04/04/2026
Retirement tax planning helps you reduce taxes now, minimize taxes later, and make your money last longer.
The IRS taxes each retirement income source differently, so understanding the rules lets you avoid surprise tax bills.
π΅ 1. Understand How Retirement Income Is Taxed
In retirement, your income may come from several sources. They are NOT taxed the same.
Taxable Income Sources
β’ Traditional 401(k) withdrawals
β’ Traditional IRA withdrawals
β’ Pensions
β’ Social Security (up to 85% taxable)
β’ Investment income (interest, dividends, capital gains)
β’ Rental income
β’ Annuity income (depending on type)
Non-Taxable Income Sources
β’ Roth IRA withdrawals (qualified)
β’ Roth 401(k) withdrawals (qualified)
β’ HSA withdrawals for medical expenses
β’ Life insurance payouts
β’ Some municipal bond interest
Your mix of these sources determines your tax bracket in retirement.
π΅ 2. Traditional vs Roth β Tax Timing Strategy
Retirement tax planning revolves around choosing when you want to pay taxes.
Traditional Accounts (401k, IRA)
β’ Pre-tax β lowers taxable income now
β’ Taxes owed later at retirement
β’ Good if you expect your future tax rate to be lower
Roth Accounts (Roth 401k, Roth IRA)
β’ After-tax β no deduction today
β’ Tax-free withdrawals later
β’ Good if you expect future tax rates to be higher
Balanced Approach
Many Americans use both to hedge future tax increases.
π΅ 3. Required Minimum Distributions (RMDs)
The IRS forces you to take money out of certain accounts.
RMD Age:
β’ Starts at 73 (may rise to 75 in future years depending on laws)
Applies to:
β’ Traditional 401(k)
β’ Traditional IRA
β’ SEP IRA / SIMPLE IRA
β’ Inherited IRAs (special rules)
Does NOT apply to:
β’ Roth IRA (you can leave money forever tax-free)
β’ Roth 401(k) after rolling it into a Roth IRA
If you donβt take RMDs β 50% penalty of the amount you should have taken.
π΅ 4. Social Security Taxation Rules
Social Security is not always tax-free.
Taxable Portion Based on Total Income
β’ Low income β 0% taxable
β’ Middle income β up to 50% taxable
β’ Higher income β up to 85% taxable
Social Security + retirement withdrawals can push you into higher brackets.
π΅ 5. The βTax Torpedoβ
The tax torpedo happens when:
β’ You withdraw money from 401(k)/IRA
β’ That income causes more Social Security to become taxable
β’ Which pushes your tax bracket HIGHER than expected
Good planning avoids this problem (more on strategies later).
π΅ 6. Tax Brackets in Retirement
Retirees pay taxes using the same federal tax brackets as everyone else.
But retirees have more control over which income they receive each year, so planning allows you to:
β’ stay in a lower bracket
β’ avoid Medicare premium surcharges
β’ reduce Social Security taxes
β’ minimize lifetime taxes
π΅ 7. Key Retirement Tax Planning Strategies
1. Roth Conversions
Move money from a traditional IRA β Roth IRA.
You pay taxes NOW, but growth becomes tax-free forever.
Best done when:
β’ Your income is low
β’ You havenβt started Social Security
β’ Markets are down
2. Delay Social Security
Waiting until age 70:
β’ Increases monthly benefits
β’ Keeps taxable income lower earlier
β’ Opens space for Roth conversions
β’ Reduces future RMD size
3. Withdraw from Accounts in the Right Order
General rule for minimizing taxes:
1. Use Roth or cash savings first (before Social Security) to keep income low
2. Convert some IRA/401(k) money to Roth during low-tax years
3. Take Social Security later
4. Use traditional IRA/401(k) withdrawals strategically to avoid high brackets
4. Use HSAs (Triple Tax Advantage)
HSAs are the best tax tool in the U.S.
β’ Contributions β tax-deductible
β’ Growth β tax-free
β’ Withdrawals for medical β tax-free
After age 65, non-medical withdrawals are taxed like an IRA.
5. Avoid Medicare IRMAA Surcharges
If your income is too high in retirement, Medicare charges EXTRA premiums.
Good planning keeps you below thresholds.
6. Harvest Capital Gains
Sell investments in years when income is low β pay 0% capital gains tax.
7. Spread Out Withdrawals Before RMD Age
Start withdrawing from traditional accounts in your 60s to avoid huge RMDs later.
π΅ 8. How to Build a Tax-Efficient Retirement Plan
A good retirement tax plan includes:
β Tax diversification
Traditional + Roth + HSA + taxable brokerage
β Withdrawal sequencing
Take money in the order that minimizes taxes
β Social Security timing
Based on health, marital status, income
β Roth conversion planning
Reduce future RMDs and taxes
β Medicare IRMAA avoidance
Keep income below premium thresholds
β Estate planning
Minimize taxes for heirs (Roth IRA = ideal for inheritance)
π΅ 9. Retirement Tax Planning for Couples
Married couples must plan carefully because:
β’ A surviving spouse may face higher tax brackets as a single filer
β’ Social Security benefits may be reduced after one spouse dies
β’ Roth accounts protect the surviving spouse from big tax increases
π΅ 10. Common Retirement Tax Mistakes
β Waiting too long to start planning
β Taking Social Security too early
β Forgetting Roth conversions
β Not preparing for RMDs
β Assuming Social Security is tax-free
β Not tracking Medicare income limits
β Keeping all savings in traditional accounts
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