IRA to Roth Conversion Tax Calculator 2025 – Bracket & IRMAA Planning

Estimate taxes on a 2025 IRA→Roth conversion. Model bracket stacking, standard/itemized deduction, and potential IRMAA impacts.

IRA to Roth Conversion Tax Calculator 2025 – Bracket & IRMAA Planning

Introduction

Roth conversions can move pre‑tax money into tax‑free Roth. This guide estimates 2025 taxes on conversions and flags IRMAA/credit impacts.


Inputs

  • Expected taxable income and deductions
  • Conversion amount
  • Filing status and state

Output

  • Added tax due from stacking conversion into brackets
  • Potential IRMAA and phase‑out considerations

Tips

  • Fill lower brackets in low‑income years
  • Coordinate with Social Security, capital gains, and credits
  • Consider partial conversions over multiple years

Related Tools


CTA: Plan Your Conversion

Enter your income and conversion amount to estimate taxes and choose a bracket‑aware strategy.


Conversion Strategy Playbook (Illustrative)

  • Bracket Filling: Convert up to the top of a targeted marginal bracket each year to smooth lifetime taxes.
  • Social Security Coordination: Conversions can increase provisional income, potentially raising Social Security taxability—sequence carefully.
  • Capital Gains and NIIT: Stacking conversions can push capital gains into higher rates or trigger NIIT—monitor thresholds.
  • IRMAA: Medicare premiums are based on MAGI with a two‑year lookback; conversions can push you into higher IRMAA brackets—use multi‑year modeling.

Methodology and Assumptions

  1. Start with projected taxable income and deductions for 2025.
  2. Add conversion amount; recompute marginal brackets and total tax.
  3. Compare with and without conversion to isolate added tax.
  4. Evaluate cliff thresholds (credits, ACA subsidies, IRMAA) if relevant.
  5. Repeat across multiple years to build a conversion schedule.

Assumptions:

  • Verify 2025 bracket thresholds and IRMAA tiers.
  • State income taxes vary; include state modeling for high‑tax states.
  • This guide focuses on tax mechanics; investment performance and sequence risk remain separate considerations.

Examples (Illustrative Only)

Example A: Early Retiree Pre‑RMDs

  • Low ordinary income years before RMDs are ideal for filling lower brackets; model multi‑year conversions.

Example B: Widowed Taxpayer Facing Filing Status Change

  • Post‑widowhood filing status can raise effective rates; front‑load conversions while still filing jointly if appropriate.

Example C: High Earner Near IRMAA Thresholds

  • Convert only up to the IRMAA tier boundary to avoid large premium jumps; revisit annually.

FAQs

Q: Does a conversion restart the 5‑year clock?
A: Each conversion has its own five‑year aging for penalty‑free access to converted principal before age 59½; qualified distributions in retirement are tax‑free subject to rules.

Q: Can I recharacterize a conversion?
A: Recharacterizations of conversions are no longer allowed; plan carefully before executing.

Q: How do QCDs interact with conversions?
A: Qualified Charitable Distributions from IRAs reduce RMDs and AGI but cannot be made from Roth IRAs; coordinate QCDs with conversion timing.


Action Checklist (Copy/Paste)

  • Project base income and deductions
  • Choose target bracket and IRMAA tier
  • Add conversion amount; compute incremental tax
  • Check credits, ACA subsidies, and state taxes for cliffs
  • Build a multi‑year conversion plan and revisit annually
Roth conversion tax 2025IRA to Roth calculatorbracket stackingIRMAA thresholds