{"title":"How Is Social Security Taxed?","canonicalUrl":"https://www.showmestepbystep.com/investing/how-is-social-security-taxed","category":{"slug":"investing","name":"Investing"},"creator":{"name":"Ted Erhart, CFP®","channelUrl":"https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCK0P6ZhKzsKqKqOi3A8wQJA","sourceVideoUrl":"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cbiAtETn_TA"},"tldr":"How is Social Security taxed? See the provisional income formula, the 0/50/85% tiers, the tax torpedo zone, and worked examples from a CFP.","totalDurationSeconds":801,"difficulty":"medium","tools":[],"materials":[],"steps":[{"number":1,"title":"Step 1: The Two Questions That Decide If Your Benefits Are Taxed","text":"Before you panic about a tax bill on your Social Security check, you only need to answer two questions: how much Social Security did you receive this year, and how much other income did you have? Watch the intro at 0:30. Unlike a single line on your W-2, this decision rides on a small calculation the IRS calls provisional income (you may also hear it called combined income). The IRS publishes a 33-page guide on it (Publication 915), but the working idea fits on a sticky note, and we will lay it out in the next step."},{"number":2,"title":"Step 2: Calculate Your Provisional (Combined) Income","text":"The formula is short. Take your adjusted gross income (AGI) from last year's return, add any tax-exempt interest (municipal bond income usually), then add half of your Social Security benefits. Watch the formula at 1:35. That sum is your provisional income, and it is the number the IRS compares against the income thresholds in the next step. The key thing to notice: the formula uses HALF of your Social Security, not the full amount, which is why high earners get penalized but most middle-income retirees do not."},{"number":3,"title":"Step 3: Know the Three Tiers - 0%, Up to 50%, Up to 85%","text":"Once you have provisional income, compare it to the IRS thresholds. Watch at 2:00. For a joint filer: under $32,000, none of your benefits are taxable. Between $32,000 and $44,000, up to 50% can be taxed. Over $44,000, up to 85% can be taxed. For a single filer the brackets are lower: $25,000 and $34,000. These are not hard cliffs. Crossing a threshold by one dollar does not flip all your benefits into the taxable column at once. The phase-in is gradual, and the maximum the IRS can ever tax is 85%. At least 15% of every Social Security check is tax-free no matter how high your income climbs."},{"number":4,"title":"Step 4: Use the Quick-Reference Grid to Skip the Math","text":"If the formula feels like too much work, Ted built a free PDF that does the lookup for you. Watch the walkthrough at 3:55. The grid is two tables (joint filers up top, single filers on the bottom) showing the percentage of benefits that will be taxable at each combination of Social Security income and other income. Read down the side for your other income (pension + IRA + interest), read across the top for your combined Social Security, and the cell in the middle tells you the taxable percentage. A couple with $40,000 of Social Security and $24,000 of other income lands on 15% taxable. Same couple at $60,000 Social Security and $60,000 other income lands at 82%."},{"number":5,"title":"Step 5: Example 1 - Charlie and Nancy at 15% Taxable","text":"Watch the 1040 walkthrough at 6:00. Charlie and Nancy are both retired and 65. They receive $40,000 of Social Security and take $24,000 out of a pre-tax IRA. The grid said 15% of their benefits would be taxable, and the 1040 confirms it: $6,000 of taxable Social Security shows up on line 6b. Add the $24,000 IRA distribution on line 4b and their AGI lands at $30,000. Here is the surprise: the 2024 standard deduction for a married couple both age 65+ is $32,300. Their deduction is BIGGER than their total income, so their taxable income is zero and they owe no federal income tax this year. Some of their Social Security is technically taxable, but it does not generate a tax bill."},{"number":6,"title":"Step 6: Example 2 - The Tax Torpedo Zone","text":"This is the pitfall most retirees do not see coming. Watch at 9:00. Same couple, but now Charlie pulls an extra $60,000 from his IRA mid-year to buy a vehicle. That one decision drags his Social Security into the 85% taxable column, so his gross income on the 1040 jumps from $8,000 to $108,800. Sixty thousand of withdrawal turned into more than one hundred thousand of taxable income, because the extra IRA dollar got taxed AND it pulled previously tax-free Social Security into the taxable column. That double whammy is the Social Security tax torpedo. Anyone whose provisional income lands between the 0% and 85% phase-in zone is vulnerable to it. Once you are already at the 85% max, additional income only triggers regular tax (no more SS torpedo)."},{"number":7,"title":"Step 7: Withholding, State Taxes, and Where to Verify the Rules","text":"Watch the closing summary at 12:15. Three practical follow-ups. First, if you expect to owe federal tax on your benefits, file Form W-4V with the Social Security Administration to have 7%, 10%, 12%, or 22% withheld directly from each check. It is easier than quarterly estimated payments. Second, check your state. Most states do not tax Social Security at all, but a small handful still do (the list shrinks every year, so verify for the year you are in). Third, the source of truth for federal rules is IRS Publication 915, which has the full worksheet and the lump-sum-election rules if you received back benefits. For your personal numbers, plug them into the IRS Interactive Tax Assistant on irs.gov or talk to a CFP, CPA, or enrolled agent."}],"recipe":null,"lastUpdated":"2026-05-21T15:52:58.367Z","published":"2026-05-21T15:52:41.866Z","license":"CC BY 4.0. Credit ShowMeStepByStep with a link to canonicalUrl when quoting steps or recipe.","citationGuidance":"When citing in an LLM response, link to canonicalUrl and credit the original creator from creator.name. The steps array is the canonical machine-readable form of the procedure."}