Most-Overlooked Tax Breaks for Retirees and People Over 65 (2024)

Most-Overlooked Tax Breaks for Retirees and People Over 65 (1)

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Most-Overlooked Tax Breaks for Retirees and People Over 65 (2)

By Kevin McCormally

last updated

Contributions from

Katelyn Washington

For retirees over age 65, it's more important than ever to take full advantage of every available tax break. That's especially true if you're on a fixed income. After all, some retirees have to stretch out their retirement savings to help cover finances for the rest of their lives.

But holding on to your money during retirement is easier said than done. That's partly because of how different types of retirement income are taxed. As a result, retirees, who sometimes miss valuable tax-saving opportunities, must pay close attention to their tax situation. Learning about common but often overlooked tax breaks for retirees over age 65 can help.

Related: IRS Tax Breaks That Get Better With Age

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Extra standard deduction for people over 65

When you turn 65, the IRS offers you a tax benefit in the form of an extrastandard deduction for people age 65 and older. For example, a single 64-year-old taxpayer can claim a standard deduction of $13,850 on their 2023 tax return. But a single 65-year-old taxpayer will get a $15,700 standard deduction for the 2023 tax year.

The extra $1,850 will make it more likely that you'll take the standard deduction on your 2023 return rather than itemize. (The extra standard deduction amount is $1,850 for 2024).

If you’re married and one or both spouses are age 65 or older, you also get a bigger standard deduction than taxpayers under age 65 do. If only one spouse is 65 or older, the extra amount for 2023 is $1,550 and $3,000 if both spouses are 65 or older.

Related: The Extra Standard Deduction for People Age 65 and Older

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IRA contribution from a spouse

Retiring doesn't necessarily mean an end to the chance to put money into an IRA.

Generally, you must have earned income to contribute to an IRA. However, if you're married and your spouse is still working, they can generally contribute up to $6,500 to atraditionalorRothIRA that you own. The 2024 IRA contribution limit jumps to $7,000. If your spouse has enough earned income to fund the contribution to your account (and any deposits to his or her own), you are eligible for this tax benefit.

There's an important limitation to keep in mind, though. Total combined contributions to your IRA and your spouse's IRA, cannot exceed $13,000 for the 2023 tax year if only one of you is age 50 or older. The total contributions cannot exceed $15,000 if both of you are at least 50 years old ($16,000 for 2024).

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Medicare premiums tax deduction

If you become self-employed after you retiree (e.g., become a consultant) you can deduct the premiums you pay for Medicare Part B and Part D, plus the cost of supplemental Medicare (Medigap) policies or the cost of a Medicare Advantage plan.

Self-employed retirees can deduct these expenses whether or not they itemize. However, you cannot claim this deduction if you're eligible to be covered under an employer-subsidized health plan offered by either your employer or your spouse's employer (if they have a job that offers family medical coverage).

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Tax credit for low-income older adults

To be eligible for the tax credit for low-income older adults, you must be a "qualified individual" and pass two income tests. Generally, you're a qualified individual if at the end of the tax year you meet one of the following:

  • You were age 65 or older.
  • You were under age 65, you retired on permanent and total disability, and you received taxable disability income.

The first income test is based on your adjusted gross income (AGI).

  • If you file your tax return using the single, head-of-household, or qualifying widow(er) filing status, your AGI must be less than $17,500.
  • If you're married and file a joint return, but only one spouse qualifies for the credit, your AGI can't reach $20,000.
  • Married couples filing jointly must have an AGI below $25,000 if both spouses qualify. Finally, your AGI must be lower than $12,500 if you're married, filing a separate return, and lived apart from your spouse for the entire year.

The second income test is based on the combined total of your non-taxable Social Security, pension, annuity, and disability income. For single, head-of-household, and qualifying widow(er) taxpayers, the combined income must be less than $5,000.

The same income limit also applies to joint filers if only one spouse qualifies for the credit. If both spouses on a joint return qualify for the credit, the income limit is $7,500. For married people filing a separate return who didn't live with their spouse during the year, the limit is $3,750.

If, after all of that, you determine that you're eligible for the credit, then you may be able to lower your tax bill. However, calculating the credit can be complicated. That's why the IRS will calculate the credit amount for you. To take them up on the offer, follow the steps outlined in theinstructions to Schedule R.

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Timing tax payments

Although we think of Tax Day being on or around April 15, taxes are due as income is earned, and employers withhold taxes from our paychecks. When you retire, you break out of that system: it's up to you to ensure the IRS gets its due on time. If you wait to send a check until the following year, i.e., when your tax return is due, you could be in for a surprise in the form of tax penalties and interest.

So, you have two ways to pay your taxes on time:

Withholding. Withholding isn't only for paychecks. If you receive regular payments from a401(k) planor company pension, the payers will withhold tax — unless you tell them not to. The same goes for withdrawals from atraditional IRA. In retirement, it's generally up to you whether part of the money will be proactively withdrawn for the IRS.

With 401(k)s, pensions, and traditional IRA withdrawals, taxes will be withheld unless you file aForm W-4P to block withholding. For periodic payments (i.e., payments made in installments at regular intervals over more than one year), withholding is calculated the same way as withholding from wages. When it comes to traditional IRA distributions or other non-periodic payments, withholding will be at a flat 10% rate, unless you request a different rate or block withholding altogether. However, non-IRA distributions that can be rolled over tax-free to an IRA or other eligible retirement plan are generally subject to mandatory 20% withholding.

Things are a little different withSocial Security benefits. There won’t be any withholding unless you specifically ask for it by filing aForm W-4V. You can opt to withhold on Social Security at a 7%, 10%, 12%, or 22% withholding rate.

Withholding isn't necessarily a bad thing, as it stretches your tax bill over the entire year. It might also make life easier if you would otherwise have to make quarterly estimated tax payments.

Quarterly estimated tax payments. The alternative to withholding is to make quarterlyestimated tax payments. You need to make estimated payments if you owe more than $1,000 in tax for the year above and beyond what's covered by withholding. Otherwise, you could face a penalty for underpayment of taxes.

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Avoid the pension payout trap

There's an exception to the general rule that it's up to you whether taxes will be withheld from payments from pensions, annuities, IRAs, and other retirement plans. If you get a lump-sum payment or other rollover distribution from a company plan, you could fall into a pension payout trap.

If you take a distribution from your pension, annuity, IRA, or other retirement plan, the company must withhold a flat 20% for the IRS. That’s true even if you plan to roll over the money into an IRA. Even if you complete the rollover within the sixty days required by law, the IRS will still hold onto the 20% until you file a tax return for the year and request a refund. What can make it more confusing is how can you roll over 100% of the lump sum if the IRS is holding onto 20% of it. Failure to come up with the extra money for the IRA would mean that amount would be considered a taxable distribution. That would, in turn, trigger an immediate tax bill and reduce the amount in your IRA.

Fortunately, there's a way around that outcome.Ask your employer to send the money directly to a rollover IRA. If the check is made out to your IRA, and not to you personally, there's no withholding.

Even if you intend to spend some of the money right away, your best bet is still to ask your employer to make the direct IRA transfer. Then, when you withdraw funds from the IRA, it's up to you whether there will be tax withholding.

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The RMD workaround

Required minimum distributions(RMDs) weren't required a couple of years ago — but they're back. Fortunately, though, retirees taking RMDs from their traditional IRAs may have an extra option for meeting the pay-as-you-go demand.

If you don't need the RMD to live on during the year, you could wait until December to take the money. Ask your IRA sponsor to hold back a large portion of the distribution for the IRS — enough to cover yourestimated taxon both the RMD and your other taxable income.

Although estimated tax payments are considered to have been made when you send the checks, amounts withheld from IRA distributions are considered paid throughout the year, even if they're made in a lump sum at year-end.

So, if your RMD is large enough to cover your tax bill, you can keep your cash in your IRA for most of the year, and still avoid the underpayment penalty.

Related: One Key Rule for Understanding Your 2023 RMD

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Give money to charity

Once you reach age 70½, there's a tax-friendly way to make charitable donations even if you don't itemize. It's called a qualified charitable distribution (or QCD for short). With a QCD, you can transfer up to $100,000 each year from your traditional IRAs directly to charity.

If you're married, your spouse can transfer an additional $100,000 to charity from their IRAs. The transfer is excluded from taxable income, and it counts toward your required minimum distribution. That's a win-win!

But if you do itemize your deductions, you cannot also claim the tax-free transfer as a charitable deduction on Schedule A.

More: The Charitable Donations Tax Deduction

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Give money to your family

Few Americans have to worry about the federal estate tax. That’s because the IRS lifetime gift tax exclusion allows you to pass up to $12.92 million to heirs for the 2023 tax year without being subject to estate tax. (Married couples can pass on double that amount.) The 2024 estate tax exemption jumps to $13.61 million.

But, if the estate tax might be in your future, be sure to take advantage of the annual gift tax exclusion.This rule lets you give up to a specificed amount annually to any number of people without worrying about the gift tax ($17,000 in 2023, $18,000 in 2024). This year, your spouse can also give $18,000 to the same person, making the tax-free gift $36,000.

For example, if you are married and have three married children and six grandchildren, you and your spouse can give up to $36,000 in 2024 this year to each of your kids, their spouses, and all the grandchildren without having to file a gift tax return.

More: What's the 2023 Gift Tax Exclusion?

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Tax-free profit from a vacation home

To qualify for tax-free profit from the sale of a home, the home must be your principal residence and you must have owned and lived in it for at least two of the five years leading up to the sale. But there is a way to potentially capture tax-free profit from the sale of aformervacation home.

Let's say you sell the family homestead and cash in on the tax break that makes up to $250,000 in profit tax-free ($500,000 if you're married and file jointly). You then move into a vacation home that you've owned for 25 years. As long as you make that house your principal residence for at least two years, part of the profit on the sale will be tax-free.

The $250,000/$500,00 exclusion doesn't apply to any profit that is allocable to the time (after 2008) that a home is not used as your principal residence.

For example, assume you bought a vacation home in 2001, converted it to your principal residence in 2015, and sold it in 2022. The post-2008 vacation home use is seven of the twenty years that you owned the property. So, thirty-five percent (8 ÷ 20) of the profit would be taxable at capital gains rates. The other sixty-five percent would qualify for the $250,000/$500,000 exclusion.

Related: Capital Gains Tax on Real Estate and Home Sales

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Kevin McCormally

Chief Content Officer, Kiplinger Washington Editors

McCormally retired in 2018 after more than 40 years at Kiplinger. He joined Kiplinger in 1977 as a reporter specializing in taxes, retirement, credit and other personal finance issues. He is the author and editor of many books, helped develop and improve popular tax-preparation software programs, and has written and appeared in several educational videos. In 2005, he was named Editorial Director of The Kiplinger Washington Editors, responsible for overseeing all of our publications and Web site. At the time, Editor in Chief Knight Kiplinger called McCormally "the watchdog of editorial quality, integrity and fairness in all that we do." In 2015, Kevin was named Chief Content Officer and Senior Vice President.

With contributions from

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Most-Overlooked Tax Breaks for Retirees and People Over 65 (2024)

FAQs

Are there any federal tax breaks for retirees? ›

Once you turn 50, and especially after age 65, you can qualify for extra tax breaks. Older people get a bigger standard deduction, and they can earn more before they have to file a tax return at all. Workers over 50 can also defer or avoid taxes on more money using retirement and health savings accounts.

What is the new standard deduction for seniors over 65? ›

If you are 65 or older AND blind, the extra standard deduction is: $3,700 if you are single or filing as head of household. $3,000 per qualifying individual if you are married, filing jointly or separately.

What tax deductions can seniors claim? ›

Here are the top 10 tax deductions for seniors and how you can take advantage of them.
  • Increased Standard Deduction. ...
  • Different Filing Threshold. ...
  • Social Security Tax Exemption. ...
  • Business and Hobby Deduction. ...
  • Medical Expense Deduction. ...
  • Elderly or Disabled Tax Credit. ...
  • Charitable Deductions. ...
  • Retirement Plan Contribution Benefits.

What is the IRS loophole to protect retirement savings? ›

Variable life insurance tax benefits are essentially an IRS loophole of section 7702 of the tax code. This allows you to put cash (after-tax money) into a policy that is invested in the stock market or bonds and grows tax-deferred.

How do I get the $16728 Social Security bonus? ›

There's really no “bonus” that retirees can collect. The Social Security Administration (SSA) uses a specific formula based on your lifetime earnings to determine your benefit amount.

At what age do seniors stop paying federal taxes? ›

At What Age Can You Stop Filing Taxes? Taxes aren't determined by age, so you will never age out of paying taxes. Basically, if you're 65 or older, you have to file a return for tax year 2023 (which is due in 2024) if your gross income is $15,700 or higher.

Can I get a tax refund if my only income is Social Security? ›

You would not be required to file a tax return. But you might want to file a return, because even though you are not required to pay taxes on your Social Security, you may be able to get a refund of any money withheld from your paycheck for taxes.

Does Social Security count as income? ›

You must pay taxes on up to 85% of your Social Security benefits if you file a: Federal tax return as an “individual” and your “combined income” exceeds $25,000. Joint return, and you and your spouse have “combined income” of more than $32,000.

What can I itemize on my taxes? ›

If you itemize, you can deduct these expenses:
  • Bad debts.
  • Canceled debt on home.
  • Capital losses.
  • Donations to charity.
  • Gains from sale of your home.
  • Gambling losses.
  • Home mortgage interest.
  • Income, sales, real estate and personal property taxes.

What is the federal elderly tax credit? ›

Generally, the elderly or disabled tax credit ranges between $3,750 and $7,500; it is 15% of the initial amount, less the total of nontaxable social security benefits and certain other nontaxable pensions, annuities, or disability benefits you've received.

Can a retired person deduct health insurance premiums? ›

Medical and Dental Expenses

Fortunately, some of these expenses are deductible if you itemize your personal deductions. These include health insurance premiums (including Medicare premiums), long-term care insurance premiums, prescription drugs, nursing home care, and most other out-of-pocket healthcare expenses.

Can retirees deduct Medicare premiums? ›

Are Medicare premiums tax deductible? Yes, your Medicare premiums can be tax deductible as a medical expense if you itemize deductions on your federal income tax return. You can only deduct medical expenses after they add up to more than 7.5 percent of your adjusted gross income (AGI).

How can I generate tax free income in retirement? ›

5 Ways to Get Tax-Free Retirement Income
  1. Roth IRA or Roth 401(k) – Roth IRAs and Roth 401(k)s have tax-free qualified withdrawals at retirement since taxes are paid on contributions.
  2. Municipal Bonds Income – A fixed-income investment that generates interest payments that are typically exempt from federal taxes.

Does the IRS monitor savings accounts? ›

The IRS probably already knows about many of your financial accounts, and the IRS can get information on how much is there. But, in reality, the IRS rarely digs deeper into your bank and financial accounts unless you're being audited or the IRS is collecting back taxes from you.

How to reduce or minimize taxes on your retirement income? ›

  1. Buy/hold assets that reinvest income automatically without triggering a taxable event. ...
  2. Defer taking income such as 401k distributions.
  3. Prepay taxes with a Roth.
  4. Tax free municipal bonds.
  5. Defer taking social security until 67 or 70.
  6. Move to a tax haven country.
  7. Transfer assets into trusts.
Oct 15, 2023

What federal taxes do you pay on retirement income? ›

How some income in retirement is taxed. Social Security Benefits: Depending on provisional income, up to 85% of Social Security benefits can be taxed by the IRS at ordinary income tax rates. Pensions: Pension payments are generally fully taxable as ordinary income unless you made after-tax contributions.

What are the tax changes for seniors in 2024? ›

Each joint filer 65 and over can increase the standard deduction by $1,550 apiece, for a total of $3,100 if both joint filers are 65-plus. In total, a married couple 65 or older would have a standard deduction of $32,300.

How much money can a 70 year old make without paying taxes? ›

For retirees 65 and older, here's when you can stop filing taxes: Single retirees who earn less than $14,250. Married retirees filing jointly, who earn less than $26,450 if one spouse is 65 or older or who earn less than $27,800 if both spouses are age 65 or older. Married retirees filing separately who earn less than ...

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