|
TAX CONSIDERATIONS IN RETIREMENT
The taxes you will owe on your retirement money depend on the
decisions you make before and after you retire. The longer you can put off paying your taxes, the more likely it is that you can make your money work for you.
|
Paying taxes
later instead of today is known as tax deferral. By investing in tax-deferred investments, money normally used to
pay taxes stays in your account, building your investments faster. Even after
paying taxes in retirement, you will generally have greater income and account
values than by investing in regular taxable accounts along the way. Individual
retirement accounts (IRAs), 401(k) plans, and annuities are examples of
tax-deferred savings plans. | |
The amount of tax you owe at retirement depends not only on your
income, but also on the timing of your withdrawals. Distributions from
retirement plans and annuities are taxed at regular income tax rates. You must
begin receiving minimum distributions from most retirement plans at age 70½ or
there will be a considerable tax penalty. The exceptions to this rule are Roth
IRAs and nonqualified annuities (annuities outside of retirement plans). In most
cases, you will also be penalized for withdrawing retirement income before age
59½. This applies to retirement plans and nonqualified annuities.
|
You also have the choice of putting your money into tax-efficient
or tax-managed mutual funds. Tax efficiency refers to the after-tax return of an investment in comparison to
its pre-tax return—in other words, how much of your investment return is lost
annually to taxes. | |
A fund with low turnover rates and few dividends is probably
tax-efficient. By investing in a tax-efficient fund, you defer paying most of
your taxes until you sell your shares.
|
A tax-managed
fund invests with tax efficiency as its goal. Tax-managed funds use trading strategies to reduce taxes. Stocks
and stock-based funds are subject to capital gains taxes. Tax rates on long-term
capital gains are not only lower than on regular income for most individuals,
they're also lower than the rate at which other kinds of investment returns are
taxed, such as most bond interest and even income
from retirement plans such as IRAs and 401(k)s. Other tax-efficient investments
include municipal bonds, most of which generate tax-exempt income, and U.S. savings
bonds, which allow you to defer your taxes until your bonds are redeemed. | |
Are you ready to begin planning your retirement? Let's go
over what we have covered.
|