We’re in our 70s. How do we withdraw $6 million from our retirement fund without getting killed on taxes? – atlantisthemes

We’re in our 70s. How do we withdraw $6 million from our retirement fund without getting killed on taxes? - atlantisthemes

“What’s my best move to minimize capital gains? Buy another property or an island?” (Photo subjects are models.)

“What’s my best move to minimize capital gains? Buy another property or an island?” (Photo subjects are models.) – Getty Images/iStockphoto

We are both in our mid-70s and retired. We’re collecting Social Security and pensions — meaning we can live comfortably. We are in fairly good health and keeping active. Our house is worth around $725,000 with no mortgage. We have no debt as we pay off credit bills each month.

I have $600,000 in my IRA, while my wife has $300,000 in hers. We have approximately $6 million in stock investments, all of which are long-term. Some of the stocks pay dividends totaling around $90,000 annually. Our son is well off in his job but works from home.

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  • We’re in our 70s. How do we withdraw $6 million from our retirement fund without getting killed on taxes?

I know that selling my stocks will incur substantial capital gains, but I also don’t want to lose the substantial gains I’ve made. I know that I can contribute to a charity and reduce my tax liability but not that much. What’s my best move to minimize capital gains?

Buy another property or an island?

Comfortably Retired

Related: My mother has dementia. If I force her into memory care without a conservatorship, would that be considered kidnapping?

You are, to employ a cliche, a victim of your own retirement success.

You are, to employ a cliche, a victim of your own retirement success. – MarketWatch illustration

You are in the third stage of your retirement planning. Accumulation. Tick! Preservation and diversification. Tick! And now — drum roll — distribution. The 20% long-term capital gains cap for 2025 is $533,401 for a single person or $600,051 for a married couple filing jointly. Be aware of a net investment income tax that kicks in if your income exceeds $250,000 for married people, filing jointly.

You are, to employ a cliche, a victim of your own retirement success. You have invested so prodigiously that you have left yourself with a whopper of a tax bill if you were to withdraw large sums now. Your $6 million will never run out. But you’ve made it to your 70s in relatively good health, I assume, and you will now be planning your financial legacy. That may include setting up a trust for your son.

If you predecease your wife or if she predeceases you, you/she will receive a step-up in basis on some/all of your investments, meaning that their appreciation will be calculated on the date of death. If you live in a community-property state (Arizona, California, Idaho, Louisiana, New Mexico, Nevada, Texas, Washington and Wisconsin) you receive a step-up in basis on both of your respective portions.