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Ordinary Income Taxes on Retirement Plan Distributions

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Ordinary Income Taxes on Retirement Plan Distributions

While your life will undergo many changes when you retire, one thing that won’t change is your obligation to pay taxes. Understanding how taxes affect retirement income can keep you from paying more than you need to.

Things To Know

  • If you take all your retirement distributions as a lump sum, you may find yourself in a higher tax bracket.
  • One way to limit taxes from retirement distributions is to take minimum distributions.

How taxation works

Payments you receive from ordinary qualified retirement and IRA accounts are taxed at regular income tax rates upon withdrawal. They are added to your total yearly income and then taxed at the rates that apply to your income tax bracket. If you have earned income or significant income from sources other than your retirement plan, your retirement plan distributions may put you in a higher tax bracket than when you were working. To avoid this extra taxation, many retirees put off taking retirement plan distributions until the mandatory age of 73, hoping that by then they will be in a lower tax bracket. Until then, their retirement nest egg continues to grow tax deferred.

The effect of taking a lump sum

If you wish to receive all of your retirement distributions in the same year (as a lump sum), you may find yourself in a higher tax bracket and paying more taxes than you would if you spread out the payments. However, if you were born before 1936, you can use the 10-year averaging option to reduce the burden. With the 10-year option, you’ll still have to pay all your taxes when you take out the lump sum, but the tax bracket will be calculated as if you took the distribution in equal payments over a period of ten years. Alternatively, you may be able to roll over a lump sum distribution from an employer-sponsored retirement plan into an IRA tax-free. This gives you more flexibility in taking taxable distributions later.

The effect of taking minimum distributions

Another way to limit taxes from retirement distributions is to take minimum distributions. If you must draw from your retirement plan before age 73, you should limit your withdrawals to just the amount of cash you need for expenses and the additional taxes. In years when you have larger tax deductions against income, you can take larger retirement distributions that will be offset by these deductions. For example, if you plan to make large charitable donations or if you have business or investment losses that can offset ordinary income in a given year, that would be a good year to take a larger retirement plan distribution.

As you can see, your tax situation in retirement may become even more complicated than while you were employed. Take the time to understand how the tax code affects your retirement plan withdrawals; it could keep more of your money in your pocket.