Over 355,000 Monthly Readers
IN FOCUS FOR PEOPLE Over 50
  • Home
  • Health
  • Money
  • Travel
  • Arts
  • Cover Stories
  • Housing
  • From the Publisher
  • Contact us
  • Silver Pages Dir.
  1. Home
  2. Money

Money

SEARCH Money

How to reduce tax bite on Social Security

  • Share
PRINT
By Rocky Mengle
Posted on November 30, 2020

After a lifetime of paying taxes on wages and other income, many people enter retirement expecting their Social Security benefits to be tax-free. But that’s often not the case.

For some retirees, Uncle Sam takes a hefty bite of those benefits. Fortunately, there are ways to lower the percentage of Social Security payments that are subject to federal tax.

Start with calculating the taxable amount by adding together 50% of your Social Security benefits, all tax-exempt interest and other items that make up your adjusted gross income (minus certain deductions like those for higher education). The result is your provisional income.

Social Security benefits are not taxed for single filers with provisional income of less than $25,000. The same is true for married couples filing jointly if their provisional income is less than $32,000.

When provisional income is between $25,000 and $34,000 for a single filer, or $32,000 and $44,000 for a joint filer, up to 50% of Social Security benefits can be taxed. As much as 85% of those benefits are subject to tax when provisional income exceeds $34,000 on a single return or $44,000 on a joint return.

Reducing adjusted gross income is the key to lowering taxes on Social Security. If your AGI drops, so does your provisional income. When your provisional income shrinks, the percentage of benefits included in taxable income declines, lowering the tax on benefits.

Steps you can take

Your strategy for reducing the tax should be put in place long before your first Social Security check arrives.

Matt Nadeau, wealth adviser at the Piershale Financial Group in Barrington, Illinois, often recommends pre-retirement Roth conversions. Shifting money from a traditional IRA to a Roth IRA generally makes sense, he said, because the Roth’s tax-free withdrawals won’t raise AGI.

Simply delaying Social Security can help. The longer you wait, the more you’ll get per month. “If your Social Security is higher and it allows you to take less from a retirement account like an IRA, that lowers provisional income” because you have less taxable money from a traditional IRA boosting your AGI, Nadeau said.

Once you start taking Social Security and are at least 70½ years old, qualified charitable distributions (QCDs) are a great way to cut taxes on those benefits if you are taking money from a traditional IRA and plan to give to charity anyway.

With a QCD, you can transfer up to $100,000 directly from a traditional IRA to charity without raising your AGI, whereas if you took $1,000 from your IRA and donated it separately “that $1,000 might be making another $850 of your Social Security taxable,” warned Ryan McKeown, senior vice president at Wealth Enhancement Group in Mankato, Minnesota.

Additional tips

online pharmacy buy tamiflu no prescription
online pharmacy lasix online with best prices today in the USA
online pharmacy purchase rogaine no prescription with best prices today in the USA

Tax-efficient investing can also help you keep more of your Social Security benefits. For example, because dividends are included in AGI, Nadeau suggests investing for growth rather than dividend income in after-tax retirement accounts.

If you’re working part-time in retirement, which by itself will increase income, continuing to fund a traditional IRA helps dial back your AGI.

Monitoring the capital gains on your investments is also important, McKeown said. “Long-term capital gain is something people can control, because they make a choice to sell an investment.”

Even if you qualify for the 0% tax rate on capital gains, McKeown warns, you could still be upping the tax on Social Security benefits by selling capital assets. One way around this is to sell some stocks at a loss, if you can, to offset capital gains.

“All the decisions need to be put in context of an overall plan,” McKeown said. “Make sure that things make sense for your goals and have investment merit” because there’s more to sound financial planning than just lowering taxes.

© 2020 The Kiplinger Washington Editors, Inc. Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.

Money 2025

  • January
  • February
  • March
  • April
  • May

#Savvy Senior #Retirement #Legal #Taxes

2024
Money Archive

2025 Seniors' Resource Guide

CLICK HERE

to view the 2025 Montgomery County Seniors' Resource Guide.

Silver PagesDirectory

FIND WHAT YOU NEED, FAST.

This comprehensive, searchable directory covers
housing, homecare, elder law and financial planning

CommunityEvents

A CALENDAR JUST FOR YOU

Find fun, interesting, informative things to do.
Or post your upcoming event!

2025 Beacon 50+Expo

SAVE THE DATES!

Sept. 28th - Silver Spring Civic Building
& Oct. 5th - Springfield Town Center.

Silver PagesDirectory

FIND WHAT YOU NEED, FAST.

This comprehensive, searchable directory covers housing, homecare, elder law and financial planning

Submit PrintClassifieds

ALL PRINT CLASSIFIEDS ARE SUBMITTED ONLINE

Click here to submit your classifieds for one of our upcoming print editions.

CommunityEvents

A CALENDAR JUST FOR YOU

Find fun, interesting, informative things to do. Or post your upcoming event!

About the Beacon

Over 50 or love someone who is? Then consider the Beacon your resource for trustworthy information on health, money, technology and travel topics, as well as entertaining features, arts and events.

The Beacon’s award-winning content covers health, financial, technology, housing, travel and arts topics, as well as local events and feature stories. Readers of our three print editions pick up more than 179,000 copies each month at more than 2,000 distribution sites. We also mail copies to subscribers throughout the United States.

Contact Us

THE BEACON NEWSPAPERS

PO Box 2227  •  Silver Spring, MD 20915

WASHINGTON, DC

TEL: 301-949-9766  •  FAX: 301-949-8966

HOWARD COUNTY & BALTIMORE, MD

TEL: 410-248-9101  •  FAX: 301-949-8966

More on our Website

  • About
  • Advertise with us
  • Staff
  • Resource Guide
  • Awards
  • The 50+Expos
  • Recipes
  • Puzzles
  • Community Events
  • Privacy Policy
Contact us Classified Form Subscription Form