Year-End RMD Crunch: Will Delaying My First Withdrawal Impact the Next?

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Unlike most personal finance questions, the answer to this one is short and simple: yes, waiting until April 1st to take your first RMD will affect the amount of your second year’s RMD.

The IRS rules on required minimum distributions – RMDs – demand that anyone turning 73 in 2024 withdraw a certain minimum amount from their IRAs and other tax-deferred retirement accounts, and continue doing so in every subsequent year. The penalty for blowing off an RMD is 25% of the amount not withdrawn (but may be reduced to 10% if the error is corrected within two years).

The one break the IRS gives on RMDs is that you can elect to postpone your first RMD to April 1 of the year after you turn 73. Postponing can make sense for someone who hasn’t done any tax or financial planning before facing their first RMD, or for someone who has a big one-time increase in other taxable income in the year they turn 73 and don’t want to pay a higher tax rate on the RMD income, so you’ll need to take a holistic look at your financial circumstances.

A financial advisor can help you determine the best strategy for your RMDs. Get matched and talk to a fiduciary financial advisor for free.

But, for most people, it’s not a break – in fact, most financial planners warn against taking the option to delay your first RMD. The reason is that if you do postpone your first RMD, you still have to take your second RMD – except that postponing RMD No. 1 means you’ll be taking two RMDs in the next year. In many cases, those two distributions can push you into a higher tax bracket, increase taxes on your Social Security benefits, and possibly trigger a surcharge on your Medicare coverage.

The formula for calculating RMDs also means that postponing your first RMD is likely to make your second RMD bigger than it would have been if you hadn’t taken the option to delay.

Your RMD amount is calculated by taking the balance of your retirement accounts at the end of the previous year and dividing it by the IRS life expectancy table. At age 73, the factor is 26.5 years, and at age 74 it’s 25.5 years.

Leaving your first RMD in your account beyond December 31, the day on which your account balance determines your RMD, means the amount you would have withdrawn in your first year also will be included in the balance for your second RMD – along with any gains that money generated. Plus, your second RMD also is divided by a shorter life expectancy, making that amount bigger, even if the account balance hasn’t grown.

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