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Roth conversion ladder tax cost
Project the federal tax cost of converting traditional IRA balances to Roth over multiple years to manage bracket-by-bracket taxation.
Total tax paid on conversions
Show the work
- Annual conversion amount$75,000
- Future tax saved (vs not converting)$168,000
- Net benefit$36,000
The Roth conversion ladder — pay tax now to avoid more tax later
A Roth conversion moves money from traditional IRA (pre-tax) to Roth IRA (after-tax) — taxable as ordinary income in the conversion year. The strategy: convert during low-tax years (early retirement, gap years) to avoid higher-bracket Required Minimum Distributions later.
When conversions win
- Current bracket < expected future bracket: classic case — early retiree at 12% bracket vs RMDs forcing 24% later
- Recently retired pre-Social Security: 5-10 year gap where income drops dramatically
- Inheritance planning: heirs in high brackets; pay your lower rate now to avoid their later
- Estate tax planning: Roth assets pass tax-free; reduces estate income tax drag
When to NOT convert
- Currently in 32%+ bracket; expected future bracket lower (e.g. you'll relocate to no-state-tax state)
- Need the cash to pay tax (don't convert if you'd liquidate the converted amount to pay)
- Recent year-end income spike that pushes you into a one-time higher bracket
- Within 5 years of needing the money (5-year rule on conversions for under-59½ withdrawals)
The 5-year rule traps
- Each conversion has its own 5-year clock
- Under 59½: 10% penalty on principal of conversion if withdrawn before clock matures
- After 59½: no penalty, but the 5-year rule on EARNINGS still applies if Roth IRA is younger than 5 years overall
Common ladder design
For early retirees (50-60): convert ~$30-50k/yr filling the 12% or 22% bracket. By age 73 (RMD start), traditional IRA is depleted. RMDs from Roth = $0. Lifetime tax: substantially lower.
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