A surviving spouse who inherits a Gold IRA has options that no other beneficiary gets. Understanding these options — and choosing correctly — can mean the difference between a tax-optimized inheritance and an unnecessarily large tax bill.
When a spouse inherits a Gold IRA, they have three distinct options — far more flexibility than any other beneficiary. Non-spouse beneficiaries generally must comply with the 10-year rule and have little ability to defer or restructure. Spouses can:
In most cases, the smartest choice for a surviving spouse is to roll the inherited Gold IRA directly into their own IRA. By doing this, the spouse:
This is particularly valuable for a younger surviving spouse. A 58-year-old widow who inherits her husband's Gold IRA and rolls it into her own account doesn't have to take any distributions for 15 years. That's 15 more years of tax-deferred or tax-free growth.
There is one situation where a surviving spouse may want to remain as a beneficiary rather than rolling over: if they are under 59½ and may need access to the funds. IRA withdrawals before age 59½ normally trigger a 10% early withdrawal penalty — but this penalty does not apply to inherited IRAs. A surviving spouse who keeps the account as an inherited IRA can take distributions penalty-free regardless of their own age. Once their financial situation stabilizes, they can roll the remaining balance into their own IRA.
Common mistake: A surviving spouse who takes a lump-sum distribution from an inherited IRA — rather than rolling it over — creates a massive and immediate taxable event. The entire balance becomes ordinary income in that year. This is one of the most costly and irreversible mistakes in estate planning.
Once the surviving spouse rolls the inherited Gold IRA into their own account and names new beneficiaries, those beneficiaries — typically adult children — will be subject to the 10-year rule when they eventually inherit. Proper planning should account for this second-generation tax impact as well.
For all other beneficiaries — adult children, siblings, nieces, nephews, friends — the 10-year rule applies. They must deplete the entire account within 10 years of the original owner's death, with no annual minimum withdrawal requirement (except in years 1–9 if the original owner had already begun taking RMDs). The tax timing is flexible within the 10-year window, but the full balance must be distributed by the end of year 10.
This makes the choice of account structure — Traditional vs. Roth — critically important when non-spouse beneficiaries are involved. A Roth Gold IRA passed to adult children still requires 10-year depletion, but every distribution is income-tax free.
Gold IRA assets count toward your taxable estate. With the federal exemption potentially dropping by half in 2026, more families are exposed than they think.
Read Article 03 →Yes. A surviving spouse can roll over an inherited IRA into their own IRA, treating it as if they had always owned it. This resets the RMD clock to the spouse's own age 73 and eliminates the 10-year forced depletion rule. This option is available only to spouses — it is one of the most valuable options in IRA planning.