Withdraw from Taxable Accounts First and Let
Tax-Deferred Accounts Compound to Best
Maintain Savings
by Shane Flait
©2011
Retirees who need to dip into savings to pay
their yearly expenses should first take from
their taxable accounts (i.e. not IRAs, etc).
Let the tax-deferral help your tax-deferred
accounts grow faster for greater future
savings. This article explains why.
The
savings of most retirees can be lumped into
two types of accounts:
·
Tax-deferred accounts, and
·
taxable accounts.
Tax-deferred accounts
come from IRAs, 401(k)s, or similar type
plans. They grow tax-deferred and you pay
income tax only on what you withdraw from
them. Because their investment earnings grow
tax-deferred, none their yearly growth is
lost to taxation if it’s not touched. Their
full earnings are available for
compounding.
On the other hand,
taxable accounts include CDs, mutual funds,
bonds and stocks. Often these are
income-type investments. Their yearly
earnings are taxed whether you take money
from them or not. That annual taxation on
earnings robs some of those earnings from
helping to compound future savings.
For comparison purposes,
let’s assume that the underlying investments
of both types of accounts have the same
annual investment growth rate. This could be
from income-type investments. Such
investments are typical for retirees looking
for income to help pay their yearly living
expenses.
Which type account
should you choose to withdraw from for
paying annual living expenses?
If you must withdraw
savings to pay yearly expenses, withdraw
from the taxable account. That’s because
you’ve always got to withdraw from it to pay
the taxable earnings amount on it anyway
firstly. But beyond that, withdrawing for
your expenses incurs no more taxation since
you’re just taking a return of your basis –
assuming very little capital gains or losses
for such an account.
If you withdrew from your
tax-deferred account, you must pay income
tax - at your income tax rate - on
everything you withdraw. That’s because
tax-deferred accounts generally have zero
basis. So you're withdrawing an amount equal
to the tax you owe on your withdrawal amount
in addition to the amount you need to pay
for your annual living expenses.
So, overall you’re
pulling more out of a tax-deferred account
than a taxable account to pay the same fixed
amount of living expenses. Additionally,
what money you have in either account will
compound faster in the tax-deferred account
than in the taxable account. That’s because
even though the underlying investments may
have the same annual earning rate, the
tax-deferred account allows all of it to
compound; the taxable account robs some of
those earnings from compounding because it
has to go to annual taxation.
As an example, let’s
assume you have a $100,000 in both a
tax-deferred account and a taxable account
with both accounts having an investment that
earns 3% annually. So each account produces
$3,000 of earnings during the year. Now if
you have $5,250 of annual living expenses
you must pay at the end of that year, what
would be the comparative result of taking
that $5,250 from each type account if your
income tax rate is 25%?
If you take the money
from that taxable account to pay the living
expenses, you must take a total of $6,000,
first $750 (=25% of the $3,000) to pay the
earnings tax due plus the $5,250 for your
living expense. That leaves only $97,000
(=$103,000-750-5250) in your taxable
account. Your tax-deferred account grew to
$103,000 at that year’s end.
If you take the money
from your tax-deferred account to pay the
living expenses, you must take $7,000, first
$1750 (= 25% of $7,000) to pay the income
tax on the full withdrawal plus $5,250 for
your living expense. That leaves $96,000 (=
$103,000 – 1750-5250) in your tax-deferred
account. Your taxable account grew to
$102,250 since you had to pay that $750 on
taxable earnings of $3,000.
Comparison of total
savings
You can see that taking
your living expense money from your taxable
account leaves your overall savings higher
at $200,000 (= $97,000 in taxable account,
and $103,000 in tax-deferred account) than
if you take your living expenses from your
tax-deferred account which leaves your
overall savings at $198,270 (= $102,250 in
taxable account, and $96,000 in tax-deferred
account).
Concluding, to better
maintain your overall savings while taking
money for living expenses from your savings,
withdraw first from your taxable accounts
and leave your tax-deferred accounts alone
to compound.
If you’re required to
make minimum required distributions (MRDs)
from your tax-deferred account (after
turning 70½), then restrict your withdraws
to only the MRD amount. Take the rest from
your taxable accounts as I said above.
The table below compares
how both a tax-deferred and taxable account
of $100,000 decreases (or increases) with a
fixed annual withdrawal of $5250 for
expenses (including paying taxes at the 25%
rate) under different investment growths.
Comparing their ‘Net account values’, you
can see that at any growth rate, the taxable
account decreases (and increases) slower
than the tax-deferred account.
|
Comparing the Growth of
Tax-deferred and Taxable Accounts
Under Withdrawal for $5250 of
annual expense for Different
Investment Rates from $100,000 fund |
|
Annual Growth of both types of
accounts |
Tax-deferred Account |
Taxable Account |
|
Investment
Growth Rate |
Dollar Growth amount before
withdrawals |
25% Income Tax to pay on withdrawal |
Total withdrawal for tax and $5250
expense |
Net value of tax-deferred account |
25% tax on taxable growth
|
Total withdrawal for tax and $5250
expense |
Net value of taxable account |
|
3% |
$3,000 |
$1,750 |
$7,000 |
$96,000 |
$750 |
$6,000 |
$97,000 |
|
5% |
$5,000 |
$1,750 |
$7,000 |
$98,000 |
$1,250 |
$6,500 |
$98,500 |
|
7% |
$7,000 |
$1,750 |
$7,000 |
$100,000 |
$1,750 |
$7,000 |
$100,000 |
|
9% |
$9,000 |
$1,750 |
$7,000 |
$102,000 |
$2,250 |
$7,500 |
$101,500 |
|
11% |
$11,000 |
$1,750 |
$7,000 |
$104,000 |
$2,750 |
$8,000 |
$103,000 |
END
Shane Flait is a writer and educator. Get
more info at
www.EasyRetirementKnowHow.com