Updated
Updated · 24/7 Wall St. · Jul 15
64-Year-Old Retiree Taps $85,000 401(k) Yearly to Lock In 8% Social Security Gain
Updated
Updated · 24/7 Wall St. · Jul 15

64-Year-Old Retiree Taps $85,000 401(k) Yearly to Lock In 8% Social Security Gain

1 articles · Updated · 24/7 Wall St. · Jul 15

Summary

  • $85,000 in annual 401(k) withdrawals lets 64-year-old Linda fund retirement now while delaying Social Security to 70, where her projected benefit reaches $5,181 a month.
  • That delay adds roughly 8% a year after full retirement age—plus a 2.8% 2026 COLA—outpacing risk-free alternatives such as a near-5% 10-year Treasury.
  • Over six years, the plan would draw about $510,000 from her $1.1 million traditional 401(k), still leaving several hundred thousand dollars if the remaining portfolio earns 5% to 6%.
  • The strategy also exploits a low-tax window: a single filer can withdraw about $63,000 and stay in the 12% federal bracket, avoiding higher taxes on later withdrawals and the $106,000 IRMAA Medicare threshold.
  • Linda could also convert $30,000 to $40,000 a year to a Roth IRA before 70, shrinking future required minimum distributions at 75 and leaving her Social Security check 32% above its full-retirement-age level.

Insights

How does paying taxes now on Roth conversions save a retiree with a $1.1M 401(k) a fortune?
What is the biggest risk to this plan if a retiree doesn't live into their 80s?
Why is this tax strategy critical for new retirees to avoid losing thousands to hidden surcharges?