00:00:00
so in today's video I'm going to explain
00:00:02
to you how you can take a million
00:00:04
dollars tax-free out during retirement
00:00:07
and it's not using a Roth IRA or some
00:00:10
fancy Insurance product in fact it's
00:00:12
using an account that all of you have
00:00:13
access to so I'm going to explain the
00:00:16
different types of retirement accounts
00:00:17
how they're related to your tax bracket
00:00:19
and then I'm going to also explain how
00:00:21
this magical mysterious account could
00:00:23
potentially allow your errors to receive
00:00:25
millions of dollars tax-free but first
00:00:28
my name is Kevin Lum I'm a certified
00:00:29
financial planner based in Los Angeles
00:00:31
and this channel is dedicated to helping
00:00:34
a million people retire without worry
00:00:36
what is this magical account that allows
00:00:39
you to take a million dollars in
00:00:41
tax-free income out during retirement
00:00:43
It's actually an account that almost all
00:00:45
of you have access to and probably
00:00:47
already have opened it's simply a
00:00:49
taxable brokerage account here's what's
00:00:51
amazing a taxable brokerage account can
00:00:54
be one of the most tax efficient
00:00:55
accounts you can use there's no limits
00:00:57
you can invest as much money as you want
00:00:59
there's incredible tax advantages and
00:01:02
you can access the money anytime you
00:01:04
want you don't have to wait until you're
00:01:05
59 and a half so I want to start by
00:01:08
explaining how the various retirement
00:01:09
accounts work and then I'm going to
00:01:11
explain to you the benefits of a taxable
00:01:14
brokerage account and how you can pull
00:01:16
such a massive amount of money out of
00:01:18
this account completely tax-free so most
00:01:21
of you have access to a variety of
00:01:22
different retirement accounts the first
00:01:24
is a traditional IRA as you know when
00:01:26
you put money into it as long as you
00:01:28
earn under a certain threshold you
00:01:30
receive a tax deduction so if you put
00:01:32
five thousand in you're able to deduct
00:01:33
five thousand dollars to your taxes and
00:01:36
you keep doing that year after year and
00:01:37
that money grows let's say to a hundred
00:01:39
thousand dollars and then someday when
00:01:41
you pull that money out you're going to
00:01:43
pay tax on it in retirement the second
00:01:45
type of account that people often use is
00:01:47
a Roth IRA a Roth IRA has no tax
00:01:50
deferment so if you put five thousand
00:01:52
dollars in the account you don't receive
00:01:53
any tax deduction but as that money
00:01:56
grows over the next 30 Years and you
00:01:58
know that grows to a hundred thousand
00:01:59
dollars you're able to pull out all that
00:02:02
money completely tax-free which is why
00:02:04
people love Roth IRAs particularly as it
00:02:07
looks like we may be facing higher taxes
00:02:09
in the coming years the other type of
00:02:12
account that everyone has or most people
00:02:13
have access to is an employee sponsored
00:02:16
account think 401k or 403 b
00:02:19
traditionally these have function very
00:02:21
similar to a traditional IRA so that
00:02:24
means a little bit gets deducted from
00:02:25
your paycheck you get a tax deduction if
00:02:28
your employer contributes they get a tax
00:02:30
deduction and then someday in the future
00:02:32
this account Rose to a half million
00:02:34
dollars or a million dollars if you're
00:02:36
really lucky but when that money comes
00:02:38
out you have to pay tax when you
00:02:40
withdraw it but for many people one of
00:02:43
the best places to put your money is
00:02:45
into a taxable brokerage account now
00:02:47
immediately you're saying all these
00:02:48
other accounts of tax advantages of some
00:02:51
sort either tax deferment or comes out
00:02:52
tax-free how is it an account that
00:02:55
literally has taxable in its name how is
00:02:58
it the best and most tax efficient
00:02:59
account but your money into here's why
00:03:02
there are basically two different tax
00:03:04
structures there's ordinary income and
00:03:06
depending on how much you earn you'll be
00:03:07
in a different tax bracket so you know
00:03:10
22 percent 24 32 percent all the way up
00:03:13
to 37 percent and the things are going
00:03:15
to be taxed as ordinary income are going
00:03:17
to be your W-2 the money you make from
00:03:19
your job distributions you take from
00:03:22
your 401K pension payments all that
00:03:24
money is going to be taxed as ordinary
00:03:26
income the more money you earn the
00:03:29
higher your marginal tax rate is the
00:03:30
higher amount you're going to pay on
00:03:32
each additional dollar that you earn the
00:03:34
other structure is capital gains tax and
00:03:36
it's typically taxed at a much lower
00:03:38
rate than your ordinary end cup now if
00:03:41
it's short-term capital gains you're
00:03:43
taxed at your ordinary tax rate but on
00:03:45
long-term capital gains so assets that
00:03:47
you've held for over a year so this
00:03:49
could be a whole variety of assets but
00:03:51
for most people in this situation we're
00:03:52
going to be talking about stocks so if
00:03:54
you've held it for over a year you now
00:03:56
qualify for long-term capital gains and
00:03:59
there's a whole different tax bracket
00:04:01
for long-term capital gains but here's
00:04:04
what most people don't know you can take
00:04:06
out over a hundred thousand dollars in
00:04:09
long-term capital gains income
00:04:11
completely tax-free and if you're a
00:04:14
single filer you can take out a little
00:04:15
over fifty thousand dollars completely
00:04:17
tax-free so that means let's say you
00:04:20
have an account where you have a million
00:04:22
dollars in profit I don't know how you
00:04:23
acquired that but let's say you invested
00:04:25
really well and you have a million
00:04:27
dollars in profit and you want to retire
00:04:29
early and you have no other income
00:04:31
coming in so you don't have your you
00:04:32
have to start your Social Security yet
00:04:34
your pension payments not coming in you
00:04:36
stop your job so you have no income
00:04:37
coming in and you retired age 60 over
00:04:40
the next 10 years you could sell a
00:04:42
hundred thousand dollars in profit not
00:04:44
just in stock but in profit you could
00:04:46
take a hundred thousand dollars in
00:04:47
profit over the next 10 years and pull a
00:04:50
million dollars out of your taxable
00:04:52
account completely tax free let's look
00:04:55
at these long-term capital gains tax
00:04:56
brackets if you are a single person and
00:04:59
you earn up to 4 forty four thousand
00:05:01
dollars a year everything you take out
00:05:03
in long-term capital gains is completely
00:05:05
tax-free now it's important to know that
00:05:07
whenever you take out long-term capital
00:05:09
gains gets added to what other any other
00:05:11
income so you can't earn forty four
00:05:13
thousand dollars a year and take forty
00:05:15
four thousand dollars a year in
00:05:16
long-term capital gains it gets added
00:05:18
together but if you earn twenty five
00:05:20
thousand dollars you could essentially
00:05:21
pull out another twenty thousand in
00:05:23
long-term capital gains and pay no tax
00:05:25
on it and this isn't just related to
00:05:27
retirement just retirement is the best
00:05:29
time to pull this money out because
00:05:30
often it's a period in your life where
00:05:32
you're earning the least amount of money
00:05:34
so as a single filer you can earn up to
00:05:36
forty four thousand six two fifty but
00:05:39
here's what's key to remember you also
00:05:41
get a standard deduction as a single
00:05:44
filer over thirteen thousand dollars a
00:05:46
year so you take the forty four thousand
00:05:48
I'm gonna do easy numbers here you take
00:05:50
the forty four thousand you add the
00:05:52
Thirteen thousand dollar standard
00:05:53
deduction as a single filer you can take
00:05:55
fifty seven thousand out as a married
00:05:57
filing join the couple you get eighty
00:05:58
nine thousand two hundred fifty plus you
00:06:01
get a 27 000 standard deduction if you
00:06:04
put those two numbers together and I'm
00:06:06
not going to do the math here really
00:06:07
quickly but it's almost 120 000 a year
00:06:10
in long-term capital gains that you can
00:06:13
pull out completely tax-free here's
00:06:16
where it gets really interesting and I
00:06:17
need you to stick with me because what
00:06:18
I'm going to talk about in just a minute
00:06:19
is going to blow your mind but you also
00:06:23
have dividend income so dividend income
00:06:25
gets taxed in two separate ways some
00:06:27
Dividends are taxed to ordinary income
00:06:29
tax rate they're called Ordinary
00:06:31
dividends Real Estate Investment Trust
00:06:33
there's a variety of different uh types
00:06:35
of Investments that when they pay out a
00:06:37
dividend it's taxed at ordinary income
00:06:39
so whatever your ordinary income tax
00:06:41
rate is that's how you be taxed but
00:06:43
there's another type of dividend which
00:06:45
is a qualified dividends for example if
00:06:47
you are invested in at T and you're
00:06:49
receiving a dividend payment and let's
00:06:51
say you invested heavy in at T which
00:06:53
probably was a bad idea but you've
00:06:54
invested heavy in ATT you have all this
00:06:56
dividend income coming in those
00:06:58
qualified dividends are taxed at your
00:07:00
long-term capital gains rate and so you
00:07:03
if you have no other income coming in
00:07:04
you could earn up to almost a hundred
00:07:06
and twenty thousand dollars a year
00:07:07
without paying any tax on those
00:07:09
dividends does that make sense hopefully
00:07:11
you're beginning to understand the power
00:07:13
of using the tax brackets to your
00:07:15
advantage so here's where it gets really
00:07:17
amazing though when you pass someday if
00:07:20
you have money in your traditional IRA
00:07:21
or your 401k and that money goes to your
00:07:24
errors they're going to have to pay tax
00:07:25
on it and they're going to have to deal
00:07:26
with rmds and the rules just changed on
00:07:29
it it's a whole it's a ordeal but money
00:07:32
that's inside your taxable brokerage
00:07:34
account when it passes to your heirs
00:07:36
passes to them completely tax free so
00:07:39
let's say you have five million dollars
00:07:41
in profit in your retire in your
00:07:43
brokerage account you bought Apple stock
00:07:45
years ago you bought it for you know
00:07:48
Pennies on the dollar what it's worth
00:07:49
today and you you paid let's say your
00:07:52
cost basis is a million dollars and
00:07:54
today the value of your portfolio is six
00:07:57
million dollars so there is a five
00:07:58
million dollar profit in that account
00:08:00
when your heirs receive that stock they
00:08:03
get what's called a stepped up basis the
00:08:05
same thing applies to your house they
00:08:07
get a stepped up basis so now their cost
00:08:09
basis the amount that they're going to
00:08:11
have to pay tax on starts at six million
00:08:13
dollars so if it goes from six to seven
00:08:15
million dollars they'll have to pay tax
00:08:17
but if they sell it immediately at the
00:08:19
Six Million Dollar mark
00:08:20
no tax will be paid by you and no tax
00:08:24
will be paid by them now here's where we
00:08:26
move into the estate tax Arena you are
00:08:29
only allowed to have in a state of 12.9
00:08:32
million thereabouts before an estate tax
00:08:35
kick set if you have a ton of money this
00:08:37
is going to be an issue for you and
00:08:39
you're going to want to make sure that
00:08:40
you have someone help you strategize
00:08:41
with how you can reduce that but for
00:08:44
most people you can pass millions of
00:08:46
dollars using a taxable brokerage
00:08:48
account to your heirs and they will pay
00:08:50
absolutely no tax as you can see it's an
00:08:52
incredibly tax efficient account to help
00:08:54
you pay less in taxes but also to help
00:08:56
your errors Pay Less in taxes as well
00:08:58
now one thing you want to know because
00:09:00
depending on your state your state may
00:09:03
have a much lower threshold for an
00:09:05
estate tax if you live in one of those
00:09:07
States it's going to be a little bit
00:09:08
more difficult to navigate around on the
00:09:11
estate tax hopefully this is helpful and
00:09:13
this works particularly well for those
00:09:15
people who are going to delay taking
00:09:16
their social security to age 70. in fact
00:09:18
I have a video here you should watch and
00:09:20
how social security is taxed as always
00:09:23
if you enjoyed this content if you do me
00:09:24
a favor and ding that Bell click the
00:09:26
Subscribe button click the like button
00:09:28
leave a comment below share this with
00:09:30
your friends all those things help the
00:09:32
algorithms know that this is content
00:09:34
worth watching thanks for watching