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3 changes in Secure 2.0 for 401(k), IRA required minimum distributions


President Joe Biden signed a $1.7 trillion legislative package on Dec. 29, 2022 that has several updates for retirement savers.

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1. Raising the RMD age to 73 (and eventually 75)

Retirement plan changes in the omnibus spending bill

Delaying the RMD starting age “overwhelmingly” benefits the wealthy, said Jeffrey Levine, a certified financial planner and certified public accountant based in St. Louis. Such savers are disproportionately the ones who can afford not to tap their retirement accounts to fund their lifestyles.

Yet deferring the RMD age can benefit many savers from a financial-planning perspective, too.

For example, it may help temporarily reduce premiums for Medicare Part B and D, Levine said. Medicare premiums are tied to income, and distributions from pre-tax retirement accounts raise a taxpayer’s income; delaying that bump to annual income can therefore keep premiums lower for longer.

2. Eliminating RMDs from a Roth 401(k)

However, there are other considerations relative to keeping your money in a 401(k) or rolling it over. For example, investment options, fees and service level may be better in one versus the other, Levine said, depending on the quality of your workplace retirement plan.

And there may be more Roth assets in workplace plans going forward due to another change allowing employers to pay a matching contribution to a Roth versus pre-tax account.

3. Reducing RMD tax penalties

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