Paying Taxes on Social Security Benefits: 3 Pitfalls for Retirees to Avoid in 2025

10 hours ago

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Social Security is one of the foundations of most Americans' retirement planning. In an annual poll from Gallup, 60% of retirees said Social Security is a major source of income, and another 28% said it played a minor role in their budget. Keeping as much of your Social Security benefits as you can is essential for many households. That means keeping taxes on your Social Security income low.

One of the biggest challenges for seniors collecting Social Security can be balancing different retirement tax strategies with the effect on Social Security taxes. Unfortunately, Social Security tax rules can be very complicated, and keeping Social Security taxes low is often in conflict with other retirement tax strategies.

If you're not careful, you could end up with a major surprise when your taxes come due.

Social Security card, eyeglasses, and pen atop a financial statement and a $100 bill.
Image source: Getty Images.

Before we dive into how to avoid taxes on Social Security, you'll need a basic understanding of how Social Security benefits get taxed in the first place. The federal government uses a metric called "combined income" to determine how much of your Social Security, if any, is subject to income taxes. Combined income is equal to the sum of half your Social Security benefits, your adjusted gross income, and any non-taxable interest income.

If your combined income exceeds certain thresholds, a portion of your benefits become taxable as detailed in the table below.

Taxable portion of Social Security

Single Filer

Joint Filer

0%

Less than $25,000

Less than $32,000

Up to 50%

$25,000 to $34,000

$32,000 to $44,000

Up to 85%

More than $34,000

More than $44,000

Data source: Social Security Administration.

If those thresholds seem extremely low, that's because they haven't changed since Congress set them over 30 years ago. There's no inflation adjustment, so you must keep your combined income as low as possible every year to avoid additional taxes on Social Security. Since the annual COLA keeps increasing benefits, that's becoming more and more difficult.

Fortunately, many retirees have a lot of control over the rest of their income, which typically comes in the form of retirement account withdrawals and capital gains. But trying to use some standard tax strategies with both of those income sources could lead to more of your Social Security income becoming taxable, offsetting some or all of the benefits.

Long-term capital gains get a preferred tax bracket compared to other sources of income. The taxes on gains on the sale of securities held for longer than one year can be as low as 0%.


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