The Average 65-Year-Old Has $267,900. Here’s the Tax Bracket Surprise Waiting at 73.
Quick Read
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Baby Boomers average $267,900 in workplace retirement plans, but every untaxed dollar faces mandatory IRS withdrawals starting at age 73.
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Combined RMDs and Social Security income can push a retired couple from the 12% to 22% tax bracket in a single year.
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Roth conversions, early pre-tax withdrawals, and QCDs up to $108,000 annually give retirees three tools to shrink future RMD tax bills.
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The average American in the 65-to-69 age bracket has roughly $251,400 saved in their 401(k), according to Fidelity’s most recent analysis. Baby Boomers as a generation are sitting on slightly more, with an average balance of $267,900 in workplace plans and an average IRA balance of $257,002. On paper, that looks like a workable nest egg heading into retirement. The problem is what happens eight years later, when the IRS stops letting that money sit untouched.
The Balance Looks Fine. The Tax Treatment Is the Catch.
Every dollar in a traditional 401(k) or IRA has never been taxed. The government deferred the bill rather than passing it. Under current rules, required minimum distributions begin at age 73, and the first withdrawal is due by April 1 of the year after a retiree turns 73. The distribution is calculated using an IRS life expectancy table, and the amount lands on the tax return as ordinary income, whether the retiree needs the cash or not.
This is the tax consequence that arrives at 73. A retiree who spent years thinking of their 401(k) as “their money” discovers that a portion must be withdrawn and taxed on a schedule the IRS sets.
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Where the 2026 Brackets Actually Bite
The 2026 federal tax brackets tax a single filer at 12% on income over $12,400, 22% on income over $50,400, and 24% on income over $105,700. For married couples filing jointly, the 22% bracket starts at $100,800 and the 24% bracket at $211,400. The standard deduction for joint filers is $32,200, and $16,100 for singles. Consider a 73-year-old couple with $500,000 combined in pre-tax accounts, plus Social Security.




