Retirement & Inheritance Planning

Bitcoin Inherited IRA Rules: The 10-Year Rule, RMDs & Planning Strategies (2026)

The SECURE Act permanently changed how Bitcoin IRAs transfer to heirs. Most beneficiaries now face a compressed 10-year distribution window — and a potential tax bomb if they don't plan carefully.

HF Hal Franklin, Bitcoin Wealth Strategist February 28, 2026 14 min read
Key Takeaway: The SECURE Act of 2019 eliminated the "stretch IRA" for most non-spouse beneficiaries. If you inherit a Bitcoin IRA, you must distribute all assets within 10 years — paying ordinary income tax on every Traditional IRA dollar withdrawn. Smart planning before and after inheritance can dramatically reduce this tax burden.

What the SECURE Act Changed for Bitcoin IRA Heirs

For decades, the "stretch IRA" was one of the most powerful estate planning tools available. A beneficiary could inherit an IRA and take distributions over their entire life expectancy — sometimes 40, 50, or even 60 years. During that time, the remaining assets continued growing tax-deferred.

The SECURE Act (Setting Every Community Up for Retirement Enhancement Act), signed into law December 20, 2019, eliminated the stretch IRA for most non-spouse beneficiaries for accounts inherited after December 31, 2019. SECURE 2.0 (signed December 29, 2022) made further modifications but largely kept the 10-year framework intact.

For Bitcoin IRA holders, this change has profound implications:

Critical Warning: Many Bitcoin IRA holders incorrectly assume their heirs will get the same favorable long-term capital gains rates they would on Bitcoin held outside an IRA. This is wrong. Every dollar withdrawn from a Traditional Bitcoin IRA — no matter how long the Bitcoin was held — is taxed as ordinary income. For high earners, that's up to 37% federal plus state taxes.

Beneficiary Categories: Who Gets What Rules

The SECURE Act created a tiered beneficiary system. Where you fall determines what distribution rules apply to your inherited Bitcoin IRA.

Beneficiary Type Distribution Rule RMDs Required? Notes
Surviving Spouse Can roll into own IRA; or 10-year rule; or life expectancy method Only if rolled into own IRA after age 73 Most flexible category; can delay RMDs
Minor Child of Decedent Life expectancy until age 21, then 10-year rule Yes, annual RMDs until 21 10-year rule begins at age 21, not at death
Disabled Beneficiary Life expectancy method (stretch remains) Yes, annual RMDs Must meet IRS definition of disabled
Chronically Ill Beneficiary Life expectancy method (stretch remains) Yes, annual RMDs Must meet IRS definition
Within 10 Years of Decedent's Age Life expectancy method (stretch remains) Yes, annual RMDs Must be no more than 10 years younger than decedent
All Other Non-Spouse Beneficiaries 10-year rule: full distribution by year 10 Depends on whether decedent had begun RMDs Most common category: adult children, siblings, others
Estate as Beneficiary 5-year rule if owner died before RMD age; life expectancy if after Situation-dependent Avoid naming estate as beneficiary — worst outcome
Non-Designated Beneficiary (charity, etc.) 5-year rule or life expectancy at date of death Situation-dependent Charities pay no tax — ideal for Traditional IRAs

The category that applies to most Bitcoin IRA heirs — adult children, grandchildren, siblings — falls under the 10-year rule with no stretch options.

The 10-Year Rule Explained

Under the 10-year rule, the beneficiary must withdraw all assets from the inherited Bitcoin IRA by December 31 of the 10th year following the original account owner's death. The rule is measured from the year after death, not the year of death.

Example: Inheriting a $500,000 Bitcoin IRA

Your father dies January 15, 2026. You are named as beneficiary on his Traditional Bitcoin IRA worth $500,000 (100% Bitcoin). The 10-year window runs from 2026 through 2035 — you must empty the account by December 31, 2035.

Key Rule: Annual RMDs Only if Decedent Had Started Them

If the original owner had NOT yet begun required minimum distributions (i.e., died before their Required Beginning Date, typically April 1 following the year they turned 73), then under the SECURE Act's original reading, beneficiaries were not required to take annual distributions — just empty the account by year 10.

However, the IRS issued proposed regulations in 2022 and finalized guidance indicating that if the decedent had already begun RMDs, non-spouse beneficiaries must take annual distributions in years 1-9 AND exhaust the account by year 10. The IRS waived penalties for failure to take these annual RMDs for 2021-2024, but beneficiaries should expect annual distributions to be required going forward.

The Bunching Problem

One of the most dangerous traps of the 10-year rule is income bunching. If a beneficiary delays distributions, hoping to defer taxes, and then Bitcoin appreciates significantly, they may face an enormous tax bill in year 10 when forced to distribute everything.

Consider: A $500,000 Bitcoin IRA grows to $2 million over 9 years. In year 10, the beneficiary must distribute $2 million — adding $2 million to their ordinary income in a single year. At the 37% bracket (plus 3.8% net investment income tax where applicable), the effective tax on that distribution could exceed $800,000.

The alternative — taking distributions in years 1-10 to smooth income — requires active planning and modeling of Bitcoin price scenarios.

RMD Requirements for Inherited Bitcoin IRAs

Required Minimum Distributions (RMDs) for inherited IRAs work differently depending on whether the original owner had already begun RMDs and the beneficiary category.

Scenario Annual RMDs in Years 1-9? Year 10 Requirement Planning Priority
Decedent died before RMD age; non-spouse beneficiary Not technically required per original SECURE Act (but IRS guidance evolving) Full balance by Dec 31 of year 10 Spread distributions proactively to avoid year-10 cliff
Decedent died after RMD age; non-spouse beneficiary Yes — annual RMD based on beneficiary's life expectancy Full balance by Dec 31 of year 10 Model RMDs annually; coordinate with other income
Spouse beneficiary (rolls into own IRA) No — treated as own IRA, RMDs begin at age 73 No 10-year rule applies Almost always best to roll into own IRA
Eligible designated beneficiary (disabled, chronically ill, within 10 years of age) Yes — annual RMDs over life expectancy No 10-year rule; distributions continue over lifetime Use qualified disability trust for disabled beneficiaries
Inherited Roth IRA (any non-spouse beneficiary) No annual RMDs required Full balance by Dec 31 of year 10 (tax-free) Hold as long as possible; let Bitcoin appreciate tax-free

Calculating Your Inherited IRA RMD

If annual RMDs are required, the calculation uses the IRS Uniform Lifetime Table (for the surviving spouse rolling into their own account) or the Single Life Expectancy Table (for all other beneficiaries). The life expectancy factor is set in the year after the decedent's death and then reduced by one each subsequent year.

For example: A 45-year-old beneficiary who inherits a Traditional Bitcoin IRA in 2026 would look up their life expectancy factor in the Single Life Expectancy Table — approximately 40.4 years. The annual RMD in year one would be: [Account Balance at Dec 31, 2025] ÷ 40.4. In year two: balance ÷ 39.4, and so on.

Traditional vs Roth: The Tax Difference Is Enormous

Nowhere in estate planning is the Roth vs Traditional distinction more consequential than with Bitcoin IRAs. Given Bitcoin's historical appreciation, the difference in after-tax value to heirs can be extraordinary.

Feature Inherited Traditional Bitcoin IRA Inherited Roth Bitcoin IRA
Distributions taxable? Yes — 100% ordinary income No — tax-free if account open 5+ years
Annual RMDs (decedent already in RMDs) Yes — must take annual distributions No — Roth has no lifetime RMDs
10-year rule applies? Yes for non-spouse beneficiaries Yes for non-spouse beneficiaries
Best strategy for heirs Spread distributions across 10 years; consider Roth conversion before death Hold as long as possible; let Bitcoin compound tax-free through year 10
$1M growing to $3M in 10 years: heir's after-tax value (37% bracket) Approx $1.9M after taxes $3M — full value, zero tax
Impact of Bitcoin appreciation Creates larger tax bill at distribution Beneficiary keeps all upside tax-free

The math is stark: a $1 million Roth Bitcoin IRA left to a child is worth nearly $1 million more in after-tax value than the same amount in a Traditional Bitcoin IRA — and that gap widens dramatically if Bitcoin appreciates.

The Roth Conversion Strategy

Many Bitcoin IRA holders are accelerating Roth conversions in their 60s and early 70s — before RMDs force large taxable distributions — precisely to eliminate the inherited IRA tax burden for heirs. Converting during lower-income years (particularly after retirement but before Social Security kicks in) is optimal.

The strategy: Pay ordinary income tax now on the conversion at a known, potentially lower rate. Your heirs then inherit a Roth IRA and pay zero income tax on distributions over the 10-year window, even as Bitcoin appreciates.

6 Strategies to Minimize Inherited Bitcoin IRA Taxes

1. Spread Distributions Evenly Across 10 Years

The simplest strategy: don't wait. Take distributions each year over the 10-year window to keep your income in lower tax brackets. This requires projecting your income for each year and modeling Bitcoin price scenarios — aggressive appreciation may require front-loading distributions to avoid a year-10 distribution cliff.

2. Front-Load Distributions in Low-Income Years

If you anticipate higher income in future years (career advancement, business sale, spouse returning to work), taking larger inherited IRA distributions early — when your income is lower — can significantly reduce total tax paid. The 10-year rule gives flexibility; use it intentionally.

3. Coordinate Inherited IRA Distributions with Deductions

Large deductions — mortgage interest, business losses, charitable contributions — can offset inherited IRA income. If you have a year with a large deductible loss, take a correspondingly larger inherited IRA distribution to take advantage of the offset.

4. Use Qualified Charitable Distributions (QCDs) Where Eligible

IRA owners age 70½ or older can make Qualified Charitable Distributions directly from an IRA to a charity, satisfying RMDs without the amount being included in taxable income. Note: QCDs are only available to the original owner, not to beneficiaries of inherited IRAs. However, if the decedent was charitably inclined, QCDs during their lifetime reduce the account balance beneficiaries must distribute.

5. Name a Charitable Remainder Trust (CRT) as Beneficiary

For larger Traditional Bitcoin IRAs, naming a Charitable Remainder Trust as the beneficiary is a powerful strategy that eliminates income tax on distributions entirely. The CRT receives the IRA, sells it (no immediate tax because the trust is tax-exempt), and pays an income stream to the individual beneficiaries for life or a term of years. The remainder passes to charity. The income stream from a CRT is still taxable, but at capital gains rates rather than ordinary income rates — a significant improvement.

6. Roth Conversion Before Death

The most powerful pre-death strategy: convert Traditional Bitcoin IRA assets to a Roth IRA, paying income tax now so heirs pay nothing. For Bitcoin holders expecting continued appreciation, this is mathematically compelling — you pay tax on the conversion at today's value, but heirs receive all future appreciation tax-free.

Partial conversions over multiple years can keep annual income in lower brackets while systematically eliminating the Traditional IRA tax liability. Work with a CPA who understands both Bitcoin and estate planning to model the optimal conversion schedule.

Special Rules for Spousal Beneficiaries

The surviving spouse has more flexibility with an inherited Bitcoin IRA than any other beneficiary. They have three main options:

Option 1: Roll Into Own IRA

The spouse rolls the inherited IRA into their own IRA or Roth IRA (if rolling a Roth). The account is now their own — not an inherited IRA. They can take distributions on their own RMD schedule beginning at age 73, beneficiary designations reset, and they can continue contributing to the account. This is almost always the best choice for younger surviving spouses who don't need immediate distributions.

Option 2: Treat as Inherited IRA

The spouse keeps the account as an inherited IRA. This allows distributions before age 59½ without the 10% early withdrawal penalty — useful if the surviving spouse is young and needs income. The tradeoff is that the 10-year rule eventually applies, and the account cannot receive new contributions.

Option 3: Elect 10-Year Rule or Life Expectancy

Spouses can elect either the 10-year distribution rule (same as other non-spouse beneficiaries) or the life expectancy method, giving them maximum flexibility to delay distributions based on their financial situation.

Timing Trap for Young Spouses: If a spouse rolls an inherited IRA into their own IRA, they lose the ability to take penalty-free distributions before age 59½. A spouse who is 50 and needs income should consider keeping the account as an inherited IRA until they turn 59½, then rolling it into their own IRA to avoid early withdrawal penalties.

Naming a Trust as Bitcoin IRA Beneficiary

Some Bitcoin IRA owners consider naming a trust as IRA beneficiary — typically to protect assets from spendthrift heirs, ensure proper management of Bitcoin private keys, or provide for a disabled family member. The rules are complex.

Conduit Trusts vs Accumulation Trusts

Conduit Trust: All RMDs pass through the trust directly to the trust beneficiaries. For purposes of the distribution rules, the IRS looks through the trust to the individual beneficiaries. If the trust qualifies as a "see-through" trust with proper drafting, the individual beneficiaries' classification (spouse, eligible designated beneficiary, etc.) determines the distribution rules.

Accumulation Trust: The trust can accumulate (retain) distributions rather than immediately passing them to beneficiaries. These are more complex and generally subject to the 10-year rule. They can be useful for protecting assets from creditors or controlling distribution timing.

Key Requirements for See-Through Trust Status

Given the complexity — and the importance of proper Bitcoin key custody provisions within the trust — work with an estate planning attorney experienced in both IRA beneficiary designations and digital asset law. Wyoming's directed trust statute is often recommended for Bitcoin-holding trusts, providing the most flexibility for custodial arrangements.

The Disabled Child Exception in Trusts

A trust named as beneficiary for a disabled child can qualify for the life expectancy method (stretch) rather than the 10-year rule — but only if the trust is properly structured as a "special needs trust" and the disabled individual is the sole beneficiary during their lifetime. This requires careful coordination between the IRA beneficiary designation and the trust document.

How Bitcoin IRA Custodians Handle Inheritance

The practical mechanics of inheriting a Bitcoin IRA depend significantly on who holds the original account. Bitcoin IRA custodians include specialized platforms like BitcoinIRA, Alto IRA, iTrust Capital, and Broad Financial, as well as traditional custodians offering self-directed IRAs.

What Happens at the Custodian

  1. Death notification: Beneficiaries notify the custodian with a certified copy of the death certificate and proof of identity
  2. Beneficiary verification: The custodian confirms you are the named beneficiary per the most recent beneficiary designation form on file
  3. Account retitling: The custodian creates a new inherited IRA account titled in the beneficiary's name for the benefit of the decedent (e.g., "Jane Smith as beneficiary of John Smith IRA")
  4. Asset transfer: Bitcoin is transferred in-kind to the new inherited IRA account — this is not a taxable event
  5. Distribution elections: Beneficiary elects distribution schedule (subject to IRS rules)

Bitcoin-Specific Complications

Unlike traditional IRA assets, Bitcoin inheritance involves additional custody considerations:

Beneficiary Designation Best Practice

The beneficiary designation on your IRA form overrides your will. A will that says "all my assets to my spouse" does not automatically transfer an IRA if a different beneficiary is named on the IRA form. Review all IRA beneficiary designations annually — especially after marriage, divorce, birth of a child, or death of a named beneficiary.

Planning Ahead: What Bitcoin IRA Owners Should Do Now

The best inherited IRA planning happens before the original owner dies. If you have a Bitcoin IRA and want to maximize after-tax value for your heirs, prioritize these steps:

1. Prioritize Roth Bitcoin IRA Over Traditional

If you have a choice between contributing to a Traditional or Roth IRA, prioritize Roth — especially if you expect Bitcoin to appreciate significantly. The tax-free inheritance is worth far more than the upfront deduction, particularly for large Bitcoin positions.

2. Execute Strategic Roth Conversions

Convert Traditional Bitcoin IRA assets to Roth IRA during lower-income years. Target conversions to fill the top of your current bracket without pushing into the next. A financial planner with Roth conversion expertise can model optimal annual conversion amounts based on your projected income, RMDs, and Bitcoin price scenarios.

3. Name Beneficiaries Correctly and Specifically

Name all primary and contingent beneficiaries by name, relationship, and Social Security number. If you want to benefit a disabled child under life expectancy rules, work with an attorney to ensure the trust beneficiary designation is properly structured. Review designations annually.

4. Separate IRA Accounts for Different Beneficiaries

If you want to leave different amounts to different beneficiaries, consider opening separate IRA accounts for each — or clearly specify the percentage allocation in a single IRA. Separate accounts also allow each beneficiary to calculate RMDs independently, preventing one beneficiary's large withdrawal from affecting another's required distribution.

5. Consider Charitable Beneficiary Strategies

For a portion of a large Traditional Bitcoin IRA, naming a charity (or Donor Advised Fund) as beneficiary can be highly tax-efficient. Charities pay zero income tax on IRA distributions. Meanwhile, you can leave other assets (Bitcoin held directly, real estate, Roth IRAs) to heirs who can benefit from lower-tax treatment. This strategy — routing "worst assets to charity, best assets to heirs" — can significantly increase total family after-tax wealth.

6. Create a Letter of Instructions for Bitcoin IRA Heirs

Your heirs may not know they're a named Bitcoin IRA beneficiary, which custodian holds the account, or how to contact them. Create a letter of instructions — stored with your estate documents — that includes:

IRA + Bitcoin Outside IRA: The Optimal Structure

Many sophisticated Bitcoin holders structure their holdings across multiple vehicles to optimize for taxes at death:

Holding Vehicle Estate Tax Treatment Income Tax at Death/Distribution Best Heir Strategy
Bitcoin held directly (cold storage) Included in taxable estate Step-up in basis at death — zero capital gains on appreciation at death Leave to high-income heirs; they get basis reset
Roth Bitcoin IRA Included in taxable estate Tax-free distributions (10-year rule applies) Leave to highest-bracket heirs; best after-tax value
Traditional Bitcoin IRA Included in taxable estate 100% ordinary income when distributed Leave to charity; or convert to Roth before death
Bitcoin in irrevocable trust Removed from estate if properly structured No step-up in basis; trust pays capital gains on sale Hold for appreciation; step-up not available
Bitcoin in GRAT Appreciation above hurdle rate removed Grantor pays all income tax during GRAT term Ideal for large lump-sum transfer at low cost
The Optimal Sequencing Rule: Use Traditional IRA assets for charitable giving (zero income tax). Use Roth IRA assets for high-bracket heirs (zero income tax on distributions). Use directly-held Bitcoin for heirs who can benefit most from the step-up in basis. This "asset location" strategy maximizes total family after-tax wealth across generations.

Working with a Bitcoin Estate Planning Attorney

Inherited Bitcoin IRA planning intersects multiple specialized areas: IRA distribution rules, estate tax, Bitcoin custody, and state law. Few advisors have deep expertise across all four. When assembling your planning team, look for:

The stakes are high: for a Bitcoin IRA holder with $2 million or more in IRA assets, proper planning can save hundreds of thousands of dollars in taxes for heirs. The combination of the 10-year rule, ordinary income taxation, and Bitcoin's appreciation potential makes this one of the most consequential planning decisions in Bitcoin estate strategy.

For related planning strategies, see our guides on Bitcoin IRA family office structures, Bitcoin IRA vs Roth IRA comparison, Bitcoin retirement planning, Bitcoin step-up in basis at death, and comprehensive Bitcoin estate planning.

This guide is updated regularly to reflect changes in IRS guidance, SECURE Act regulations, and Bitcoin IRA custodian procedures. Last updated: February 2026.

Frequently Asked Questions

What happens to a Bitcoin IRA when you die?
Your Bitcoin IRA passes to your named beneficiaries via the custodian's beneficiary designation process — not through your will. The custodian retransfers the Bitcoin holdings into an inherited IRA in the beneficiary's name. No immediate taxes are owed at the transfer, but the beneficiary must follow inherited IRA distribution rules. For most non-spouse beneficiaries, the SECURE Act requires the entire account to be distributed (and taxed, for Traditional IRAs) within 10 years of your death.
Do you pay taxes on an inherited Bitcoin IRA?
For Traditional Bitcoin IRAs: yes, every distribution is taxed as ordinary income in the year taken. There is no capital gains treatment, regardless of how long Bitcoin appreciated inside the account. For Roth Bitcoin IRAs: distributions are generally tax-free (if the account has been open at least 5 years). This makes Roth Bitcoin IRAs dramatically more valuable for heirs — a $1 million Roth IRA is worth nearly $1 million more after-tax than a Traditional IRA of the same balance for a beneficiary in the 37% bracket.
Can a surviving spouse roll over an inherited Bitcoin IRA?
Yes — the surviving spouse is the only beneficiary who can roll an inherited IRA into their own IRA. This is almost always the best strategy for younger surviving spouses: it resets the RMD schedule to their own age 73, allows continued tax-deferred growth, and eliminates the 10-year distribution rule. The one exception: if the spouse is under 59½ and needs immediate distributions, they should keep the account as an inherited IRA to avoid early withdrawal penalties, then roll it over after reaching 59½.
What is the best way to inherit a Bitcoin IRA?
For non-spouse beneficiaries, the best approach is to: (1) understand your distribution window under the 10-year rule; (2) work with a CPA to model distribution timing against your projected income for each year; (3) take distributions in lower-income years when your tax rate is lower; (4) avoid waiting until year 10 to distribute everything, which risks a large income spike if Bitcoin has appreciated; and (5) if inheriting a Roth Bitcoin IRA, hold as long as possible within the 10-year window since distributions will be tax-free.
Is there a way to avoid the 10-year rule on an inherited Bitcoin IRA?
The 10-year rule cannot be avoided for most non-spouse beneficiaries. However, several strategies can reduce its tax impact: (1) Roth conversions before the original owner's death eliminate income tax on inherited distributions; (2) naming a charity as beneficiary for Traditional IRA assets eliminates income tax entirely; (3) a Charitable Remainder Trust as beneficiary converts ordinary income distributions to a more favorable income stream; (4) eligible designated beneficiaries (surviving spouse, disabled, chronically ill, within 10 years of decedent's age) are exempt from the 10-year rule and can use the life expectancy method.

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Disclaimer: The information on this website is for educational purposes only and does not constitute legal, tax, financial, or investment advice. Bitcoin and digital assets involve significant risk. Consult qualified legal, tax, and financial professionals before making decisions. The Bitcoin Family Office does not provide legal, tax, or investment advisory services.