Always seeing lots of advertisements on converting IRA to Roth to mitigate taxes due to RMD.
Why do i need to do this? Why pay the tax now vs when I'm 73?
Curious who has done this?
We did several conversions from tIRA to Roth. We have fairly substantial assets in tIRAs and when one of us passes RMDs will become onerous. Another reason we converted was for estate planning purposes. As stated by others, many factors should be taken into consideration.
It all depends on your current tax bracket vs your future one. Makes sense for some, not for others. I'm in the latter category, so no conversions for me.Always seeing lots of advertisements on converting IRA to Roth to mitigate taxes due to RMD.
Why do i need to do this? Why pay the tax now vs when I'm 73?
Curious who has done this?
^^^^^ Perfect scenario on when a conversion makes a lot of sense.I retired at 53 and didn’t realize the tax benefit until a few years later. If you look at the tax table 2026 for single the 12% tax rate upper range is $50,400 and any income over that starts at 22%. Add in the standard deduction of $18,150 and tax for 12% is $68,540 but Trump added additional $6,000 deduction until 2028 to get to 74,540 for the upper limit for 12%. You can convert up to $74,540 into a Roth for 12% tax rate a year If you don’t have any other taxable income. This save you at least 10% increase in tax rate assuming you have a substantial 401k or IRA of at least $1.4 million. I transferred about 25-30,000 a year over to a Roth to stay under the 12% tax rate upper limit. In additional the tax rates should increase in the future due to the deficit.
The conversion only works if you retire early and don’t take social security until 67 and you have a substantial amount in your 401k or IRA. The saving is at least the 10% increase in tax rates and more if rates increase in the future. This applies even more going from the 24% tax rate to 32% tax rate but your IRA would need to be around $10 million maybe.
For us its about estate planning, not estate tax. The kids will get the Roth tax free, along with a stepped up basis in stocks we've held for decades that are in in a taxable account.If you are in the fortunate position (unfortunately I'm not) to be worried about estate tax then paying the income tax reduces your taxable estate subject to a 40% rate. I should add this holds true in some states although the benefit is less