For many retirees, the first year of Social Security feels predictable. The checks arrive, the cost-of-living adjustment (COLA) shows up, and Medicare premiums are easy enough to spot. Then year two rolls around, and suddenly, more of that income may be taxed than expected.
That change usually comes from taxes, not Social Security itself. A full year of senior benefits, along with withdrawals or investment income, can push total income past IRS thresholds that did not apply before.
Here’s why that change often appears after year two, and what to review before it affects your tax bill.
Find Out: 14 benefits seniors are entitled to but often forget to claim
How Social Security benefits become taxable
Social Security is not automatically tax-free. Whether you owe federal tax depends on your combined income, which includes adjusted gross income (AGI), tax-exempt interest, and half of your Social Security benefits.
Once that combined total crosses certain thresholds, a portion of your benefits becomes taxable.
For single filers:
-
No tax applies below $25,000
-
Between $25,000 and $34,000, up to 50% of benefits may be taxable
-
Above $34,000, up to 85% may be taxable
For married couples filing jointly:
-
No tax applies below $32,000
-
Between $32,000 and $44,000, up to 50% may be taxable
-
Above $44,000, up to 85% may be taxable
It’s important to note that Social Security isn’t taxing 85% of your benefit at your full tax rate. Instead, up to 85% of the benefit is included in taxable income, then taxed at your marginal rate.
The catch is that these thresholds haven’t been adjusted for inflation. Over time, it takes less additional income to push retirees into the taxable range, which is why this issue so often surfaces after the first year of retirement.
Who really has the cheapest auto insurance in your area? Check your zip code here.
Why it often shows up in year two
In year one of retirement, your income picture is often uneven. You might claim Social Security partway through the year, take smaller withdrawals while you get your budget dialed in, or still have a few months of work income mixed in.
By the second year, the numbers usually stabilize. You have a full 12 months of Social Security on the books, and your other income sources are more likely to be running at a steady pace. When you plug those totals into the combined income formula, it’s easier to cross the thresholds that trigger taxes.
Advertisement
The result is that Social Security can feel like it suddenly became taxable, even though the rules didn’t change. You simply reached the point where more of your benefit is counted as taxable income.
Triggers that push benefits into the taxable range
Once retirement income is fully in place, a few common changes can push your combined income past the thresholds.
Required minimum distributions (RMDs), for instance, are one of the biggest factors. Starting at age 73, withdrawals from traditional IRAs and 401(k)s become mandatory, and those distributions count as ordinary income. Even a moderate RMD can be enough to make more of your Social Security taxable.
Full-year Social Security benefits can also make a difference. If you started benefits partway through your first year, your second tax return may include a full 12 months of payments, which means a larger amount is included in the combined income calculation.
Other retirement income often plays a role as well. Pension payments, investment income, larger portfolio withdrawals, or even a one-time capital gain can push your total income higher than expected.
Individually, these changes may seem modest. But together, they can move your combined income past the thresholds, and that’s when the Social Security tax surprise tends to appear.
How income spikes can raise Medicare later
Taxes aren’t the only year-two change that can affect what you keep from your Social Security check. Higher Medicare premiums can also show up later than expected.
Medicare uses a two-year lookback to set income-related surcharges, known as IRMAA. That means a higher-income year, such as one with a large withdrawal, capital gain, or business payout, can lead to higher Part B and Part D premiums two years later.
When those surcharges kick in, they’re usually deducted directly from your Social Security payment. The result isn’t a lower benefit, but it does reduce the amount that reaches your bank account, often without much warning.
Bottom line
By the second year of retirement, more income sources tend to be in play at the same time. A full year of benefits, along with withdrawals, investments, or other income, can push more of your Social Security into the taxable range.
Reviewing your combined income early, planning for withholding or estimated taxes, and keeping an eye on one-time income spikes can help you avoid surprising retirement mistakes. A clear view of how these pieces fit together makes your retirement income easier to manage and more predictable going forward.
More from FinanceBuzz: