Use this calculator to determine your Required Minimum Distribution (RMD). The IRS requires that you withdraw at least a minimum amount - known as a Required Minimum Distribution - from some types of retirement accounts annually. The distributions are required to start when you turn age 72 (or 70 1/2 if you were born before 7/1/1949). This calculator has been updated for the 'SECURE Act of 2019 and CARES Act of 2020'.
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An RMD is the smallest amount you must withdraw from your tax-deferred retirement accounts every year after a certain age. At some point in your life, you may have put money into tax-deferred retirement accounts, such as Individual Retirement Accounts (IRAs) and 401(k) workplace retirement accounts. The key word here is “tax-deferred.” You postponed taxes on your contributions and earnings; you didn’t eliminate them. Eventually, you must pay tax on your contributions and earnings. RMDs make sure that you do that.
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You must start taking RMDs by April 1 of the year after you turn 73. Let’s say you celebrated your 73rd birthday on July 4, 2023. You must take the RMD by April 1, 2024. You’ll have to take another RMD by Dec. 31, 2024 and by Dec. 31 each year after that. (For tax year 2022, the age for starting RMDs was 72).
The amount changes each year, according to your age. Start by calculating how much you had in all your tax-deferred accounts as of December 31 of the previous year. Next, find your age on the IRS uniform lifetime table and the corresponding “distribution period.” The distribution period is an estimate of how many years you’ll be taking RMDs. If you’re 73, for example, the distribution period is 24.7 years, based on your life expectancy. Then divide your balance by the distribution period. Let’s say you have a combined $100,000 in your tax-deferred retirement accounts: $100,000 divided by 24.7 is $4,049 — which is the amount you must withdraw. If you are in the 25 percent combined state and local tax bracket, you’ll owe $1,012 in taxes on your RMD.
You can take your RMD out of one account, or take bits from each one, so long as you withdraw the required minimum.
Roth IRAs are funded with after-tax contributions, and they don't require RMDs until after the owner dies. If you're still working and have a traditional 401(k) or other workplace defined contribution plan, you may be able to defer RMDs until April 1 of the year after you stop working.