
The Short Version
A Roth conversion strategy means moving money from a pre-tax IRA to a Roth IRA, paying taxes now so future withdrawals are tax-free.
Done right, it can:
- Reduce lifetime taxes
- Lower future RMDs
- Avoid IRMAA surprises
- Create tax-free income later
Done wrong… it can spike your tax bill for no good reason.
The Problem Nobody Talks About
You did what you were told:
- Maxed your IRA
- Deferred taxes
- Let it grow
Now you’ve got a healthy retirement account.
And a future tax problem.
Because eventually:
- RMDs force withdrawals
- Social Security becomes taxable
- Medicare premiums creep up
The strategy that helped you build wealth can quietly make retirement more expensive.
What a Roth Conversion Actually Is
No jargon:
- Traditional IRA → taxed later
- Roth IRA → taxed now
- Conversion → choosing when to pay
You’re not avoiding taxes.
You’re deciding whether to pay them:
- On your terms now
- Or the IRS’s terms later
The Core Idea: Pay Taxes When They’re Cheapest
This is the whole game.
Not:
“Should I do a Roth conversion?”
But:
“Will I pay more tax later than I would today?”
If yes…
You’ve got a case.
The Window Most People Miss
The Gap Years
After Retirement to before:
- Social Security
- RMDs
This is your planning window.
Lower income = lower tax brackets
This may be the single best opportunity you’ll ever have to reduce lifetime taxes.
How Much Should You Convert?
This is the question everyone actually cares about.
The simple framework:
“Fill up your current tax bracket—but don’t spill into the next one.”
Example (Conceptual):
- You’re in the 22% bracket
- The top of that bracket is ~$X (varies by year)
- You convert just enough to stay inside it
Result:
- You lock in a known rate
- Avoid jumping to 24%+
- Stay in control
The Mistake People Make
They think:
“If conversions are good… more must be better.”
Nope.
That’s how you:
- Jump brackets
- Trigger IRMAA
- Undo the benefit
This is a precision move, not a sledgehammer.
A More Realistic Example
Let’s say:
- $1M traditional IRA
- Retired at 65
- No Social Security yet
- Living off brokerage
You decide to:
Convert $80K/year for 8 years
What happens:
- You systematically reduce your IRA
- Future RMDs shrink
- Your taxable income later drops
- You create a growing Roth bucket
Now compare that to doing nothing:
- Larger RMDs
- Higher tax brackets later
- Less flexibility
The Trade-Off (Be Honest About This)
Roth conversions are not free.
You are:
- Paying taxes now
- Reducing current liquidity
So the real question becomes:
“Is paying 22% today better than paying 24–32% later?”
Often the answer is yes.
Not always.
Where This Interacts With Everything Else
This isn’t a silo decision.
It directly affects:
- RMDs → smaller later
- IRMAA → may increase short-term, decrease long-term
- Social Security taxation → potentially reduced later
This is why planning across years—not just this year—matters.
Common Mistakes (Where This Goes Sideways)
- Converting too much in one year
- Ignoring IRMAA thresholds
- Paying taxes from the IRA itself
- Not coordinating with spouse income
- Treating it like a one-time move
A Roth conversion is a strategy, not an event.
Who This Is Best For
- Large pre-tax balances
- Early retirees
- People expecting higher future tax rates
- Anyone who values flexibility
- If you’re getting a late start on retirement planning
Who Should Be More Careful
- Already in high tax brackets
- Short time horizon
- Tight cash flow
Reader Question
“I’ve always been told to defer taxes as long as possible. Why would I pay them now?”
Because “later” isn’t always cheaper.
If your future tax rate is higher than today’s, deferring taxes can cost you more.
The Bottom Line
Roth conversions aren’t about beating the IRS.
They’re about not letting the IRS dictate your retirement.
Do nothing, and taxes happen to you.
Plan ahead, and you decide when and how much.
What to Do Next
- Estimate your current tax bracket
- Look at your IRA balance
- Identify your gap years
- Run a simple multi-year plan
Then ask:
“Am I choosing my tax rate… or inheriting it later?”
One Last Thought
Out here on the Texas flats, timing matters.
Fish the wrong tide, you might still catch something—but you’ll work a whole lot harder for it.
Roth conversions are about fishing the right tide.




