Roth IRA Conversions- Age 71
I'm mulling over the idea of making some substantial Roth conversions from my regular IRA account.
Other than a couple of homes, one in TV and one on a lake in NY, all of my money is in IRAs. I'm 71, and with the amount in my IRAs, and my yearly draw, I am in a comfortable position, UNLESS...where my plan gets shaky is if I or my wife live into our mid-90s (we have some history of long life-spans as well as some history of early demise, so it's a crap shoot), and we have all of our money in IRAs, we could get into some very heavy RMD years, with exorbitant tax rates, and serious depletion of our wealth.
So, it seems to me that Roth conversions over the. next 10 years could be a good hedge against that. From my calculations, somewhere in the 4 or 5 year range would be the break-even point. After that it's a clear win.
From what I've researched, the immediate costs would be obviously, more income tax now, and a bump in our Medicare premiums. Factoring those in, we get the tax back later when we withdraw the Roth money tax-free, and at the pace required of our lifestyles, not at a pace dictated by the IRS.
Furthermore, there is a very good chance that only one of us would survive into such an old age, and the survivor would be taxed at the Single rate, which would be even more of a burden.
As long as I am certain (and I'm as certain as I can be) that we won't need to tap the Roth IRA for 10 years, this seems like a no-brainer.
I'm interested in the opinions of others who may have done this, or are considering doing this, and what their thought processes are.
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