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How Do I Avoid a Big Tax Hit on My First Year of Social Security?

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As your first year of retirement progresses, it’s important to evaluate whether the financial plan you laid out to ensure your sustainable well-being is going according to plan. An appropriate plan should include tax calculations to understand how much of your income will truly be at your disposal for needs and wants.

Some people may think that because you pay for Social Security benefits throughout your lifetime via payroll taxes, it’s a tax-free benefit. However, this is often not the case. Both the amount of your Social Security benefits subject to taxes and the tax rate itself will depend on a handful of factors personal to your situation.

To build your own retirement income plan and tax strategy, talk to a fiduciary financial advisor today.

In short, you might pay taxes on 0%, 50% or 85% of your Social Security retirement benefits. This is depending on your provisional income, though:

Provisional income = Taxable income + Tax-exempt interest + ½ of annual Social Security benefits

You then would compare your provisional income to that year’s income threshold to determine what portion of your Social Security benefits will be taxed. Your tax rate will be your marginal rate. For a single filer, the thresholds are as follows:

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For example, if you had $25,000 in 401(k) withdrawals, $5,000 in tax-exempt bond interest and $29,000 in annual Social Security benefits, your provisional income would be:

$25,000 + $5,000 + (½ x $29,000) = $44,500

Because this is beyond the $34,000 income threshold, 85% of your Social Security income will be taxed.

So, nearly $25,000 of your Social Security benefits ($29,000 x 0.85 = $24,650) for the year would be taxable in this case. Again, that’s only the amount of money you’ll be charged taxes on – not what you’re actually paying in taxes. The other roughly $4,000 would be tax-free.

Talk to a financial advisor about building a strategy to minimize taxes in retirement.

In some cases, it may make sense to reduce your other income streams to prevent additional taxation of your Social Security benefits. While some advisors may recommend their client delays taking Social Security as long as possible to get increased benefits, it might be helpful to reduce the tax liability on Social Security income by delaying other income streams instead. For instance, you could push back distributions from a 401(k) or traditional IRA.

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