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Required Minimum Distributions (RMDs): What You Need to Know

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When it comes to retirement, one of the most important—but often surprising to learn—rules is the Required Minimum Distribution (RMD). RMDs are mandatory withdrawals from certain retirement accounts that begin after a specific age. Failing to take RMDs on time can result in tax penalties, so it’s important to understand how they work and how to plan for them.

What Is an RMD?

A Required Minimum Distribution is the minimum amount you must withdraw annually from your tax-deferred retirement accounts once you reach a certain age. These withdrawals are mandated by the IRS to ensure that retirement savings eventually become taxable income.

How is an RMD Calculated?

The IRS provides life expectancy tables to calculate RMDs. The most common is the Uniform Lifetime Table, which assumes a generic life expectancy based on age. The formula is:

RMD = Account Balance (as of Dec 31 last year) ÷ Life Expectancy Factor

For example, if you’re 75 and your IRA had $500,000 on December 31 of last year, and your life expectancy factor is 24.6, your RMD would be $500,000 ÷ 24.6 = $20,325.20

See Retirement topics – Required minimum distributions (RMDs) | Internal Revenue Service for the lifetime tables used in for the Life Expectancy.

What Accounts are Subject to RMD Rules?

RMD rules apply to most Pre-Tax Retiremetn Accounts to certain types of retirement accounts:

Accounts Subject to
Regular RMD Rules
Accounts Subject to Special RMD RulesAccounts Not Subject to RMD Rules
Traditional IRAInherited Traditional IRATaxable Accounts
SEP IRAInherited Roth IRARoth IRA (original owner)
SIMPLE IRABeneficiary IRA (10-Year
Rule Applies)
Roth 401(k)
Pre-Tax 401(k)Non-Spouse Beneficiary
401(k)
Health Savings Account (HSA)
Pre-Tax 403(b)403(b) inherited pre-2020Education Savings Accounts
(ESA/529)
Governmental 457(b)Trust as Beneficiary of
IRA
UGMA/UTMA Accounts
Profit-Sharing PlanInherited Employer Plans
(varies)
Life Insurance Cash Value
Accounts
Cash Balance Pension Plan  

 

When do RMD's Begin?

RMD’s begin based on when you were born. Here is a table of the dates and ages for starting:

Birth YearRMD Starting Age
Before July 1, 194970½
July 1, 1949 – 195072
1951 – 195973
1960 or later75

 

You must take your first RMD by April 1 of the year after you reach your required beginning age. After that, RMDs are due by December 31 of each year.

Note: Delaying your first RMD until April 1 means you’ll take two RMDs in one tax year (the one for the previous year and the current year), which could increase your tax liability.

If You Miss an RMD

The penalty for missing an RMD is steep: 25% of the amount not withdrawn (reduced to 10% if corrected in a timely manner, generally within two years). The IRS may waive the penalty if there’s reasonable cause and the shortfall is corrected.

Why RMD's are so Important

RMDs are so impactful because failing to plan for them can lead to missed opportunities and costly consequences.

Without proper planning, you risk triggering the “Tax Torpedo,” where RMDs increase your taxable income, causing a ripple effect: higher taxes on Social Security benefits, elevated Medicare premiums, and a potentially much larger lifetime tax bill.

You could also miss the chance to perform strategic Roth conversions in early retirement—before RMDs begin—when your tax rates may be lower. Once RMDs start, you cannot convert them to a Roth IRA, closing off one of the most powerful tax planning tools available.

This article offers a foundational overview of RMD rules, but there’s much more to explore—such as charitable giving strategies like Qualified Charitable Distributions (QCDs), account aggregation rules, and optimizing across multiple accounts.

Make Sure You're Not Leaving Money on the Table

Want to make sure you’re not leaving money on the table? Schedule a retirement income review today to explore how proactive RMD planning can lower your taxes and protect your future.
Steven Gilbert

Steven Gilbert CFP® is the owner and founder of Gilbert Wealth LLC, a financial planning firm located in Fort Wayne, Indiana serving clients locally and nationally. A fixed fee financial planning firm, Gilbert Wealth helps clients optimize their financial strategies to achieve their most important goals through comprehensive advice and unbiased structure.