I am wondering what others have found? Obviously, I won't be paying SS tax on my investment income that I withdraw. But what about pension payouts? And my understanding is that SS itself is currently not taxed unless one exceeds certain income levels.
He also mentioned that once retired I no longer have to save my current 15% of gross pay for retirement. Good point.
The feds will tax the taxable portion of your pension. (My father gets two pension checks each month-- one is non-taxable and the other is taxable. I'm not sure why and he no longer remembers.) Most states do not tax federal pensions.
States may not tax some pensions (depending on whether they're federal or state civil service), or where they're earned despite your current residence. Some states are very aggressive about chasing down their [-]escaped[/-] relocated retirees to make sure they've taxed them for everything they can get.
Bob Clyatt mentions in "Work Less Live More" that the vast majority of pensioned retirees are in the 15% bracket. Living off your own dividends/cap gains may put you down into the 10% bracket, especially if you can beat the standard deduction. IIRC Trombone Al is a virtuoso of the 10% bracket.
That's why you can do nice Roth conversions when you early retire, filling up your lower tax bracket.
Huge advantage for us. We already know now that spouse's pension will kick us back up into the 25% tax bracket, although that bracket may be higher by 2022. (I doubt it'll be lower.) So we've been converting a little bit of conventional IRA every year (up to the top of the 15% bracket). Both of our IRAs should be all Roth by 2015.
Do I understand correctly that one will have to file quarterly in retirement?
It depends on your sources of income. Your total tax bill might be less than $1000, which is below one of the thresholds for filing quarterly taxes. Many pensions will gladly make the income tax withholding for you, so you wouldn't necessarily have to pay quarterly. Some IRA custodians will withhold tax on your RMD.
You can work through the flowchart on page 18 of IRS Pub 505 (
http://www.irs.gov/pub/irs-pdf/p505.pdf) or let tax software parse through your income, deductions, & credits.
The federal estimated-tax website allows you to set up an entire year of quarterly payments during one session. Some states aren't quite so sophisticated in their estimated taxes.