The post The “Social Security Tax Trap” That Can Cost a Retired Couple $8,189+ per Year appeared first on 24/7 Wall St..
Picture a retired couple in their late 60s. Both worked their full careers, both delayed Social Security until full retirement age, and both now collect a check close to the national average of about $2,177 a month. Together that runs roughly $52,242 a year in benefits. They live mostly off that, dip into savings here and there, and pay no federal tax on their Social Security. Life feels orderly.
Then they turn 73. Required minimum distributions kick in on the traditional 401(k) and IRA they spent 40 years filling, and the tax picture flips overnight. This is what some writers have started calling the “Social Security tax trap”: the moment forced retirement account withdrawals push a couple’s income high enough to make most of their benefits taxable for the first time. One forum post described it bluntly, saying they felt fine for a decade and then RMDs hit and the IRS suddenly wanted thousands they had never owed before.
The IRS decides how much of your Social Security is taxable using something called provisional income, which is roughly your other taxable income plus half of your benefits. For a married couple filing jointly, none of Social Security is taxed if that number stays under $32,000. Once it crosses $44,000, up to 85% of benefits get pulled into taxable income.
Before RMDs, our couple sits well below the line. Half of their benefits is about $26,121, they have no other reportable income, and Social Security stays untaxed.
Now fast-forward to age 73. They have $2 million in a traditional 401(k) and IRA. The IRS uniform life expectancy divisor at 73 is 26.5, which produces a first-year RMD of roughly $75,472. Add that to half of Social Security and provisional income jumps to about $101,593, far above the $44,000 line. Suddenly 85% of their benefits, or about $44,406, lands on the tax return.
Stacked together, the RMD plus the taxable portion of Social Security creates about $119,878 of gross income. From there the deductions go to work:
Taxable income comes down to roughly $72,378. Apply the 2026 brackets, which tax the first $24,800 at 10% and the next dollars at 12%, and the remaining $47,578 lands in the 12% bracket. Total federal bill: about $8,189. That is the number this couple owes purely because their RMD dragged 85% of their Social Security into the taxable column.
The trap is the interaction between the RMD and Social Security taxation. A retiree with the same $75,000 of withdrawals but no Social Security would still owe tax on the withdrawal. What the tax trap does is double-count: the RMD is taxable, and the RMD also makes the previously untaxed benefits taxable.
That is why the most useful planning window for many couples is the gap between retirement and age 73. Partial Roth conversions in low-income years, qualified charitable distributions starting at 70 and a half, or simply spending traditional account dollars before claiming Social Security can shrink the RMD that eventually arrives. A 2.8% cost-of-living adjustment for 2026 only makes the benefit side larger over time, which raises the stakes of getting the timing right.
Two things are worth holding onto. First, the tax trap is predictable. If you know roughly what your traditional retirement balance will look like at 73, you can estimate the RMD today and see whether it will push you past the $44,000 provisional income line. Second, the hardest mistake to undo is leaving a large traditional balance untouched into your 70s without a conversion strategy. Once RMDs begin, your flexibility narrows.
The $8,189 figure here is an illustration built on 2026 rules and one specific couple’s numbers. Shift the account balance, the claiming age, or the mix of Roth versus traditional money, and the result moves with it. The mechanism, though, is the same for almost everyone walking into their 73rd birthday with a seven-figure traditional account.
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The post The “Social Security Tax Trap” That Can Cost a Retired Couple $8,189+ per Year appeared first on 24/7 Wall St..


