He is 61, part of the first Gen X wave born around 1965, and the retirement he is walking into looks nothing like his parents’. They had pensions. Steady monthlyHe is 61, part of the first Gen X wave born around 1965, and the retirement he is walking into looks nothing like his parents’. They had pensions. Steady monthly

He’s 61 and Gen X, Retiring Without the Pension. The 401(k) He Built Is Setting Up an RMD Tax Torpedo at 75.

2026/07/09 22:02
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The post He’s 61 and Gen X, Retiring Without the Pension. The 401(k) He Built Is Setting Up an RMD Tax Torpedo at 75. appeared first on 24/7 Wall St..

  • At 75, a $500,000 traditional 401(k) untouched through retirement will force an RMD large enough to push benefits into taxation and trigger Medicare premium increases two years.
  • Converting 401(k) chunks to Roth in the 60s while delaying Social Security until full retirement age shrinks future RMDs and locks in higher benefits.
  • Are you ahead, or behind on retirement? SmartAsset's free tool can match you with a financial advisor in minutes to help you answer that today. Each advisor has been carefully vetted, and must act in your best interests. Don't waste another minute; learn more here.

He is 61, part of the first Gen X wave born around 1965, and the retirement he is walking into looks nothing like his parents’. They had pensions. Steady monthly checks arrived whether the market cooperated or not. He has a traditional 401(k) with a healthy balance built over decades, exactly as he was told to do when pensions disappeared from private employers in the 1980s and 1990s. That balance is his win. It is also the setup for a tax problem his parents never faced.

A version of his story shows up frequently in early-retirement forums: someone in their low 60s with several hundred thousand or more in a traditional 401(k), a Social Security estimate they have not yet claimed, and a nagging sense that the tax bill in their mid-70s will be worse than today. That instinct is correct, and it has a name.

Why the 401(k) generation faces a bill pensioners didn’t

A pension is taxable income, but it is a flat stream. It does not grow inside a tax-deferred account for another 15 years while compounding into a larger forced withdrawal. A traditional 401(k) does exactly that. Every dollar he did not pay tax on during his working years is still owed to the IRS, and the government eventually insists on collecting.

The collection mechanism is the required minimum distribution (RMD). For anyone born in 1960 or later, which covers every Gen Xer, RMDs begin at age 75, not 73. He has roughly 14 years before the first one hits. That is the window that matters.

The average Gen X 401(k) balance sits around $217,500, and 15-year continuous Gen X savers average $589,400. Left untouched and growing, a balance of that size can produce a first-year RMD large enough to push a retiree into a higher bracket the moment it starts, whether he needs the cash or not.

How Social Security gets pulled into the blast radius

Social Security benefits are taxed based on provisional income, a formula that adds half the benefit to other taxable income. Once that number crosses relatively modest thresholds set in the 1980s and never indexed to inflation, more of the benefit becomes taxable. Up to 85% of the benefit can be pulled into taxable income. That 85% figure is the share of the check that becomes taxable, not a tax rate on it.

A large RMD at 75 is ordinary income. It lifts provisional income and drags Social Security into taxation. The same spike raises Modified Adjusted Gross Income (MAGI), which can trigger higher Medicare Part B and Part D premiums through the Income-Related Monthly Adjustment Amount (IRMAA). IRMAA looks back two years, so a spike at 75 shows up as a higher Medicare bill at age 77. A pension is taxable too, but it does not escalate with an account balance the way an RMD does.

The 2026 Social Security COLA of 2.8% nudges benefits up this year, which is welcome, but every increase also pushes more retirees closer to those frozen taxability thresholds.

The 14-year window he actually controls

His 60s and early 70s are the silent years before Social Security, RMDs, and IRMAA converge. That gap is the planning window. Two levers tend to matter most:

  1. Partial Roth conversions in low-income years. Moving chunks of the traditional 401(k) into a Roth before RMDs begin means paying tax now at a known rate rather than at whatever bracket the RMD forces later. Roth balances have no lifetime RMDs and do not count toward provisional income.
  2. Sequencing Social Security and withdrawals deliberately. Delaying Social Security while spending down the traditional balance in his late 60s can shrink the future RMD and increase the eventual benefit. Claiming early and letting the 401(k) grow does the opposite.

Neither move is one-size-fits-all. A conversion done in a high-income year can cost more than the RMD it prevents, and delayed claiming only pays off if longevity cooperates. This is where personalized planning earns its keep.

What to hold onto

A large traditional 401(k) is a good problem to have. It exists because he did what the system asked after pensions faded. The task now is awareness: the tax structure his parents’ pensions did not carry is baked into his account, and the years between retirement and 75 are when he has the most control over how loud the torpedo gets. Small decisions made in his early 60s tend to matter more than large ones made at 74. Individual circumstances vary, and the right sequence depends on details a good tax professional or fee-only planner can see that a general article cannot.

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The post He’s 61 and Gen X, Retiring Without the Pension. The 401(k) He Built Is Setting Up an RMD Tax Torpedo at 75. appeared first on 24/7 Wall St..

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