it promptly and file the right form. Fix it fast.
Can I combine two inherited IRAs?
Only if they came from the same person under the same rules. You cannot merge an inherited IRA with your own personal IRA.
Does the 10-year clock start the year of death or the year after?
The year after. If the owner died in 2025, your deadline to empty the account is December 31, 2035.
Where to go next
An inherited account is one piece of a bigger picture. If you are mapping your own future, read how to prepare for retirement in 2026. To handle any lump sum you withdraw, see what is a brokerage account in 2026. And to fit new income into your monthly plan without lifestyle creep, start with the 50/30/20 budget explained for 2026.