UBCNews - Business - The Withdrawal Sequence That Saves Your Retirement: Tax-Savvy Moves For 2026
Episode Date: February 11, 2026You don’t need a new tax code to improve your retirement outcome—you need a sequence. For many pre-retirees and retirees, the order of withdrawals determines whether you quietly climb int...o higher tax brackets, trigger Medicare premium surcharges, or inflate the taxable share of Social Security. The goal isn’t to eliminate taxes; it’s to smooth them over a multi-decade retirement so your savings last. Start with the income you can’t avoid. Most retirees have a baseline: dividends, interest, and any required minimum distributions. From there, layer in the income you can control: which account you tap, when you realize capital gains, whether you convert pre-tax dollars to Roth, and how you time Social Security. The sequence many planners favor—adapted to your situation—goes like this: use taxable accounts first, harvesting losses or gains deliberately; consider partial Roth conversions in lower-income gap years after work and before RMDs and benefits begin; and leave pre-tax accounts for later once you’ve right-sized future required minimum distributions. The details matter, but the principle is simple: manage today’s bracket without creating tomorrow’s spike. Let’s cover a few key moves. First, use gap years for Roth conversions. Convert just enough to fill your current bracket without tipping into a higher one or over Medicare premium thresholds. This shrinks future required distributions and builds tax-free flexibility. Second, coordinate Social Security with taxes. Claiming earlier produces more current income; delaying can create room for conversions now. Align the decision with your tax plan, not in isolation. Third, mind the thresholds. Medicare premium cliffs, capital gains brackets, and the taxation of Social Security are where small missteps become big bills. Fourth, use qualified charitable distributions if you’re eligible. Direct IRA gifts to charity can satisfy required distributions without increasing adjusted gross income. That helps with both Medicare premiums and Social Security taxation. Fifth, harvest with intent. Losses can offset gains, and gains can be realized at favorable rates if you plan around your ordinary income. Here’s a simple example. Suppose you retire at 64 and delay Social Security to 67. Those three years are often your best conversion window. Lower income gives you space to move pre-tax assets into Roth without breaching target thresholds. By the time required distributions begin at 73 under current rules, your withdrawals are smaller and less likely to push you into a higher bracket or raise Medicare premiums. This isn’t a one-year problem. It’s a map. Build a two- to five-year view showing projected income, conversion targets, capital gains capacity, and required distributions by account. Then decide each fall: how much to convert, what to realize, and which account to draw. Repeat. It’s unglamorous, but it’s how you keep control. This works best when withdrawal sequencing is coordinated with investment risk, healthcare costs, and your estate goals. That’s the difference between a list of tactics and a plan you can actually follow. Your plan should be intentional, not reactive. This episode is for informational purposes only and not personalized tax, legal, or investment advice. Tax laws and thresholds may change. Consult a qualified professional who understands your individual circumstances. Thanks for tuning in! For more information, visit the website link in the description. Goldstone Financial Group City: Oakbrook Terrace Address: 18W140 Butterfield Road Website: https://www.goldstonefinancialgroup.com/ Phone: +1 630 620 9300 Email: contactus@goldstonefg.com
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You don't need a new tax code to improve your retirement outcome.
You need a sequence.
For many pre-retirees and retirees,
the order of withdrawals determines whether you quietly climb into higher tax brackets,
trigger Medicare premium surcharges,
or inflate the taxable share of Social Security.
The goal isn't to eliminate taxes.
It's to smooth them over a multi-decade retirement, so your savings last.
Start with the income you can't avoid.
Most retirees have a baseline.
dividends, interest, and any required minimum distributions. From there, layer in the income you can
control, which account you tap when you realize capital gains, whether you convert pre-tax
dollars to Roth, and how you time Social Security. The sequence many planners favor, adapted to
your situation, goes like this. Use taxable accounts first, harvesting losses or gains deliberately.
Consider partial Roth conversions in lower income gap years after work and before RMDs and benefits begin,
and leave pre-tax accounts for later once you've right-sized future required minimum distributions.
The details matter, but the principle is simple.
Manage today's bracket without creating tomorrow's spike.
Let's cover a few key moves.
First, use gap years for Roth conversions.
Convert just enough to fill your current bracket with,
without tipping into a higher one or over Medicare premium thresholds.
This shrinks future required distributions and builds tax-free flexibility.
Second, coordinate Social Security with taxes.
Claiming earlier produces more current income.
Delaying can create room for conversions now.
Align the decision with your tax plan, not in isolation.
Third, mind the thresholds.
Medicare premium cliffs, capital gains brackets,
and the taxation of Social Security
are where small missteps become big bills.
Fourth, use qualified charitable distributions if you're eligible.
Direct IRA gifts to charity can satisfy required distributions
without increasing adjusted gross income.
That helps with both Medicare premiums and Social Security taxation.
Fifth, harvest with intent.
Losses can offset gains,
and gains can be realized at favorable rates
if you plan around your ordinary income. Here's a simple example. Suppose you retire at 64 and delay
Social Security to 67. Those three years are often your best conversion window. Lower income gives
you space to move pre-tax assets into Roth without breaching target thresholds. By the time required
distributions begin at 73 under current rules, your withdrawals are smaller and less likely to push you
into a higher bracket or raise Medicare premiums.
This isn't a one-year problem. It's a map. Build a two-to-five-year view showing projected
income, conversion targets, capital gains capacity, and required distributions by account.
Then decide each fall, how much to convert, what to realize, and which account to draw.
Repeat. It's unglomerous, but it's how you keep control. This works best when withdrawal sequencing
is coordinated with investment risk,
health care costs, and your estate goals.
That's the difference between a list of tactics
and a plan you can actually follow.
Your plan should be intentional, not reactive.
This episode is for informational purposes only
and not personalized tax, legal, or investment advice.
Tax laws and thresholds may change.
Consult a qualified professional
who understands your individual circumstances.
Thanks for tuning in.
For more information, visit the website link in the description.
