Blog Post

How to Dodge the Social Security Tax Torpedo

  • By Travis Echols
  • 29 Jul, 2017
Tax Torpedo

Originally written on 1/6/2017. The SECURE Act of 2019 changed the starting Required Minimum Distribution (RMD) age to 72 versus  70½. The most recent SECURE Act change is age 73 or 75 depending on when you were born. This would change the numbers in the illustration below, giving the Brady family a little more time to do partial Roth conversions before RMDs are required.  

The basic taxation of Social Security benefits did not change with the SECURE Act, so the concept is still very applicable under the current 2020 tax laws.

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Your financial planning strategy for managing assets in retirement is as important as your strategy for accumulating assets for retirement. Middle-income earners are often vulnerable to a problem known as the tax torpedo

This unfortunate state of affairs occurs when various income sources in retirement combine in such a way to raise your federal tax bracket, effectively punishing you for doing nothing more than being financially successful. 

But there are strategies to dodge or reverse the tax torpedo. I want to focus on one such strategy in this article.

Early Social Security filers and retirees who start taking pension payments as soon as possible can find themselves paying much higher taxes than they expected (either early in retirement or long after Social Security full retirement age). 

It doesn’t take very much taxable income to subject your Social Security benefit to federal income taxation. 

Retirees who are the most vulnerable have multiple income sources such as a pension, part-time work, rental income, and/or large withdrawals from tax-deferred retirement accounts.

Even if you do not need income from your tax-deferred retirement accounts (like IRAs and 401ks), you have little choice but to take Required Minimum Distributions (RMDs) at age 72 (was age70½ before the SECURE Act of 2019)--or else face a 50% penalty on what you should have taken. 

The government’s perspective is that you have deferred paying taxes long enough. 

So, at age 72 it is time to start taking distributions and pay your tax bill on those assets whether you need the money or not. And remember, tax-deferred 401(k) and IRA withdrawals (not Roth IRAs) are taxed at ordinary income tax rates. 

These marginal federal tax bracket rates are higher than long-term capital gains rates and qualified dividends from taxable accounts.    

If your "provisional income" exceeds the thresholds below, a percentage of your Social Security benefit will be taxed. For example, for married couples filing jointly, if your provisional income is between $32,000 and $44,000, you will be taxed on 50% of your Social Security benefit. 

If your provisional income is above $44,000, you will be taxed on 85% of your Social Security benefit.    

Provisional income = Adjusted gross income (excluding Social Security) + tax-exempt interest (like municipal bond interest) + ½ of Social Security benefits. Unfortunately, these income thresholds are not indexed upward each year for inflation, and will not likely be indexed in the future.

The strategy I'm discussing here is to delay claiming your Social Security benefit to increase your Social Security monthly payments and simultaneously give yourself a few years to convert tax-deferred IRA assets to tax-free Roth IRA assets. 

The goal is: when your Social Security income does begin at a higher guaranteed-for-life income level, your provisional income will be below the income tax threshold and you can eliminate paying taxes on your Social Security benefits. Or, if you have a higher income, you can at least lower your tax burden on your Social Security benefits.

Let’s look at a personal finance example using a couple I’ll call Mike and Amanda Brady.

Notice below: the additional income in the later years is made up primarily of RMD withdrawals and taxed Social Security.

This is after the Brady family retire at ages 65/65 (two years apart) and they live off of monies in the bank or regular brokerage accounts during the gap from 65 to 70.
Notice below how the large IRA distributions drive up their federal income tax brackets (in this case above the 28% marginal rate, starting when Mike is around 80 years old).

The graph below shows how this Roth conversion strategy smooths out the tax liability. By converting the amount of traditional IRA assets needed to fill up the lower 15% tax bracket in the early years, Mike and Amanda have avoided being taxed at the 28% bracket in their later years. 

So the advisability of the strategy is based on marginal tax rates now versus later.

By harvesting and converting retirement assets for tax efficiency, the Brady’s ending portfolio is over $1 million greater at ages 92/90! Mike and Amanda will have extra money they can spend or give away rather than sweating out higher taxes in their golden years.

This is not a strategy suitable for everyone, as some will need to take Social Security early, due to a lack of liquid assets. Many retirees do not have the disparity in marginal tax rates for this to make any appreciable difference. Some investors already have a large proportion of their investments in Roth 401(k)s or Roth IRAs.

Some people do not trust the solvency of Social Security so they want to get the benefit as early as they can, while they can. 

And then there are retirees who would prefer other ways of dodging the tax torpedo (such as staggering withdrawals from tax-deferred accounts every other year, timing the sale of securities, timing the withdrawals of Roth IRAs and traditional IRAs, and lowering other types of investment holdings that raise provisional income.)

As you can see, a financial planner who specializes in Social Security and tax planning for retirees can guide you in this discovery and show you from which accounts withdrawals should be taken (taxable, tax-deferred, tax-free), in what order, and what conversion opportunities exist to maximize your tax-efficiency. 

See IRS Roth IRA conversion regulations and consult your tax adviser and financial planner before implementing this reverse Social Security tax torpedo strategy.

See also Leverage Tax-Efficient Withdrawal Strategies to Boost Your Retirement Income  and Investing for Income in Retirement.

Bottom line: A customized tax-efficient distribution strategy can save you a significant amount of money and extend the time horizon of your retirement assets.
As always, this free content is not to be taken as advice of any kind. You will want to consult your financial advisor before implementing any of these strategies. 


At Echols Financial Services, we specialize in retirement planning, tax planning, and investing for individuals over age 50. We do our best work with people who are at or near retirement, who are optimistic but cautious. Learn more about our no-cost, no-obligation process to help you make your retirement a success.
Travis Echols, CRPC®, CSA
Chartered Retirement Planning Counselorâ„   
Certified Senior Adviser
Echols Financial Services

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Building and maintaining an optimized portfolio can save or make a retiree tens or hundreds of thousands of dollars over a long retirement. Here is a framework for helping you construct an optimized retirement portfolio. The academic research from the last several decades would suggest seven major building blocks aimed at balancing liquidity, income, growth, and safety over a 20 to 30-year period. 


  • Liquidity--Retirement assets are not being locked up or annuitized such that capital is not available for emergencies.
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  • Safety--manages the myriad of investment risks like market risk, inflation risk, and credit risk. Under worst-case scenarios, if withdrawal amounts are adjusted by using guardrails, the portfolio can still provide a lifetime income.

 

Here is an executive summary of how to build up a portfolio for retirement in seven steps.

1. Values clarification and goal-setting . Figure out the income objective and capability of your retirement assets in lifestyle terms, then financial terms. In other words, set realistic, specific, financial goals based on your core life values.

2. Asset allocation glide path . Figure out how to diversify your retirement assets among stocks, bonds, and cash, based on your age, risk tolerance, retirement goals, and changing market values.

3. Valuation-dependent efficient frontier . Figure out which areas of the markets are historically inexpensive, and which are historically expensive. Don’t take on more volatility than you need to for the growth you need or desire.

4. Multi-asset class approach . Diversify one more step for more growth and less volatility. Put more money in the specific market areas that are less expensive and less money in the specific market areas that are more expensive.

5. Tax-aware asset location and distribution . Save as much on taxes as possible by figuring out which type of investments should be held in which types of accounts. If you are drawing an income from your assets, figure out the least-costly order for making withdrawals.

6. Investment selection based on account type (qualified, nonqualified) and asset-class propensity and magnitude of outperformance (passive, factor, managed, etc. ). Figure out what kind of investment to use (index mutual fund, factor mutual fund, actively managed mutual fund, single factor ETF, multifactor ETF, passive ETF, individual stocks, individual bonds, Unit Investment Trust, closed-end fund, etc.) based on the account type, asset class, and growth and income needs.

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Here is a summary of the details backing this approach. Also, click here for more background information regarding my investment philosophy.

  1.   Values clarification and goal-setting

Investment planning for (or in) retirement starts with retirement planning. You start with thinking about your life goals...your dreams...your ideal life in retirement. It could involve doing no work, working part-time, or doing seasonal work. Your ideal life could be going back to school, spending more time with family, traveling, ministry, etc.  

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Originally written on Aug 2, 2018 and updated for tax law changes. 

If you are no longer working and have reached the age of 72, you probably know about Uncle Sam’s rule for you to take a Required Minimum Distribution (RMD) from your traditional and rollover IRA(s) each year for the rest of your life. You can always withdraw more, but this requirement is the minimum you must take or be severely penalized. Fortunately, this rule does not apply to Roth IRAs. (The SECURE Act of 2019 changed the starting RMD age from 70½ to 72 starting in 2020, but fortunately you can still make a Qualified Charitable Distribution (QCD) starting the year you turn 70½.)

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If you have delayed paying taxes in your pretax IRA, 401(k), or 403(b), etc, there comes a time when the IRS wants their taxes. And if you don’t give them their taxes based on their required withdrawal schedule, you'll get hit with a 50% penalty on top of what you owed.

Along with Social Security and other retirement income, this RMD can significantly raise your tax rate. Also read How to Dodge the Social Security Tax Torpedo . There are not many ways to reduce this tax burden. In the past, retirees have used various deductions including charitable cash contributions and gifting of highly appreciated assets to charities. (The latter not only gives you, the donor, a deduction but also avoids a long-term capital gains tax bill.)

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