By coincidence I was advising someone today on tax planning under a similar scenario, and then saw this excerpt from Kiplinger regarding "the Distribution Phase of Retirement". I completely disagree with this advice. If in the last few years working full-time, pre-retirement, it will pay to max out the 401k, not the Roth. Even to the point of taking money out of an existing Roth to make up the difference. It can always be converted back into the Roth at lower future tax rates (due to no longer working full time).
The reason is simple: the marginal tax bracket will be lower in the future post-work, than it is now, pre-retirement. Trad. IRA/401k is designed to reward having a lower tax bracket in the future;by contrast Roth IRA is designed only to reward having a higher tax bracket in the future.
The reason is simple: the marginal tax bracket will be lower in the future post-work, than it is now, pre-retirement. Trad. IRA/401k is designed to reward having a lower tax bracket in the future;by contrast Roth IRA is designed only to reward having a higher tax bracket in the future.
"The secret to mitigating taxes? Plan ahead. You can lower your tax bill by shifting your retirement nest egg from tax-deferred accounts like IRAs or 401(k)s to Roth accounts. While your tax bill will increase in the year of the shift, you can time it correctly to ensure that this occurs while you still have a paycheck coming in and while tax rates are lower.
Remember that tax rates tend to increase year after year, much like inflation, and one thing is certain: You will have to pay them. It's better to do so while you still have a paycheck coming in and when tax rates are lower, so you won't feel the tax burden as acutely."
Remember that tax rates tend to increase year after year, much like inflation, and one thing is certain: You will have to pay them. It's better to do so while you still have a paycheck coming in and when tax rates are lower, so you won't feel the tax burden as acutely."
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