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Retirement Taxes

Hi!

I plan on retiring at full-retirement age of 67 (2028). What are the best strategies to be insulated from taxes in retirement? Or, at least paying in a lower tax bracket? Is the social security benefit taxed? Should our savings be in money market accounts, IRA/ROTH, stocks and bonds, or something else while also considering yield). Can you explain the whole ROTH/IRA thing? I always thought it was better to pay taxes in retirement (at a lower bracket) than pay now (in a higher bracket), but not the ROTH? Thanks!

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1 Reply
kthomasusa1
Expert Alumni

Retirement Taxes

Well, first of all...congrats on getting near full retirement. I hope you are able to fully enjoy that time of your life.

You will pay tax on a maximum of 85 percent of your Social Security income...this maximum is triggered on your other income...other pensions, IRA withdrawals, 401k distributions, etc plus any taxable interest, dividends or capital gains.

  • if you file a joint return, and you and your spouse have a combined incomebetween $32,000 and $44,000, you may have to pay income tax on up to 50 percent of your benefits more than $44,000, up to 85 percent of your benefits may be taxable.
  • Check the SS tables for more info on this.

If you have money save in ROTH, your distributions on this are NOT subject to tax and will not trigger the income discussed above. ROTH is a savings vehicle that is utilized during the years you were working...not so much in retirement. There are some strategies available to rollover retirement funds into a ROTH, but that isn't something that initially makes sense for you now.

I hope this is helpful.

 

Kelly C, CPA

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