The post The $1 Million 401(k) Withdrawal Strategy That Doubles Your Annual Payout Before Age 59.5 appeared first on 24/7 Wall St..
A 52-year-old with a $1.2 million 401(k) and a buyout offer on the table keeps running into the same wall on Reddit’s personal finance forums: the 10% early withdrawal penalty. The Rule of 55 helps if you separate from your current employer in the year you turn 55. At 52, you are too young for that. The IRS exception that does work is Rule 72(t), the Substantially Equal Periodic Payment program. The math is unforgiving, but the door is real.
SEPP lets you pull a fixed schedule of withdrawals from a retirement account before age 59 and a half without the 10% penalty. You still owe ordinary income tax on every dollar. In exchange for skipping the penalty, you commit to taking the same calculated payment every year for the longer of five years or until you turn 59 and a half. For a 52-year-old, that means a seven-and-a-half-year lockup. Miss a payment, change the amount, or roll the account mid-stream and the IRS retroactively assesses the 10% penalty on every dollar you ever withdrew, plus interest.
You pick one of three calculation methods at the start: required minimum distribution, fixed amortization, or fixed annuitization. The RMD method recalculates annually and flexes with the balance. The other two lock the dollar amount on day one.
Under IRS Notice 2022-6, the interest rate used in the amortization and annuitization methods can be any reasonable rate up to the greater of 5% or 120% of the federal mid-term rate. With the 10-year Treasury at 4.49% and the 1-year at 4%, 120% of the mid-term rate lands close to 5% but rarely above it. The 5% floor is what most planners are using right now, and it is the single biggest lever in the calculation.
Run the numbers on a $1 million traditional balance with a 52-year-old single life expectancy of 33.4 years. The RMD method produces roughly $29,940 in year one. The amortization method at 5% produces roughly $62,190 every year for the duration. The annuitization method lands within a few hundred dollars of amortization. Same balance, same age, same IRS rules, and the choice of method more than doubles the annual paycheck.
Choose the RMD method if the 401(k) is one piece of a broader bridge and you want the payment to fall when markets fall. The annual recalculation means a bear market shrinks your obligation. You will pull less income, but you protect the remaining principal during drawdowns.
Choose amortization if you need the cash. A reader leaving a $250,000 job at 52 and trying to cover a $90,000 lifestyle until pensions or Social Security kick in cannot bridge the gap on $30,000. The fixed $62,190 from a $1 million account, paired with brokerage or cash, can.
One option not in the IRS playbook but allowed: split the account first. Roll $600,000 into a separate IRA, start SEPP on that piece, and leave the rest untouched and penalty-free for emergencies. The SEPP rules only apply to the account you elect, not your aggregate retirement assets.
The Section 7520 rate is reset monthly off Treasury yields. The 10-year sits in the 94th percentile of its 12-month range, well above the February low of 3.97%. Locking a SEPP today produces a meaningfully higher payment than it would have four months ago. With the Fed funds rate at 3.75% and unchanged since December, and core PCE still in the 90th percentile of its 12-month range, the real return on what you leave invested is the opportunity cost of pulling early.
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The post The $1 Million 401(k) Withdrawal Strategy That Doubles Your Annual Payout Before Age 59.5 appeared first on 24/7 Wall St..

