PP here. Yes, we know. We want them to keep it invested until they graduate college. The desire from grandparent that died was that they use it for travel and they are aware. They are set to receive a much larger amount from the other grandparent. The conversations about investing are mainly to prepare them for that happening. In-laws do/did not believe in trusts and want all grandkids (5) to receive the money immediately. We had to explain to FIL that he would not be giving our teens the money directly when MIL died two years ago. |
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Kids are 18, 17, 14
Each have ~55k fidelity UTMA; 255k ROTH; 350k 529 |
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If they spend it, that's a lesson, no?
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Yes, a lesson I learned the hard way. I’d never give my kids large sums of money when they are young and irresponsible. |
Wow - how did their Roth’s get that funded / big at such a young age? |
I would question the Roth number as well unless they actually had significant earned income at a young age. |
Inherited Roth passed from paternal grandmother (husbands mother, required lawyer, paying taxes & I don’t even know or understand what, but it’s there) |
Ah makes sense, great legacy. |
Don’t they have to empty within 10 years? |
Yes but they can let it grow until the last second. What a great legacy. |
Oh well that certainly explains it. Keep in mind, a minor who inherits a Roth IRA must take RMDs until they reach age 21, after which they are subject to the 10-year rule, requiring the account to be fully distributed within 10 years of reaching that age. |
The rules are different if the deceased was not the parent. |