IRA to 401k?
I am 74 years of age and been taking RMDs for 2 years. However, I am still working, have really good group insurance and don’t need the RMD income to live on. My plan is to retire in 2-3 years and go on Medicare. By taking the RMDs it throws me into a higher tax bracket and could possibly increase my Medicare premiums when I retire and go on Medicare. I have a really good 401k with excellent low cost investment options and they will accept my IRA should I choose to convert it. This would save me over $100,000 in RMDs over the next 2-3 years plus allows the 401k to hopefully grow tax deferred until I do retire and move it back to my IRA when I will need the RMD income. Thoughts?
Permalink Submitted by Alan - IRA critic on Mon, 2022-11-21 14:53
Your main goal is to level out your taxable income for the duration, therefore the larger your wages are in relation to your RMDs, the better your plan will be. Conversely, doing this will defer your IRA as well as your 401k RMDs (due to the still working exception) into fewer years and make them larger. Doing this IRA to 401k rollover will not reduce your IRA RMD for 2022, as you will have to distribute it before doing the rollover. And if will not reduce your total RMD for 2023 either if you are not still employed on 1/1/2024, and it will not reduce your RMD for the year in which you actually retire. You would have to work into 2025 in order to achieve over one year of IRA tax deferral. Finally, if you have any basis in your IRA (Form 8606), you cannot roll over any of the basis to the 401k.