Hypothetical Illustration: This case study is a hypothetical example based on common situations encountered in retirement planning. It does not represent any specific client or actual results. Individual circumstances vary, and outcomes depend on a variety of factors unique to each person’s financial situation. This illustration is provided for educational purposes only and should not be considered personalized financial advice.
The Setup
Consider a hypothetical couple, Richard and Diane, both in their late sixties. Recently retired, no major debt, steady careers behind them, and consistent retirement savings the whole way. On the surface, they look like the textbook example of doing things right.
That is exactly where most retirement tax planning goes wrong. The couples who have done everything right are often the ones with the largest hidden tax exposure waiting to surface.
But when we looked closer, there was a hidden tax issue that could have quietly cost them tens of thousands of dollars over their retirement.
The Initial Situation
Here is what their financial picture looked like when running the numbers:
- Approximately $1.1 million in traditional IRAs
- Minimal Roth savings
- Modest taxable brokerage account
- No pension
- Planned Social Security benefits beginning around ages 67–70
On the surface, everything looked straightforward. But once you project their income after Social Security and RMDs kick in, a quiet problem emerges.
The Problem They Didn’t See Coming
Modeling their future income surfaces three issues stacked on top of each other:
- Once both spouses claimed Social Security
- And Required Minimum Distributions (RMDs) began
- A significant portion of their Social Security benefits would become taxable
In fact, under their original plan:
- Up to 85% of their Social Security benefits would be taxed
- Their marginal tax rate during retirement would be higher than expected
- Medicare premiums were also at risk of increasing due to income thresholds
They weren’t overspending.
They weren’t living extravagantly.
The issue was timing — not behavior.
The Planning Opportunity: A Critical Window
The reason this scenario is worth walking through is timing. Richard and Diane are catching this early enough to do something about it.
They were:
- Retired
- Not yet collecting Social Security
- Not yet subject to RMDs
That is what I call a tax planning window — a stretch where income is temporarily lower and the decisions you make can have an outsized long-term impact. Most retirees do not know they are in one until it has closed.
The Strategy That Fits the Facts
Instead of waiting for Social Security and RMDs to force higher taxable income, the right move is to act inside the planning window. Three steps, executed in sequence.
1. Strategic Roth Conversions
Over the next several years, a coordinated plan would convert portions of their traditional IRAs into Roth IRAs, carefully:
- Filling lower tax brackets
- Avoiding spikes in taxable income
- Coordinating conversions with future Social Security timing
The goal wasn’t to eliminate taxes — it was to control them.
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The Social Security claiming strategy gets aligned with the Roth conversion plan so that:
- Future provisional income would stay lower
- Less Social Security would be pulled into taxation
- Lifetime after-tax income would increase
3. Income Smoothing
By balancing withdrawals across:
- Taxable accounts
- Traditional IRAs
- Roth accounts
the risk of triggering unnecessary tax thresholds later in retirement drops considerably. The same dollar drawn from a different bucket can be the difference between a smooth tax year and a bracket-jumping one.
The Outcome
Long-term projections under reasonable assumptions about tax rates and life expectancy show a meaningful reduction in lifetime Social Security taxation — in this hypothetical, on the order of tens of thousands of dollars over the couple’s projected retirement. Actual results vary based on tax law, market conditions, and individual circumstances. The structural benefits are what matter:
- Lower lifetime exposure to Social Security taxation by keeping provisional income under control
- Reduced exposure to the Social Security tax torpedo
- Improved flexibility in retirement withdrawals
- Lower risk of future Medicare premium increases
Just as important, the plan is legible. Anyone working from this framework can see why it works, not just what is happening — which is what keeps the discipline intact when markets or tax law shift.
Why This Case Matters
This couple didn’t need exotic investments or risky strategies.
They needed coordination.
This is a perfect example of why Social Security decisions should never be made in isolation. When retirement income, taxes, and timing are aligned properly, the difference isn’t theoretical — it shows up in real dollars.
Key Takeaway
Social Security isn’t “taxed or not taxed.”
It’s planned for — or reacted to.
When retirees act early, they often have far more control than they realize. When they wait, many of the options quietly disappear.
This is why Social Security planning belongs on the table years before benefits begin — not months after. The cheapest moves are the ones you make while the window is still open.
This article is published by Confluence Media Group LLC, an independent publisher of educational financial content. Thomas Clark is a Series 65 Investment Advisor Representative. The information provided is for educational and informational purposes only and is not personalized financial, tax, or legal advice. Past performance does not guarantee future results. All investing involves risk, including potential loss of principal. Consult a qualified professional before making financial decisions.
Confluence Media Group LLC is a separate entity from Confluence Capital Management, the investment advisory practice through which Thomas Clark provides advisory services. Advisory services are not offered through this publishing platform.
Thomas Clark is a Series 65 licensed investment advisor and experienced trader. He specializes in investing, retirement planning, and market analysis, helping individuals build wealth and make informed financial decisions.