I’m 55 With $900,000 in an IRA. Should I Convert $100,000 Per Year to a Roth to Avoid RMDs?

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At age 55 with $900,000 in a traditional individual retirement account (IRA), converting $100,000 per year to a Roth IRA could help reduce required minimum distributions (RMDs) and related taxes in retirement. Although Roth conversions create current tax liabilities, paying taxes now may result in more predictable and lower lifetime taxes.

Taking an incremental Roth conversion approach can effectively distribute the tax impact over time and keep you in lower tax brackets depending on your total income in any given year rather than making the conversion all at once. Moving your nest egg to a Roth IRA will not only help you avoid RMDs, it’ll also also protect your withdrawals from income taxes down the road, despite the initial tax hit on the conversion.

For personalized guidance on Roth IRA conversions and other retirement planning decisions, consider working with a financial advisor who can review your full financial picture.

RMD Basics

As a retirement saver using a traditional IRA, you are free to leave your retirement savings in the account to grow tax-free, but only up to a point. Once IRA holders reach age 73, they must start taking annual RMDs. The amount of each RMD is based on IRS life expectancy tables and account balances. This is a matter of concern because each RMD withdrawal adds to taxable income for that year. With large IRAs, annual RMDs can easily push retirees into higher income tax brackets, resulting in bigger tax bills down the road.