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The Borrelli Report

Same ten years.
Two different inheritances.

A traditional IRA hands your heirs a decade of forced taxable income at their peak salary. An inherited Roth grows untouched and comes out tax-free. Whose bracket pays is the whole question.

01 — The Decade

Ten years either way. Nothing else is the same.

Since the SECURE Act, most non-spouse heirs must empty an inherited IRA within ten years — Roth or traditional, same deadline. Everything else about that decade is different:

Inside the ten yearsInherited traditional IRAInherited Roth IRA
Withdrawals taxed?Yes — ordinary income, at the heir’s rateNo — qualified distributions are tax-free
Forced annual withdrawals?Often yes — if the owner’s own RMDs had begunNo — a Roth owner has no required beginning date
Stacks on the heir’s salary?Yes — every withdrawn dollarNever
Can it grow untouched to year ten?Usually notYes — the full decade, then out tax-free
Federal treatment for most non-spouse heirs under the 10-year rule. Eligible designated beneficiaries — a spouse, minor child, or disabled/chronically ill heir — have different options; see the full 10-year-rule breakdown.
02 — The Real Question

Whose bracket pays — yours or theirs?

A traditional IRA carries a deferred income-tax bill that someone must pay. Die with the account intact and the bill transfers to your heirs — due within ten years, at their rates, in their circumstances. And their circumstances are usually the worst possible ones for it: heirs tend to inherit in their fifties, at peak salary, so a hypothetical $2,000,000 account becomes roughly $200,000 a year of forced income stacked on top of their highest-earning years — often taxed in brackets the account’s owner never occupied in their life.

Converting reverses the assignment. The tax gets paid now, at your rate — ideally inside the low-bracket window between retirement and RMDs. The comparison is then simple to state and personal to answer: your rate in the window, versus their rate at their peak. When the window rate is lower — and for many households it’s the lowest rate any generation of the family will ever see on that money — prepaying converts a bad decade into a clean one.

The estate-tax red herring: conversion doesn’t shrink the taxable estate — both account types are included. For most families the estate tax never applies anyway. The inheritance question is an income-tax question, and pretending otherwise is how it goes unplanned.

03 — What Transfers

The clocks travel with the account.

Two mechanical details decide how clean the Roth handoff actually is:

And one non-tax detail outranks everything above: the beneficiary form at the custodian controls who inherits — not the will. The cheapest fix in estate planning, and the most expensive to skip.

04 — The Honest Column

When converting for the heirs doesn’t make sense.

A fair comparison lists the cases where prepaying loses:

Which column your household lands in isn’t a philosophy — it’s your window rate, your heirs’ likely rates, your Medicare and Social Security exposure along the way, and what the account would force out under the 10-year rule. The guide walks the chain; the calculator runs your numbers, including what your heirs would keep.

05 — Quick Answers

The questions people actually ask.

Do heirs pay taxes on an inherited Roth IRA?

Generally no. Qualified distributions from an inherited Roth IRA are free of federal income tax, and because a Roth owner has no required beginning date, most non-spouse heirs owe no annual withdrawals — just the ten-year deadline. If the original owner hadn’t yet satisfied the five-year account clock, heirs wait out the remainder before earnings are qualified.

Is it better to inherit a Roth or a traditional IRA?

Dollar for dollar of account balance, heirs generally keep more from a Roth: distributions are tax-free, nothing stacks on their salary, and the account can grow untouched for the full ten years. But the comparison isn’t free — converting a traditional IRA to Roth means the owner pays the tax up front. Which generation’s tax rate is lower decides whether prepaying made sense.

Does a Roth conversion reduce estate taxes?

Not directly — both account types are included in the taxable estate. What conversion changes is income tax: it settles the deferred income-tax bill at the owner’s rate instead of passing it to heirs at theirs. For most families the estate tax never applies, and the income-tax question is the whole question.

When does converting for the heirs’ sake not make sense?

Several common cases: heirs expected to be in lower brackets than the owner’s conversion rate; accounts intended for charity, since a charity pays no income tax on a traditional IRA it receives; and situations where paying the conversion tax would compromise the owner’s own retirement security, which always comes first.

Sources

See what your heirs would actually keep.

Your window rate, your RMDs, their decade — free, in about 3 minutes.

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