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🧩 Roth Conversions: Why the Trade-Offs Aren’t So Simple

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Last week, many people asked about Roth conversions — one of the most common questions I hear.


On the surface, it sounds simple: “Should I convert to a Roth?”


But tax rules don’t stand still. What looks smart under today’s brackets may look very different when rates shift, deductions expire, or new thresholds kick in.


That’s why Roth conversions aren’t about guessing policy — they’re about testing trade-offs under multiple scenarios where the math is clear, not assumed.


The Challenges Families Overlook

Here are four areas where Roth conversions often go sideways:


Liquidity → Paying tax upfront means tying up cash you might need.

Timing → Markets and tax law don’t move in sync with your calendar.

Brackets → Converting in the wrong year can push you into higher taxes, affecting not just income tax but also Medicare premiums and other thresholds.

Legacy → What helps you may not help your heirs. For example, a conversion that saves you money now could mean less flexibility for the next generation.


Too often, families assume Roth conversions are always smart. I’ve seen the opposite — cases where liquidity was destroyed just when it was most needed.


A Quick Example

Imagine someone with a $1 million traditional IRA who decides to convert the entire balance in one year.


On paper, the idea looks clean: pay the tax bill now, then enjoy tax-free growth forever.


But in practice:


The tax bill could exceed $300,000, requiring outside cash or reducing retirement savings.

Their income for that year would spike, pushing them into higher tax brackets and Medicare premium surcharges.

If markets dip right after the conversion, they’ll have paid tax on money that temporarily “vanished.”


By contrast, spreading conversions over five years could:


Smooth the tax hit, keeping them in lower brackets.

Reduce the risk of paying upfront taxes on inflated values.

Preserve liquidity for other priorities like real estate, business funding, or family needs.


Same dollars, different timing — and a completely different outcome.


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A Tool to See the Trade-Offs Clearly

That’s why I created an illustrative toggle — designed to show trade-offs in a simplified way, not to replace planning software.


The Roth IRA Playground Toggle is:


Built for client use.

Designed for illustration.

A way to approximate the outcomes of different strategies without spreadsheets or guesswork.


Here’s what it can show you:


The impact of converting all at once vs. spreading conversions over several years.

How higher or lower assumed growth changes the long-term picture.

What happens if tax rates change in the future.

The balance between upfront tax cost and future tax-free growth.


Why It Matters

The right answer isn’t obvious until you run the numbers side by side.


The toggle doesn’t replace planning software (I use more robust tools for full plans). But it gives clarity — a simple way to visualize what’s at stake without spreadsheets or guesswork.


For many families, this exercise reveals that Roth conversions are not “all or nothing” but rather a staged process — where the goal is to balance today’s taxes with tomorrow’s flexibility.


And that’s the point: Roth conversions aren’t about timing the market or predicting Congress. They’re about clarity, structure, and making sure your wealth works as hard as you do.

 
 
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