Most people assume that once they retire, the financial pressure will ease.
No more job. No more hustle. And surely, fewer taxes.
But that’s where many people get blindsided.
In reality, taxes can become one of the largest and most underestimated expenses in retirement. If your plan doesn’t address it, you may end up handing a large portion of your savings right back to the IRS.
Let’s break down what’s really happening.
You Were Told to Defer Taxes. No One Told You When the Bill Would Come Due.
Throughout your career, you were encouraged to save into 401(k)s, IRAs, and other tax-deferred accounts. The idea was simple: reduce your tax burden today and pay taxes later, when your income would presumably be lower.
But “later” is retirement. And unlike your working years, you don’t have tax deductions or write-offs to soften the blow.
Here’s What That Looks Like in Real Life
Imagine you have $750,000 in a traditional 401(k). That money may feel like yours, but a portion of it already belongs to the government.
If you need $60,000 per year to cover your expenses, and you’re in the 22 percent tax bracket, you’ll need to withdraw around $76,900 just to net your desired income. That’s roughly $17,000 in taxes every single year.
Now multiply that over 20 years. You can see how quickly taxes can eat away at your hard-earned savings.
Your Social Security Isn’t Fully Safe Either
Many retirees are surprised to learn that Social Security can also be taxed.
If your combined income exceeds certain thresholds, up to 85 percent of your Social Security benefits may become taxable. So the very benefit you worked for your entire life could end up partially taxed, depending on your overall income.
Then Come the RMDs
At age 73, you are required to begin withdrawing money from your tax-deferred accounts, whether you need the income or not.
These Required Minimum Distributions (RMDs) increase your taxable income and can push you into a higher tax bracket. That ripple effect may cause you to:
● Pay more in federal income taxes
● Trigger taxes on Social Security benefits
● Increase your Medicare premiums
● Reduce the amount your heirs receive
All this can happen without any change in your actual lifestyle.
But Aren’t Taxes Supposed to Be Lower in Retirement?
That’s the common belief. But reality tells a different story.
Many retirees:
● No longer have mortgage deductions or dependents
● Shift from married filing jointly to single filing after the loss of a spouse
● Have fewer tax-advantaged savings opportunities
● Could face higher tax rates in the future due to national debt and policy changes
So while your income might drop, your taxable exposure may actually rise.
So What Can You Do About It?
Avoiding the tax trap begins with proactive planning, not last-minute preparation.
Smart retirement tax planning includes:
● Strategically deciding which accounts to draw from, and when
● Managing or even reducing the impact of future RMDs
● Exploring options to shift some money into tax-free vehicles
● Minimizing how much of your Social Security gets taxed
● Creating a plan that considers how your assets will be taxed when passed to heirs
These are not decisions to be made one year at a time. They require a comprehensive strategy that looks 10, 15, even 20 years into the future.
Final Thought
You can’t avoid taxes entirely. But you can avoid overpaying them.
At NarrowGate, we help retirees create strategies that prioritize both income and efficiency. Because building wealth is only half the battle. The other half is keeping it.