When the stock market was way down I did Roth conversions with shares of stock. Now the value has more than covered what I paid in taxes. Win win.
@ausgra17Ай бұрын
You make an excellent point about Roth conversions. Your thesis is that the R/C was good b/c you profited by converting while the stock market value is down which is certainly true. That of course is called "Market Timing". Interestingly, I took part in a R/C in the mid 1990's, and the reverse was true. I paid taxes at the height of the stock market that dropped significantly in value and that tax loss will never be recouped (under laws that existed then). Timing is everything whether it be stocks, real estate, spouses, friends...
@rdspam2 ай бұрын
It regularly shocks me that (income *(1-tax rate))*investment gain = (income * investment gain) * (1-tax rate) is so far beyond many people’s comprehension. Pay taxes when the rate is lower. You’re one of the few advisors I’ve ever seen point out this simple fact. Thank you.
@EatLeadPal7 ай бұрын
I'm 62 and just retired last fall. I just did my first conversion last month. I'm leaving my entire portfolio to my children to help them with their retirement, or to be passed on to my grandchildren, because I don't need it. I'm paying the taxes out of savings. Thanks for the informative video.
@cindymartinez83475 ай бұрын
Always a Negative Nancy around to brings us all down!!
@AbeLincoln-sb4bv5 ай бұрын
Kind of you.
@teresawood68306 күн бұрын
@@cindymartinez8347 Why not a Negative Ned?
@robh30437 ай бұрын
This is one of the best Roth conversion discussions I have seen and demolishes the notion set forth by others that there is only one optimal way to do this and for a fee we can tell you. Well done!
@slimdawgwoof7 ай бұрын
You are one of the few that understands the rules and uses MATH to determine the best course of action. Thank you for sharing.
@touchofgrace32177 ай бұрын
Creative math at that! Did you happen to notice in the first myth how he took the 15% tax straight out of the Roth conversion itself to make it look equal? In reality, many people do Roth conversions when they are still working because they want to pay tax in advance so that it doesn’t have to come out of the Roth now or later. Of course that math would not have dovetailed with his “myth”
@philipdouglasknight6 ай бұрын
@@touchofgrace3217 his math is correct. If you are in the 15% tax bracket and invest $100,000 in a traditional account at the beginning, you pay no taxes so you invest a net of $100,000 because you don't have to pay tax on that money. However if you invest $100,000 in a Roth instead, you have to pay the tax on that $100,000 of income, which means you have a net of $85,000 to put in the Roth at the beginning. When you take out the earnings, if you are in the same tax bracket, you will have to pay the 15% tax on the traditional, but not the Roth. Because of the commutative property of multiplication, you end up with exactly the same amount at the end. Hence, what matters is whether the tax rate is higher when you take it out versus when you put it in.
@ronmorrell9809Ай бұрын
If I'd paid tax while working on money going into Roth, it would have been at 32%. By putting untaxed money into traditional IRA while working, then moving it to Roth at 15%, and I had 17% more of the earned amount. The US government appreciates your paying extra taxes.
@tomkudla3756Ай бұрын
@@ronmorrell9809 What you did makes total sense in 32% bracket! Why pay 32% when you can pay 15. Good job.
@cjimcook3 ай бұрын
What is needed is a software tool that incorporates all the rates (tax, RMD, medicare, etc.) plus the bracket information to run through a whole set of possible scenarios. It's like running a Monte Carlo simulation, but for conversions/taxes instead of growth and funds lasting through retirement. The question is: Where can we access such tools?
@DennisBryant-dp4cyАй бұрын
Try Boldin (New Retirement).
@M22Research7 ай бұрын
Wow, this somewhat “geeky” presentation is loaded with excellent wisdom and smarts! I only wish you had a flat/hourly fee model since even at your lower than typical % of AUM model fee structure, we really have no interest in handing over full management of our assets. We prefer simple and maintaining full control. We’re looking for expertise to review what we believe is already a solid, but not fully optimized plan, not take over management.
@bryanharrell40597 ай бұрын
Search for hourly rate Fiduciaries in your area. Prepare a clear presentation and snapshot of your finances, goals and strategy for them to revue and give you feedback. They're becoming far and fewer between but they are out there. You just gotta poke around.
@M22Research7 ай бұрын
@@bryanharrell4059 not worth the time invested - tried that. And we’re in a medium large metro area with plenty of wealthy individuals. Too many local planners stuck in the “buy us a steak dinner”, “investment advisor” past. Therefore went national in the search since it matters not where an advisor is located as long as they serve multi-states and use tools that cover all states. But certainly if we came across a qualified local referral from a trusted friend or colleague, we’d entertain local.
@beefcreeb966 ай бұрын
There are too many Rules of Dumb baked into the current advisor handbook to broadly trust their advice. A person could maybe work up a short questionnaire to evaluate prospective advisors, weed out the pretenders long before they "wow" you with their Monte Carlo simulation chock full of faulty assumptions.
@extremeflext3 ай бұрын
@@bryanharrell4059 anybody have any recomendations? curious why it's better to be in ''your area'' - to better understand state taxation?
@BrettBayer-gj3uo2 ай бұрын
If your age is less than 59.5 and you pay the taxes from the Traditional IRA, THAT is a distribution and it gets taxed as an early distribution. Pay your taxes from savings if you are younger than 59.5
@ld57145 ай бұрын
This was a great video and discussion Eric. The graphs and discussion were very helpful. I'm not sure how I missed this notification when it was posted but just found it today. Larry, Central Valley, Ca.
@philblane57525 ай бұрын
Wouldn't you think that you could just pay someone to determine if a Roth conversion is the right course of action? Wealth management firms won't do it unless you sign on to let them manage your entire portfolio, so it creates a never-ending stream of income for them. Tax preparers/planners won't do it unless you sign on as a tax client so that it creates a never-ending stream of income for them. Why can't I just pay someone a fair price for doing a single task like everything other service I buy? I don't understand this industry.
@Jetfuture7372 ай бұрын
This is exactly my current problem
@ronmorrell9809Ай бұрын
@philblane5752 I agree with your sentiment. My solution has been DIY. First I read various books ("Stocks For the Long Run" by Jeremy Siegel was the best IMO). Game theory emphasizes the least bad worst outcome. Avoiding spending my (widow's) final years in a walk-up cold-water flat is more important than increasing my estate by $50,000. I decided dollar cost averaging by automatic deposit into a broadly based index fund was my best solution. Maxed out employer's match of 401k. Marriage counseling instead of divorce. Also purchased small, reliable used cars to drive until the wheels fell off. Cheap entertainment and self-guided domestic vacations traveling in the small car. Employment required frequent moves, so rented rather than repeatedly pay closing costs. When my career progressed to the point I'd not move again, I bought a house. Early adoption of solar panels with tax incentives paid for itself in under 10 years. Associated low-end electric car (Nissan) was initially a mistake, but second try was a win vs $4 gasoline. Having retired, I am back to studying. Playing with tax modeling software trial versions, I found the Roth conversion plan which seems best for me today (right at the current IIRMA step close to top of current 24% band; counting on inflationary movement of the band before 2026 to provide a bit of margin for error). Still using broad based index funds. Since I have low expenses, social security at 65, and a defined benefit pension, I focus entirely on long horizon growth in broad based stock index fund. Perhaps this could be polished, but I don't think planner guidance would pay for itself.
@Richard.Cabeza10 күн бұрын
I'm frustrated with this. At 62, single, I'm just going to take out money from the IRA every year at what ever tax rate it turns out to be and blow the money. I earned, it grew to a lot and who ever I leave it to can worry about the taxes.
@njlifeandhealth7 ай бұрын
This is great info! Dense and full of actual actionable steps. So much of finance KZbin is fluff, and general info is amazing.
@kylecanaday12764 ай бұрын
Thank you for the great information. Can’t believe your videos are not getting 10X more views.
@patrickoconnor25477 ай бұрын
Learn the most from your videos. Great topics. Keep em coming
@bobbert19454 ай бұрын
I was led to this older video by one that you published a few days ago (the end of July 2024). I realize I've already seen this video, but it was really great to go over everything again. I've gone over your past videos quite a bit as we get close to RMD age. Your information is really valuable. However...you need to tell your future (August 2024) self to shave like you used to. Your wife will thank you.
@SafeguardWealthManagement4 ай бұрын
I appreciate the kind comments. But she's a big reason it's not clean shaven. That, and I've been cutting a bit more firewood lately. Science shows the chainsaw doesn't cut as well without a little bit of a beard.
@garynickloy4455 ай бұрын
0 seconds ago One factor that I don't see addressed on these videos is the potential of one spouse dying early and the spouse being left with high RMD's in the single tax bracket. I am being more aggressive in my conversion strategy to lower that impact because, due to medical conditions, is likely. Am I missing something or do you factor these items in your analysis?
@ericgold38404 ай бұрын
Excellent. This guy knows his stuff
@AltayHunter7 ай бұрын
#5 is fascinating to me, because backdoor Roth contributions makes it almost completely moot. This is the kind of obscure knowledge I come here for.
@erickarnell7 ай бұрын
Item 9 was eye-opening to me. I now understand how continuing to receive some taxable income throughout retirement can make perfect sense.
@Alan-jk1yi7 ай бұрын
@@AbeFroman-zx5hs The point is that it won't be at a higher rate as long as you plan correctly.
@shawnbrennan75267 ай бұрын
@@AbeFroman-zx5hs I think the point is somewhat theoretical. If you created a situation where your ONLY income is from Roth withdrawals because you converted everything, then you have given up on getting even the standard deduction worth of 0% income tax rate. But most people will have SS, pension income, dividend/interest income, etc.
@shawnbrennan75267 ай бұрын
@@AbeFroman-zx5hs Always best to watch the video before commenting. ;) I agree that pensions are almost dead, but many Boomers have them, plus military, teachers, police, etc. My point was really about whether it is even feasible for people to go “Roth only” or whether there will almost always be other sources of income. Quibbling a bit on 2026+, but it will be interesting to see how the next admin works with Congress on the new tax rules. I’m betting on something between the old rules and Trump’s.
@rayzerot7 ай бұрын
@@AbeFroman-zx5hsThe 10 and 12% tax brackets would like to disagree with you that taxes "through out retirement translate to high tax rates." Most people pay into their Roth accounts in the 22% tax bracket. If you're only going to have social security and retirement savings and income through retirement, as the majority of the population will, then having some taxable income will be optimal
@shawnbrennan75267 ай бұрын
@@AbeFroman-zx5hs I don’t know what bracket your conversions would be in, but I think it is unlikely that our tax rates or the tables will go down in 2026. And no matter who is in the White House, there is a high probability that disfunction in Congress will mean nothing changes until the last second - or even part way through 2026. So, if you are considering converting I’d at least do some in 2024. My $0.02.
@Comut-d4m6 ай бұрын
Please review the state Tax Department guidance concerning Roth conversions.For example, your 401K type account or IRA could be considered an eligible retirement plan as such for state tax purposes only - state/FED employees for example. Furthermore, you need to review 1099-R box 7 as there should not be any check marked if pension payment. Know the rules for your state and tax treatment of conversions!
@RDM17767 ай бұрын
Great video, Eric. Can you speak to Roth conversation misconceptions in regards to Back Door Roth operations?
@viking_fisherman4 ай бұрын
This is by far the best retirement finance planning channel out there! Very detailed, very comprehensive. Very clear and understandable!!!
@alanng4534 ай бұрын
Many thanks for your great presentation of much useful info on Roth Conversion. It seems to me you are alluding to that Roth conversion is generally not advisable after RMD kicks in, especially for those who have forced incomes (pension and social security) plus ordinary incomes (interest, etc). Please kindly confirm whether this understanding is correct? Thank you.
@SicilyJo2 ай бұрын
Great question. Did you ever get any kind of confirmation (since I don’t see any response here) elsewhere?
@fredgrau12096 ай бұрын
I love all of your videos - they are incredible. However, on point #9, if you are taking Social Security while withdrawing from your IRA, there is no 10 or 12% bracket. Filling the 0% bracket with withdrawals is optimal - as you mentioned in the video.
@jefflloyd3942 ай бұрын
Very helpful, thanks Eric
@dadandgirls73067 ай бұрын
One thing that makes Roth conversions so appetizing right now is the low tax rates. Because of the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act, it’s very unlikely that we will be paying taxes at a lower rate years from now. And if you did conversions when the market was down late last year, congratulations. You converted a smaller amount, paid less taxes, and watched your portfolio grow over the past 6 months tax free.
@philbikes19314 ай бұрын
True and another reason is the flood of baby boomer retirees entering retirement coupled with fairly good stock market growth.
@Tolerancematters7 ай бұрын
I have a sizeable pension and I have taxes withheld from that pension to cover taxes associated with converting from my rather large traditional IRA. This allows me to pay the taxes from the taxable "bucket" while avoiding quarterly tax payments from savings or paying from the conversion itself. This is especially useful for me because I participate in some real estate limited partnerships that don't generate K-1 information in time for the first and second quarter of the year.
@bigtoeknee117 ай бұрын
You can also have 0 withheld from your pension throughout the whole year then towards the end of the year figure out how much taxes you will owe and take a 401k withdraw with 100% withheld for taxes.
@monkeysuncle2816Күн бұрын
Love your videos, but that smoke detector chirp ( 00:03 ) has me wondering about your attention to detail.
@willystallaАй бұрын
Thanks for your video. How do you report a Roth Conversion in the tax return form 1040? I've been searching and I see lots of videos on how to do a roth conversion but nobody explains how to actually report that in the tax return. Thanks for your help.
@firstylasty1704 ай бұрын
At 6:32, what about the remainder of the 2 million? That still has to be inherited and taxed.
@DevanAsher5 ай бұрын
Right now, things seem odd. The US dollar is losing value due to inflation, but it is strengthening in comparison to other currencies and commodities like gold and real estate. Because they believe it to be safer, people are going to the dollar. I'm concerned that the rising inflation may lead my retirement funds to lose value. Where else could we put our cash?
@JoeGerald2135 ай бұрын
Having a mentor is my personal recommendation. It seems like a good bet if you have limited market knowledge, but I'm not sure where you'll find an experienced one.
@LuizRubico-w5n5 ай бұрын
I concur. In light of individual experience working with a financial adviser, I presently have $1m in a very much enhanced portfolio that has encountered dramatic development. It's not just a matter of having money to invest in stocks. you also need to be knowledgeable, persistent, and have strong hands to support your investment
@HardyThomasD.5 ай бұрын
Please who's this advisor that guides you?
@LuizRubico-w5n5 ай бұрын
Certainly, there are a handful of experts in the field. I've experimented with a few over the past years, but I've been stuck with *KAREN* *MARIE* *GENDRON* for about five years now, and her performance has been consistently impressive.
@HardyThomasD.5 ай бұрын
Thanks for this. I just googled her name and found her webpage. I'm really impressed with her credentials and I reached out to her since I need all the assistance I can get.
@mims25826 ай бұрын
Roth Conversions from Ira distributions have 10% penalty if under 59.5, why we do from saving moneys
@comingshortly2 ай бұрын
Good video. Although your math is correct that sequence of returns does not impact the result of whether Roth or traditional is better, once you determine converting to Roth is better, sequence of returns does matter. Example. You have $500k today and convert all to Roth (likely not the optimal strategy but it makes the example easier). You pay 25% tax or $125k and have lifetime tax free growth. If instead you waited a year and the value of your account dropped to $400k, you now could convert it all at 25% for $100k.
@ericreddish-jx3hc6 күн бұрын
If you use part of your conversion to pay the taxes I believe that portion is subject to 10% penalty if your under 59 1/2?
@wilma62356 ай бұрын
I agree with what you said a huge indicator is the future tax rates. Another indicator for me is when the market downs a lot, like in March 2020, we ready that’s another perfect time to convert to Roth.
@ParkDari14 күн бұрын
I had no idea about the stock transfer into the Roth IRA. I’m going to do that immediately with some old single stocks I inherited.
@teresawood68306 күн бұрын
You can’t do that if they are in an inherited IRA, only a brokerage account and I believe contributions have to be cash.
@J-2024-v8i7 ай бұрын
Great video!. For No. 6, although you mentioned that you can pay the conversion taxes from the funds you are converting (rather than other outside funds), you neglected to mention that if you do that before being 59.5yo you would have to pay a 10% penalty on the amount withheld to pay those taxes.
@SafeguardWealthManagement7 ай бұрын
Yes, that is correct. Good add on.
@extremeflext3 ай бұрын
so helpful - thank you
@TravelingtheWorld967 ай бұрын
For #4, something seems off. There are essentially two 5 year rules. You covered one of them but the other is that you also have to have done at least a single ROTH contribution/conversion at least five years ago. If I am wrong, please let me know. Thank you.
@wvumoose14 күн бұрын
I incorrectly rolled over after 401k tax contributions into my traditional IRA. I should have rolled it over into my Roth IRA since the after tax contributions have already been taxed. How do I correct this? Do you have a video explaining how to correct the error so the money isn't taxed twice?
@toninewhouse857 ай бұрын
If I am regularly contributing to a Roth, and I do a conversion from my IRA, how does the government know the conversion money is from the IRA, not my regular contribution?
@shawnbrennan75267 ай бұрын
You will get a 1099-R with the proper code in Box 7. I think for Roth conversion it is a 2. Your tax software will handle it from there.
@mere_cat7 ай бұрын
Every time I watch your videos, I am blown away by the analysis. Also, the blue background is fantastic! What color is that paint?!?!
@sooner_born22567 ай бұрын
Excellent video!
@av8rgrip5 күн бұрын
My mother left us some pretax money. The problem is that we are in the last 10 years of working prior to retirement, which also happens to be my highest earning years. The RMDs will be taxed at a higher rate than when she would have been subject to. The only positive is that the 10th year is the year after I retire, so the remainder can be taken out at that point.
@BF2021-kf8xz5 ай бұрын
Other advisors on KZbin mention how we shouldn't be focused on converting too much and that paying a little more tax for IRMAA, etc. is a temporary pain and well worth the growth of the ROTH funds later. ...it's hard to know who to follow on this issue!
@SafeguardWealthManagement5 ай бұрын
I would be very cautious on listening to anyone who tells you that you shouldn't worry about converting too much. Think about it... If you convert too much, too fast, you risk paying more in taxes than you otherwise would have paid by 'doing nothing'. Paying more in taxes means you end up with less wealth which has major downstream effects.
@av8rgrip5 күн бұрын
I don’t know if that is exactly correct. I thought that you still had a 5 year restriction even after 59.5
@thekid20035 ай бұрын
I am taking death beneficiary RMD's and doing Roth conversions. Do I still have to take all the years RMD before completing any Roth Conversions. Is it different because I am still in my 60's and it's a death beneficiary RMD and not due to my age. I have looked for an answer for this but cannot seem to find this specific information. Thanks for any info and thanks so much for your videos. I watch almost all you produce!!
@karens60537 ай бұрын
If all your money was in a Roth 401K, then your social security wouldn't be extra taxed and medicare premiums would be lower. But if all my money is is a just a 401K then all my social security gets penalized and I get hit with bigger taxes and medicare premiums.
@hummerchine6 ай бұрын
This is EXCELLENT
@chrisblock66977 ай бұрын
It’s the IRMAA cliff that has me most focused on the Roth conversion amount. Whoops… $1 over the bracket and I owe like an extra $174 a month. Since the tax brackets use a percentage over the bracket, I’m a bit less concerned about jumping into a higher tax bracket. But, I’m no financial advisor, so thoughts from others to straighten me out are welcome!
@larryjones97737 ай бұрын
Try to avoid IRMAA, if possible. But, if you need to go over, go over up to $1 below the next higher IRMAA amount.
@chrisblock66977 ай бұрын
@@larryjones9773Yep! But hard to get to $1 below bracket. It’s hard to predict my dividends for this year and IRMAA has that 2 year look back. Took Medicare at 65 and if I was smart I’d try to defer some of that pay when I was 63, but didn’t really understand at the time and thought I like this paycheck at 63… now I know could have been smarter when I was 63, but not planning / thinking.
@randolphh80057 ай бұрын
The IRMAA “cliff” is real, but it is really a bump, not a cliff. The IRMAA penalty is about $2000, not exactly a back breaker. You would not want to pay more than $2000 in extra taxes to avoid $2000. I understand the penalties can exceed $4000 for very high earners. If you are converting at the 22% bracket, that is $22k per $100k. The point is that you are paying taxes at some point, you have to look at the whole equation to see if it is a good move.
@mr.j27767 ай бұрын
I had originally planned on converting all of the funds in my rollover IRA. At this point, I intend to leave some of the funds in the IRA. This way, I can withdraw funds to fill up the 12 then 15% bracket (2026 forward). My wife is older then me, and I realize that when one of us passes, the survivor will get hit with that darned tax torpedo. Better to take out more when we are both alive. At this point, we have a lot of ROTH funds due to contributions and conversions. (No children, BTW).
@mlee13087 ай бұрын
I have $5 million in pretax. Just talked to Schwab fp to get confirmation. I’m doing all at once. Makes sense especially when my three kids will get tax free.
@bigtoeknee117 ай бұрын
Not a good idea to convert 5m all at once. Find another fee only FP
@mr.j27767 ай бұрын
@@mlee1308 I'm no expert, but you might want to get some advice from an advisor not related to Schwab. (You would be in a really high tax bracket if you do it all at once).
@deerhunter30146 ай бұрын
@@mlee1308 Horrible advice you received!!! Unless it's you, Warren, or Mr. Gates...
@5metoo7 ай бұрын
Your statement that every conversion starts a timer for the 5 year rule will cause more confusion not less. It is true that being over 59.5 doesn't necessarily mean the 5 year rule doesn't apply. But if you're over 59.5 AND have contributed to any Roth at least 5 years ago at the time of conversion ALL withdrawals are qualified. If the distribution is qualified, for those over 59.5 the 5-year clock for conversion distributions is not relevant. This has been done in great detail on Bogleheads.
@pavelm44847 ай бұрын
Trying to think about this and wondering about timing of conversions during a big drawdown like during 2020? Does that change some of the math in the sense that valuations are lower?
@whitleyca7 ай бұрын
#6 - Paying tax on conversions. If under 59.5 and paid w/ IRA funds, assume that counts as distribution and subject to early draw penalty?
@shawnbrennan75267 ай бұрын
Nope
@davidwelsh20737 ай бұрын
I believe early withdrawal penalty 0:12 would be owed on withholdings for those under 59.5, unless one of the exceptions apply such as the rule of 55
@SafeguardWealthManagement7 ай бұрын
No, but withholding taxes from the conversion would count as a distribution.
@micheleyoungblood4 ай бұрын
Yes it does
@VanminhVn24 ай бұрын
do you do consulting? I need help in converting my ira to Roth.
@jeromefirlik81006 ай бұрын
What happens to the comparison of taxes on traditional vs Roth if your investment return is much higher? ; for example some years the market might return 20%
@longbowrider7 ай бұрын
Good info…Does Turbo Tax automatically calculate the amount in step 5? The MAGI calculation subtraction? Do I get sent a form that showed the amount of conversion or do I just have to remember the amount I did? I did some Roth converting but stopped because I didn’t want to disqualify doing a Roth IRA. Thanks
@JimQChang7 ай бұрын
If #5 is correct, then my TurboTax did not do it correctly for me. My regular income in 2023 was way below the $230,000 limit, but a Roth Conversion pushed my AGI to around $260,000. I made a Roth contribution, TurboTax indicated that my MAGI was above the limit and I would have to pay a penalty unless I remove my contribution. I removed my contribution.
@JimQChang7 ай бұрын
My experience suggests that TurboTax does not know this rule for MAGI for Roth Conversion. My regular income in 2023 was way below the $230,000 limit, but a Roth Conversion pushed my AGI to around $260,000. I made a Roth contribution. TurboTax indicated that my MAGI was above the limit and I would have to pay a penalty unless I remove my contribution. I had to remove my contribution to make TT happy. I plan to contact TurboTax. Do I point to Worksheet 2-1 in Publication 590A? @@_-Karl-_
@Snipely2 ай бұрын
Hi, I don't get the point of comparing three years of growth to 4 years. Of course an end of year start will be worse if the growth window is smaller.
@PH-dm8ew2 ай бұрын
62 with most monies in deferred 401k accounts. if i do roth conversions and live off cash for 3 years, i have no cash to pay taxes. How detrimental is paying conversion out of converted funds?
@richdewitt7607 ай бұрын
Great content! Thank you
@tahrendt17 ай бұрын
Question? The MAGI number I found for a single filer was $153k in 2023 & $161k in 2024 yet you show $146k? Which is correct?
@alrocky5 ай бұрын
7:50 $138k - $153k is phase out range 2023. $146k - $161k is phase out range 2024. At $153k 2023 & $161k 2024, no direct contribution to Roth IRA.
@cutehumor7 ай бұрын
If you are a super saver, it’s best to be in Roth 401k especially if you already have a million in pretax before age 50. The taxes are huge when a spouse dies then the kids inheritance have to be drained within ten years because of the secure act. I’m doing Roth 401k max until age 55 when I will retire with irs rule of 55. Plus I want the ACA subsidies from age 55 to age 65
@randolphh80057 ай бұрын
“The kids inheritance” should be re-titled as the grandkids inheritance. We are retired in our mid 60’s, and still “waiting” for our moms to die so we can get the inheritance. Obviously I’m joking about mom, but most people don’t realize that their kids will enter retirement in their 60’s when many parents are in their early 80’s. We will get a house, but we don’t need it, we had to plan for retirement well before counting on that property. Either give your kids the money much earlier, when it will actually help, or plan on the grandkids being the heirs.
@5metoo7 ай бұрын
@@_-Karl-_ - Ah, super returns will do it too.
@bigtoeknee117 ай бұрын
Give to your kids along the way is the better option.
@shawnbrennan75267 ай бұрын
Good rundown. Still hate the chart you use for #2 though - just very unintuitive.
@apeel20087 ай бұрын
I believe I have watched all of your Roth Conversion videos and have learned a lot. You are really good at this. However, the type of chart used in #2 comes up frequently and I have never really understood how these works. I guess what confuses me is how the chart has these torpedoes in them. How does a tax implication reduce as the income increases? The dips and valleys in the chart make me think the tax rate drops as the income increases. Would you consider doing a ‘deep dive’ video into how to create a chart like this based on a persons income profiles as an example,mor examples?
@jerrylabat5507 ай бұрын
@@apeel2008 That's because that chart is incorrect and meant to scare you. He is adding tax rates on disparate amounts of money. You can't do that, it is mathematically incorrect. Its the equivalent of having a nickel and adding 5 pennies, and declaring you have a 500% increase in money. It is correct you have a 500% increase in the number of coins, but only a 100% increase in money.
@SafeguardWealthManagement7 ай бұрын
@@jerrylabat550, why do you assume the chart is incorrect and meant to scare you just because you don't understand it? I'm not sure the relevance of your penny/nickel example. The chart shown is a marginal tax chart that a number of tax softwares can create. Widely used by advisors and CPAs alike. At various times, a dollar of ordinary income in retirement can force taxation on other income, such as capital gains and Social Security. If a dollar of income forces you to own $.22 of taxes, that's a marginal rate of 22%. If that dollar of income forces $.40 of tax because of S.S. also becoming taxable from that extra dollar of income, then your marginal rate is 40%. It is not fear-mongering, just math. @shawnbrennan7526 and @apeel2008, I'd be happy to run through the math behind the chart in a future video.
@jerrylabat5507 ай бұрын
@@SafeguardWealthManagement I do understand that when you cross various income thresholds you see significant marginal tax rate increases. If the purpose of that chart wasn't to scare someone, you would have layered the effective tax rate over the top of it, which would have basically remained flat. That would have made the chart look much less dramatic(not nearly as scary).
@SafeguardWealthManagement7 ай бұрын
@@jerrylabat550, we don't use the effective tax rate in tax planning because it has very little decision-making power. The effective tax rate only matters if everything is the same cost. Here's an example. Let's say you need to buy 10 bananas at the store, and there are three stores (three accounts) you can choose to purchase from. If the price of bananas is the same across the board, great, use total cost (effective tax rate) for the analysis. But if there is a marginal difference in cost for each banana at each store, the total cost is meaningless for decision-making. Or rather, it's only helpful in calculating out marginal cost. For instance, if at one store, the first 2 bananas are free. Then the next 3 cost $1 each. Then the next 5 cost $10 each. You probably wouldn't want to buy all of the bananas from that store. You might want to buy 2 or 5 bananas from that store and then compare the marginal cost from other stores. I don't know what you mean by scary. My goal is to show reality. In most videos where I dive into detail about these graphs, I provide context. If you are being charged 50% for only $1,000 worth of income, it's not a big deal if it's just a spike and tax rates drop after. If you're paying 50% taxes for $20,000 worth of income, it's probably a bigger deal worth managing.
@mathew32676 ай бұрын
If I convert to Roth won't I lose all the compounding I gained the last 20 years? Everybody says never take a loan out of your 401k because you lose the compound interest. How will you ever know when or if the roth can ever catch back up?
@janc.81975 ай бұрын
Don't have tax taken from the money you convert so that the full amount is converted to Roth. Pay the tax from other savings or have more taken out of other income.
@wendyfamily93847 ай бұрын
What if I do Roth conversion towards the end of the year, how to avoid under tax penalty for the first few quarters that missed the estimated tax payments? My brokerage does not take tax withholding for Roth conversion.
@larryjones97737 ай бұрын
Just pay the tax on your Roth conversion a few weeks later (by January 15), and you'll be fine.
@wendyfamily93847 ай бұрын
Thanks
@clintonwoodward7 ай бұрын
You will be fine if you pay the tax in the quarter of the Roth conversion, however, you will likely need to fill out the annualized income section for Form 2210 to show that your income was unequal throughout the year, and thus your tax payments were unequal. Without doing that you will likely get hit with the penalty. Filling out the Form 2210 is a pain but worth it to avoid the penalty issues.
@deerhunter30147 ай бұрын
Please tell us which brokerage house doesn't offer to withhold the tax...
@wendyfamily93847 ай бұрын
Big investment firm start with F😅
@thomasmoshier392013 күн бұрын
I’d rather take large distributions in my 60’s spending it on the kids when they need it most rather than doing Roth conversions and locking up my money for 5 year intervals.
@gregmori51617 күн бұрын
If you are in your 60’s the five year rule doesn’t apply.
@thomasmoshier39207 күн бұрын
It applies on the gains. Not on the principal.
@edorofish3 ай бұрын
I always pay my roth conversion taxes during tax time. its a small penalty for the small amount i'm converting.
@johnmorgan9577 күн бұрын
I like my dividend investments. Wouldn't it make more sense to have my funds in my Roth IRA for my qualifying dividend investments?
@SuperMatt12355 ай бұрын
Does it really matter if someone makes 500000.00 a year from all sources?
@jessefletcher91167 ай бұрын
there's an expression "better the devil you know" which in this application would mean it's better to knowingly convert at today's tax rates because future tax rates are speculative, one look at the national debt and to me it seems probable they are going to have to go up, up, and away.
@rtj68744 ай бұрын
That is incorrect information. If you are older than 59.5 when doing the Roth Conversion AND you've had the Roth for more than 5 years, the second 5 year rule does NOT apply.
@BillMaass7 ай бұрын
Since everyone’s situation is different, I disagree with the blanket advice to avoid a tax free retirement. We simply don’t know the future. Tax laws will change. One spouse may die prematurely much earlier than the surviving spouse. There clearly is a risk that you will convert too much. There is also clearly a risk that you will convert too little. In my opinion, no one will convert precisely the correct amount each year. Be prudent with your Roth conversions and reassess them annually. In my case, we should owe zero income tax after 2026 if tax laws remain as expected. We will file federal tax returns in 2027-2030 to obtain ACA tax credits. Our smaller Roth conversions should be completed by 2038. Still, I expect changes to our plan before then. But, we will sleep really well with little to no income taxes in our future.
@shawnbrennan75267 ай бұрын
I had an expert run the numbers and showed that we were better off biting the bullet and converting over 2 years instead of 3. I can’t even imagine making the assumptions for spreading it all the way through 2038, especially since you don’t know how much growth you’ll really have between now and then. I’m also not a fan of assuming the ACÁ subsidies will stay as you predict.
@BillMaass7 ай бұрын
@@shawnbrennan7526 I made a large conversion in 2021 at age 62 (24% bracket) before IRMAA age. My 2022-2025 conversions went into 22% bracket while capturing the AOTC tax credit for son in college. My 2026 conversion goes into the 15% bracket. That will leave me with a relatively small amount to convert along with wife’s 401k. The remaining conversions will be small enough to avoid taxation if we live that long. They will be reevaluated annually as tax laws, including ACA, may change. I am quite confident in the investment returns for those tax deferred assets as they are mostly invested in a short term government MM fund. I am no longer in a position where I need to risk those assets in pursuit of higher investment returns. As I said, every situation is different. Hindsight is needed to evaluate how each person’s plan worked out.
@annamartino56816 ай бұрын
Eric, Thank you! ❤ I must disagree with this misconception spread out perhaps who don't know the complexity of Tax and Retirement Planning "it all comes down to the Tax Rates" for Rollover to ROTH Conversion. Your channel videos thank God explain to me the STEEP UNFAIR IRMAA SURCHARGES (aka "IRMAA TAX PENALTIES"). These IRMAA SURCHARGES should be VIEWED as TAX PENALTIES in TAX PENALTIES COLUMN which people should not forget to build in their own thinking even if they can't do complicated analysis of Taxes in Excel like you do. 😂. Also, if people don't vote Republican in 2024, in 2025 Trump's Tax Cuts and Jobs Act of 2017 is set to Sunset, and due to lowering Standard Deduction in 2025 and STEEPER TAX BRACKETS hitting even lower income brackets it would be only "MORE TAXES" in the Future. So any modeling or thinking about Rollover to ROTH Conversion should keep KEY IRMAA SURCHARGES (aka "IRMAA TAX PENALTIES" or some call them "RETIREMENT TAX B0MB$" and together with Social Security Benefits Tax Torpedo they are DEFINITELY DESIGNED TO HIT YOU HARD SPECIFICALLY IN RETIREMENT). After all, they never updated these Social Security Benefits Tax Torpedo Brackets to be prorated and raised with giant Inflation, and that's DESIGNED TO HIT YOU HARDER WITH HIGHER AND HIGHER TAXES even at lowest incomes than if it would be if you were working. Besides, it's going to cost significantly more for Retirees to afford Healthcare Insurance as Advantage MEDICARE Plans are going to change for the worse, especially after recently MEDICARE changed how they are compensating Advantage MEDICARE insurers hitting their profit margins (recent news for Earnings for Humana and their planning to exit some markets, CVS (parent of Aetna), UnitedHealth news). So TAXES are DEFINITELY DESIGNED TO HIT YOU HARDER specifically at Retirement or Older age, and it's better to anticipate all Retirement Hurdles (and not just be overly focused on "the same tax" assumptions). Also, most of people would agree that Social Security Benefits Tax should be completely removed as it's Money already Taxed and set aside specifically for retirement, but the punishment is designed with SS Tax Torpedo to punish those who saved and invested instead of spending, and those with better financial awareness who planned for their own supplemental to Social Security Benefits Income.
@charliehargrave74587 ай бұрын
Talk about the widow and widowers tax trap, why would to leave a tax bomb to the survivor plus they would have to pay more for Medicare.
@KMarik5 ай бұрын
Some of this makes sense. One important consideration is that the main advantage of the Roth accounts is that the gains are not taxed. That means that even if you would pay taxes at the same rate later, the growth in your account is tax free.
@kersting135 ай бұрын
He proved that your assumption is incorrect in this video. Growth, sequence of returns, etc does not make one single bit of difference. Only the difference in tax rates between the conversion and the withdrawal change the post-tax difference in $$. I've seen other KZbinrs who claim this as well, and it's simply not true. It's why you should listen to this guy, and not other people who claim anything other than the tax rate difference matters.
@lauraa66823 күн бұрын
From everything I've read, your number four is wrong. There is a 5-year wait on each and every conversion no matter what your age
@SafeguardWealthManagement20 күн бұрын
There are multiple 5 year rules for Roth IRAs that may create some of the confusion. For Roth Conversions, there is no 5 year waiting if you are 59.5.
@bryanharrell40597 ай бұрын
Can anyone really see tax rates lowering in the future? The countries debt, deficit, and SS situation will have to be addressed at some point. It will most likely begin sooner rather than later and depending on how fast it's corrected it will take generations.
@SafeguardWealthManagement7 ай бұрын
Could have said the same thing in 2017, right?
@bryanharrell40597 ай бұрын
@@SafeguardWealthManagement Well, you do have a point. I guess it's the usual question of how long we can kick the can down the road, and individual time horizons for retirement do need to be considered. I'm thinking I'll defer to you as I'm an Armchair Economist. How long before the debt and deficits must be addressed? Can the same economic behavior continue with zero correction and consequences? I mean consequences other than the current wealth gap widening and middle class disappearing. Is it possible to print money forever, lower revenue, and never pay the piper?
@SafeguardWealthManagement7 ай бұрын
@@bryanharrell4059 This is the main reason why I believe we have to plan based on the rules we know today. Beyond that, I tend to leave prediction out of the equation. There is too broad a spectrum of options and timelines to try to predict with any meaningful accuracy. I 100% agree things need to change, but the combination of changes is effectively infinite. Take income taxes rising. The change may raise income taxes across the board (this is the default most seem to assume). They could also keep the same tax tables and simply change the levels you are taxed at. They could also keep the tax tables at lower income levels the same and raise rates on higher income levels, which may not change the conversion math at all for some retirees. The current economic policy is based on Modern Monetary Policy, which effectively bets on growth outpacing inflation. It works, theoretically, but is a very fragile system. So, another variable to work into the grand economic model is economic growth. My point is that we can all agree that we have problems here in the U.S., but we are dealing with an incredibly complex system that makes it impossible to make any reasonably accurate predictions. So, it's not a game I play, nor do I think you should play.
@drexellake40517 ай бұрын
What if you just want more tax free money to spend without a big tax hit? Right now I have $700,000 in a rollover IRA. If I want to buy a Porsche for $125,000 I'll get hit with a huge tax bill in tax season. If I roll it over into a roth over a few years, taxes are spread out, and I won't get hit with one large tax bill. Same for buying a house or other major purchase. I'm a disabled vet so I can't contribute my disability to a roth because it's not considered income and is non taxable. Fidelity advisors won't go anywhere near taxes, so I'm looking for a real advisor.
@ReginaWhite257 ай бұрын
It's great to hear that you are considering investing in the stock market after being inspired by the success of Munger and Buffett with Berkshire Hathaway. Here are some key points to consider when investing a significant amount like the proceeds from selling your apartment: