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Steve Cohen's avatar

In your example, you say that with $120,000 in regular income, the tax rate is 22%-24% so your tax is 22%-24% of $120,000.

Where did you get that?

That seems to assume a single filer, where the example to compare to is married filed jointly.

It also seems to ignore effective tax rates. For a single filer, the effective tax rate on $120Kis about 17%, after taking into account the progressive brackets and the deductible.

Your point about capital gains is still valid.

But a fair comparison would be to a married filed jointly with an actual effective tax rate, which is $10K in taxes, not the $28K you said.

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Robert Puelz's avatar

Good idea. Let’s take an edge case. Retirement begins mid-year. Earner has earned $130,000z. Spouse doesn’t work and rhe couple is filing jointly. Tax favorable brokerage sales are not in play to support spending for the second half of the year, correct?

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