At the start of the fourth quarter of 2023, millions of American retirees are wondering how they will handle required minimum distributions from tax-advantaged retirement accounts. According to Morningstar's Christine Benz, many are finding that their 2023 RMDs are smaller than anticipated.
This is a result of a few interrelated factors, Benz says, including poor market performance in 2022 and recent rule changes introduced in landmark legislation known colloquially as the Secure Act and the Secure 2.0 Act.
Benz, Morningstar's director of personal finance and retirement planning, shares this insight in a recently published video interview posted on the firm's website. According to Benz, more RMD flexibility this year means that many retirees will be able to effectively minimize their tax obligations, and some early retirees will be able to forgo making RMDs entirely.
As Benz emphasizes, advisors can help older clients by coordinating their RMDs with other sources of income, and they can help younger clients make moves that can significantly lower their expected RMDs.
Older RMD Age Adds Flexibility
The Secure Act of 2019 increased the RMD age from 70.5 to 72 years, and the Secure 2.0 Act subsequently increased the age again — to 73 — starting in 2023. Under Secure 2.0, this age is to increase once more in 2033.
"It's set to go all the way out to 75 eventually, so people may be able to push off that date at which they need to take those distributions," Benz explained. "There are reasons that people really like to delay those RMDs. One is that RMDs can push them into a higher tax bracket, and that can cause some other knock-on tax effects."
As Benz points out, those adjustments to the starting date offer potentially powerful tax-planning opportunities between one's retirement age, which could be in the late 50s or early 60s, and the RMD age.
"That provides an opportunity to do IRA conversions in that period when your income tax rate may be at a low ebb relative to what it will be once those RMDs come online," she explained.
Lower Penalties for Missed RMDs
Another factor affecting retirees this year is that the penalties for missing RMDs have gone down, again thanks to the Secure 2.0 Act.