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Estate Planning · Gold IRA Series

Gold IRAs &
Estate Planning

Opening a Gold IRA without an estate plan is like building a vault and forgetting to name who gets the key. This series covers the estate planning issues every Gold IRA holder needs to understand — and that almost no other site explains.

Last reviewed:
Gerry Howatt
Gerry Howatt GoldSilver.com · Hard Assets Alliance · GBI Direct

Gerry spent years working inside the precious metals industry across GoldSilver.com, Hard Assets Alliance, and GBI Direct — the institutional platform behind them both. He built GOLDIRA.TAX to provide the kind of honest, tax-focused analysis that was missing from the market.

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Why Estate Planning Matters for Gold IRA Holders

Gold IRAs are marketed as a way to protect your wealth. But wealth protection is incomplete if it ends at your death. The decisions you make today about account structure, beneficiary designations, and distribution strategy will determine how much of your Gold IRA your family actually keeps — and how much goes to the IRS.

The estate planning landscape for IRAs changed dramatically with the SECURE Act of 2019 and SECURE Act 2.0 of 2022. Rules that were true for decades are no longer true. Strategies that worked for your parents may not work for you. And mistakes in this area are largely irreversible — you can't undo a bad beneficiary designation after you're gone.

The core problem: Gold IRA companies are excellent at helping you open an account and buy metals. None of them are qualified to advise you on what happens to that account when you die. That gap is what this series addresses.

Articles in This Series

Article 01

The SECURE Act 2.0 & The 10-Year Rule

The rule that eliminated the "stretch IRA" and forces most heirs to drain inherited accounts within a decade — often at the worst possible time.

Article 02

Spousal vs. Non-Spousal Inheritance

Spouses have options no other beneficiary gets. Understanding the difference could save your family hundreds of thousands in taxes.

Article 03

Estate Tax Exposure on Gold IRAs

Gold IRA assets count toward your taxable estate. With the TCJA exemption sunsetting in 2026, more families are exposed than they realize.

Article 04

Naming Beneficiaries — The Most Overlooked Step

An outdated or missing beneficiary designation can send your Gold IRA through probate, costing your heirs years and thousands of dollars.

Article 05

Trusts as IRA Beneficiaries

Naming a trust as your IRA beneficiary can backfire badly if it isn't structured correctly. Here's what to know before you do it.

Article 06

The Step-Up in Basis Myth

The step-up in basis that protects heirs from capital gains on stocks and real estate does not apply to IRAs. Every dollar will be taxed.

Article 07

State Estate Taxes

Twelve states have their own estate taxes — some with exemptions as low as $1 million. Your Gold IRA may be exposed even if you clear the federal threshold.

Important: This series provides general educational information about estate planning as it relates to Gold IRAs. It is not legal or tax advice. Estate planning is highly individual. We strongly recommend consulting a qualified estate attorney and tax advisor to address your specific situation.

Frequently Asked Questions

A Gold IRA passes to named beneficiaries, not through a will. A surviving spouse has the most flexibility and can treat the IRA as their own. Non-spouse beneficiaries are subject to the SECURE Act 2.0 10-year rule — the account must be fully distributed within 10 years of the original owner's death, with annual RMDs in most cases.

No. Gold IRA assets are included in the deceased owner's taxable estate. The federal estate tax exemption for 2025 is $13.61 million per individual ($27.22 million for couples). Estates below this pay no federal estate tax, but 13 states have their own estate taxes with lower exemptions.

No. IRAs do not receive a step-up in basis — a critical and common misconception. Every dollar distributed from an inherited Traditional Gold IRA is taxed as ordinary income to the beneficiary. The deferred tax obligation passes to heirs in full.