Retirement savings moves that cut your tax bill

Take advantage of catch-up contributions. Workers who are at least 50 years old can defer an extra $6,000 into their 401(k) savings each year, reducing their taxable income, said Kevin Meehan, a certified financial planner and the regional president of Wealth Enhancement Group in Itasca, Illinois.

You can also make catch-up contributions of an extra $1,000 into an IRA, which may be deductible.

“They have a catch-up provision for a reason,” he said. “Most people need to catch up.”

Diversify your savings. “Especially when you’re younger, look at where you’re putting your money,” said Meehan. “If it’s all in your 401(k), you have no tax diversity [in retirement].”

Ideally, you’d put retirement savings in both pretax accounts (which are taxed on withdrawal) and Roth accounts (contributions are made with after-tax dollars, but you can withdraw the money tax-free), as well as a taxable brokerage account.

Having a mix can help you better control your taxable income in retirement, he said, potentially keeping you into a lower tax bracket.

Consider an HSA. Health savings accounts have a triple tax advantage — you can deduct contributions, and account funds grow tax-free and can be withdrawn tax-free for qualified medical expenses. (You’ll have plenty of those in retirement; an estimated $260,000 for a 65-year-old couple retiring this year, according to Fidelity.)

“Health-care expenses, just like taxes, just keep on coming,” Meehan said.

moves retirement savings 2016-12-28

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