Near Retirement, Convert IRA to Roth or not if changing state residence
Most of savings in traditional IRA. Seems prudent to make rollover to Roth IRAs in years leading up to RMDs, Presently live in state with tax burden of little more than 4%, which fully taxes retirement benefits. Contemplating move in future to state that does not tax retirement benefits. If make rollovers to Roth now, would be paying tax on distributions that would not be taxed if moved to other state. Would it still be worth it? What calculations would be pertinent? Expected return, years before withdrawal?
Permalink Submitted by Alan - IRA critic on Thu, 2018-01-25 16:11
The main driver of conversion analysis is a comparison of the total tax rate paid for the conversion with the estimated marginal rate you would owe in retirement on the TIRA RMDs and other distributions if you didn’t convert. You would total the federal and state marginal rates in this comparison. You would also translate such things as IRMAA surcharges into your marginal rate in retirement. A move to a state that does not tax retirement income would lower your rate in retirement, making it less likely that conversion would be beneficial. Of course, the state income tax rates are only one factor. Determining the cost to convert is easy, but estimating your marginal rate in retirement is a crap shoot because many things can change in the interim including your personal financial situation. Note that if you delay SS benefits, it can provide more years of very low tax rates in which to convert. The recent tax bill lowers rates for 8 years, but what happens after that is anyone’s guess.