Roth Conversion at the time RMD’s start
If this is the first year we have to do RMD’s from an IRA and 401K, how do you feel about also doing a very large Roth Conversion ( with current low 7 figure IRA balances) and paying huge tax now to go to “Never Taxed” at once this calendar year?
Thanks.
Permalink Submitted by Alan - IRA critic on Mon, 2021-07-12 14:59
If you were going to convert, the better time would have been prior to RMDs or even prior to SS if you retired early. If you convert this large an IRA in a single year you will pay the top tax rate on most of the conversion and close to the top rate on the rest. Unless there is something unusual about your future income (perhaps you have alot of rentals or expect a large inheritance for example), you would be best served with smaller incremental conversions each year that would be taxed at less than the top rate. Of course, the top rate could well increase somewhat due to legislation, so you need to keep track of that issue. You would also need to determine where the taxes on large conversions will come from. But there is no way to provide a certain answer without knowing several additional details on your situation, so you might consider running your plan by your tax preparer or other professional that could factor in all these variables including who will inherit the IRA and what bracket they might be in. If you are going to leave it to charity, you would convert far less since the charity will pay no taxes and would rather inherit a large TIRA than a smaller Roth.
Permalink Submitted by Blue_Sky on Mon, 2021-07-12 15:46
So building a bit on your comments on leaving TIRA’s to charities…is there ever ANY reason to convert TIRA dollars that you don’t intend to use for yourself or leave to heirs? My spouse and I have what I believe to be enough to live on in our brokerage, Roth accounts, a 10 year deferred salary payout (like an annuity) and SS (which we are maximizing by claiming late – ages 70 and 62. So bottom line…if we want to give away virtually all of the $ in our TIRA’s, does it make sense to convert any of it?If yes, would the optimal strategy for determining how much to donate each year largely be guided by how much we can offset taxes dollar for dollar, up to any IRS limit or cap?