The post A $1.3 Million 401(k) Triggers a $19,800 Tax Bomb in Year One. Here’s How to Cut It in Half appeared first on 24/7 Wall St..
The 73-year-old who logged into their 401(k) portal this April with a $1.3 million traditional balance found that the first required minimum distribution generates a roughly $19,800 tax bill, more than double what the federal income tax on the withdrawal alone would suggest. The withdrawal itself is the smallest piece of the cascade.
The IRS Uniform Lifetime Table divisor at age 73 is 26.5. A $1.3 million account produces a first RMD of $49,057. In the 22% federal bracket, which starts at $50,400 of taxable income for single filers in 2026, the withdrawal generates close to $10,800 in tax. That figure is what most pre-retirees plan around, and it is the figure that misleads them.
The cascade starts when the RMD lands in adjusted gross income. Provisional income clears the $34,000 single-filer threshold, which makes up to 85% of Social Security benefits taxable. For a retiree drawing the 2026 average benefit, after Social Security raised payments 2.8% this year, that conversion adds roughly $5,000 to the federal bill on income that was previously sheltered.
Medicare delivers the third layer. The 2026 standard Part B premium is $202.90. IRMAA surcharges activate above $109,000 in modified adjusted gross income for single filers and $218,000 for married couples. A single retiree pushed into Tier 1 by the RMD pays an extra $81.20 per month on Part B and $13.70 on Part D. State income tax, where applicable, adds another $2,000 to $3,000. Stacked up, the cascade lands near $19,800.
IRMAA tracks income from two years prior. The 2026 surcharge is anchored to the 2024 tax return. A retiree who ran a large Roth conversion in 2024, sold a rental property, or harvested capital gains is paying the Medicare bill in 2026 regardless of what current income looks like. The reverse also applies: any planning move executed in 2026 will hit Medicare premiums in 2028. The window to manage the next bill is closing now.
For perspective, the Bureau of Labor Statistics put average annual consumer expenditures at $78,535 in 2024. A $19,800 RMD tax bill consumes a full quarter of a typical household’s spending, paid out of an account the retiree may not have needed to touch yet.
The 10-year Treasury yield near 4.5% offers a conservative reinvestment option for RMD proceeds the retiree does not need to spend, but the tax bill clears first regardless. The decision worth making is which dollars leave the 401(k), and in what order, not whether they leave at all.
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The post A $1.3 Million 401(k) Triggers a $19,800 Tax Bomb in Year One. Here’s How to Cut It in Half appeared first on 24/7 Wall St..


