
Jim and Pam are a hypothetical couple I use with clients to illustrate what the numbers in a retirement plan can look like. They’re both 62, have $2.5 million in pretax retirement accounts and $54,000 a year in combined Social Security benefits when they retire. On paper, they’ve done everything right.
But when Jim dies at 75, Pam’s financial picture changes in ways they never planned for.
Her Social Security does not disappear entirely. The higher of the two checks continues, but one check is gone and her fixed income drops significantly overnight.
Sign up for Kiplinger’s Free Newsletters
Profit and prosper with the best of expert advice on investing, taxes, retirement, personal finance and more – straight to your e-mail.
Profit and prosper with the best of expert advice – straight to your e-mail.
Her effective tax rate climbs from approximately 10% to between 15% and 23%, and may reach 28% by the time she is 85. Her total annual tax bill rises by approximately 145%, from roughly $11,000 to roughly $27,000. Within just a few years that increase may exceed 300%, with estimated total taxes of around $46,000 a year driven primarily by required minimum distributions (RMDs).
On top of that, a Medicare IRMAA surcharge begins approximately two years after RMDs start, ranging from an estimated $4,600 to $6,300 a year, deducted directly from her Social Security before she ever sees it.
And her RMDs, around $167,000 a year when they begin and potentially $250,000 a year as the account grows, now land entirely on a single tax return.
Same savings. Dramatically different tax bill — for the rest of her life.
This is the widow’s penalty. It is not a fluke or an edge case. It is a predictable consequence of how our tax system treats a surviving spouse, and most retirement plans don’t take it into account.
Four financial hits that arrive at once
When one spouse passes away, the survivor faces four simultaneous changes. Each is significant on its own. Together, they reshape the entire retirement picture.
1. Tax brackets compress immediately.
2. Medicare IRMAA surcharges can jump.
Medicare’s income-related premium adjustments are tied to income thresholds that are far lower for single filers than for married couples. A couple may be comfortably below an IRMAA tier, but when one spouse dies, the survivor can suddenly be well above it, paying thousands more a year in Medicare premiums on exactly the same income.
3. One Social Security check stops.
The survivor keeps the larger of the two benefits but loses the other entirely. For many couples, that’s a drop of $25,000 to $40,000 in annual income. It doesn’t get replaced.
4. RMDs don’t stop.
At age 73 or 75, RMDs continue, regardless of what else has changed. The account balance is the same. But those forced withdrawals now land entirely on a single tax return, at single-filer rates, whether the money is needed or not. For a $2.5 million pretax account, that’s not a rounding error.
Why don’t retirement plans cover this?
Three things work against couples here. First, most retirement planning conversations focus on accumulation — saving more, investing well, managing risk. Tax planning for the surviving spouse is rarely on the agenda.
Second, advisers and clients alike tend to plan for the couple as a unit. The shift to single-filer status feels abstract until it’s real, and by then the options have narrowed.
Third, these are uncomfortable conversations. It’s easier to defer them. But in tax planning, time is the asset. The window for meaningful action is only open while both spouses are alive, healthy and still in a favorable bracket.
Four things to do while the window is still open
The widow’s penalty is predictable. That means it’s plannable. Here’s where I focus with clients who want to get ahead of it.
1. Roth conversions during the married filing jointly window.
Every dollar converted from a traditional IRA to a Roth while both spouses are alive is a dollar the survivor can access tax-free, without pushing into higher brackets, triggering IRMAA surcharges or increasing Social Security taxation.
The married filing jointly bracket is one of the most valuable tax planning advantages available to couples. Most never use it for this purpose. I’d argue it’s the most effective move available for reducing the survivor’s future tax burden.
2. Term life insurance sized to replace the lost Social Security check.
This one surprises people. Term insurance isn’t just a wealth-transfer tool. It can be a direct replacement for the Social Security income that disappears when a spouse dies. Size it to cover the income gap, put it in place before retirement while premiums are still reasonable, and the survivor has a real financial buffer during the most financially vulnerable period of widowhood.
3. Coordinate Social Security claiming with the survivor in mind.
Delaying the higher earner’s benefit increases the survivor’s check for life. For couples where one spouse earned significantly more, that delay can materially increase the survivor’s annual income for life. The claiming decision that maximizes lifetime income for two people is often different from the one that maximizes the survivor’s income alone. That gap deserves explicit attention.
4. Keep the portfolio working.
As a married couple, it can be easy to feel like the investments do not need to work as hard. Two incomes, shared expenses, a plan built around both of you. But that can change at any moment.
While both spouses are still living, keep the portfolio growing. A surviving spouse at 75 may have 20 or more years ahead and may suddenly need to draw significantly more from the portfolio than the couple ever did together.
A portfolio that becomes too conservative too early loses the growth needed to outpace inflation and fund a long retirement. Investment strategy should be built around who is still here and how long they may need it to last, not the couple’s age at the time of the first death.
The penalty is predictable. So is the solution
The math behind the widow’s penalty isn’t complicated. What makes it damaging is that it catches couples off guard, at the worst possible time, with no runway left to act.
Jim and Pam’s numbers aren’t abstract. They’re close to what I see across my client base, with different names. The tax bill Pam faces isn’t the result of bad luck or bad investments. It’s the result of a plan that was built for two and never updated for one.
The right time to fix that is now, while both spouses are here, the brackets are still favorable and the options are still on the table.

