As many employers have canceled pension programs over the past several decades, retirees increasingly must rely on their assets, not pension income, to supplement Social Security benefits and cover their expenses in retirement. While this change has significant upside potential, it also shifts enormous responsibility onto retirees to manage their savings and withdrawal strategies effectively and thereby ensure that their assets last throughout retirement. One key element of an effective withdrawal strategy is managing the bite that taxes take from your assets. By pursuing tax diversification while you are working and in retirement, you can reduce lifetime taxes on your investment assets and preserve greater value for your retirement nest egg.
What is tax diversification? There are two main components of tax diversification. The primary one involves strategically saving to (or withdrawing from) different accounts based on their tax treatment. The second involves strategically allocating your investment assets to those different accounts in light of their expected return and taxable distributions.
What type of account should I save to (or withdraw from) and when? From a tax perspective, the three types of savings or investment accounts are: taxable accounts, tax-deferred accounts, and tax-free accounts.
Having money in each of these three “pots” allows you to control when taxes are paid by varying the pot from which a distribution is made. If you are in a relatively low tax bracket during a portion of your retirement (e.g. before starting to claim Social Security or take required minimum distributions from your retirement accounts), you can choose to draw some assets from a tax-deferred account or realize some capital gains in a taxable account. These moves would generate taxable income, but you would not face a heavy tax bill because you are in a low marginal tax bracket. Conversely, at other points in retirement (e.g. you and a spouse are both taking Social Security and your retirement account distributions are particularly high this year because you had to buy a new car and put on a new roof), you may choose to draw some assets from a tax-free account because you are in a high marginal tax bracket relative to other years in your retirement.
In addition, having assets in each of the three tax buckets can create a hedge against potentially higher tax rates in the future. If ordinary income tax rates creep up, but capital gains rates and the treatment of Roth assets remains the same, those with assets in taxable or tax-free accounts will be better positioned to weather the storm.
What is the best investment strategy to maximize tax diversification? As mentioned above, when you have assets in each of these three types of accounts, you can strategically place investments to try to optimize returns and minimize taxes across your portfolio as a whole. For example:
Tax policies will likely change numerous times over the course of your retirement, and your specific financial needs will change year-to-year. Tax diversification allows the flexibility to withdraw assets from optimal sources at different times to help preserve retirement assets, and by strategically emphasizing certain types of investments in each of the three types of accounts, you can stretch your retirement assets even further.
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