As a freelancer, you are responsible for not just accumulating retirement savings but also managing withdrawals tax-efficiently in retirement. The strategies that minimize taxes in retirement are different from accumulation strategies. Here is what you need to know about withdrawing from your retirement accounts as a self-employed person.

Disclaimer: Educational content based on current tax law. Tax laws change. Consult a CPA or tax professional for your specific retirement withdrawal strategy.

This builds on our retirement account comparison guide: Solo 401(k) vs SEP IRA vs Roth IRA. Understanding how each account is taxed in retirement helps you plan withdrawals wisely.

The Three Tax Buckets

Your retirement savings will likely be in three types of accounts, each taxed differently. Tax-deferred accounts (Traditional Solo 401(k), SEP IRA, Traditional IRA): contributions were tax-deductible, withdrawals are taxed as ordinary income. Roth accounts (Roth Solo 401(k), Roth IRA): contributions were after-tax, withdrawals are tax-free. Taxable brokerage accounts: contributions were after-tax, only gains and dividends are taxed (at capital gains rates).

The strategy is to withdraw from these accounts in a tax-efficient order. In general: withdraw from taxable accounts first (they have the least tax advantage), then tax-deferred accounts up to the top of your lower tax brackets, then Roth accounts last (they grow tax-free the longest). However, Required Minimum Distributions (RMDs) from tax-deferred accounts starting at age 73 complicate this. You must withdraw enough from tax-deferred accounts to meet RMD requirements.

The Roth Conversion Strategy

One of the most powerful tax strategies for freelancers is the Roth conversion. In years when your freelance income is low, you can convert some of your Traditional IRA or Solo 401(k) to a Roth account. You pay taxes on the converted amount at your current low rate, and the money grows tax-free forever. This is especially valuable if you expect to be in a higher tax bracket later or want to reduce future RMDs.

Example: Maya earns $30,000 in a slow freelance year. She is in the 12% tax bracket. She converts $20,000 from her Traditional IRA to a Roth IRA, paying only 12% tax on the conversion. If she had waited until retirement when she expects to be in the 22% bracket, she would pay 22% on that same money. The Roth conversion saves her 10% in taxes, or $2,000.

Managing Required Minimum Distributions

RMDs begin at age 73 for most retirement accounts. The IRS requires you to withdraw a minimum percentage each year based on your life expectancy. These withdrawals are taxed as ordinary income and can push you into higher tax brackets. Freelancers with large Solo 401(k) or SEP IRA balances face significant RMDs.

Strategies to manage RMDs: start Roth conversions in your 50s and 60s to reduce your tax-deferred balance. Make Qualified Charitable Distributions (QCDs) from your IRA directly to charity after age 70.5, which satisfy RMD requirements tax-free. Keep contributing to Roth accounts (Roth Solo 401(k), Roth IRA) even in your 50s and 60s to build tax-free income for later retirement.

Tax-Loss Harvesting for Freelancers

In your taxable brokerage accounts, tax-loss harvesting can reduce your tax bill. When investments lose value, you sell them to realize the loss, then buy a similar (but not identical) investment to maintain market exposure. The realized losses offset capital gains and up to $3,000 of ordinary income per year. For freelancers with variable income, this is particularly valuable. In a low-income year, the $3,000 deduction from tax-loss harvesting has a smaller impact. In a high-income year, the same $3,000 deduction saves more at your higher marginal rate. Time your tax-loss harvesting strategically.

Strategy Best For
Automated transfers Consistent savers with steady income
Percentage-based saving Freelancers with variable income
Windfall rule (50% to goals) Those with irregular large payments
Weekly review habit Building financial awareness

  • Track every dollar of business income and expense
  • Set aside taxes from every payment immediately
  • Review your financial progress every Friday
  • Adjust your savings percentages quarterly

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the best withdrawal order? Generally: taxable accounts first, then tax-deferred, then Roth. But your specific situation depends on your tax brackets, RMDs, and other income sources. A CPA can model this for you.

Should I withdraw from my Solo 401(k) before my IRA? They are taxed similarly (both are tax-deferred). However, Solo 401(k)s have slightly more creditor protection under federal law. Withdraw from IRAs first if you need to reduce the balance before RMDs.

What if I retire early before 59.5? You can access retirement account funds early through Substantially Equal Periodic Payments (SEPP, Rule 72t), which allows penalty-free withdrawals from IRAs before 59.5. You can also withdraw Roth IRA contributions (not earnings) at any time tax-free and penalty-free.

Tax-efficient withdrawal strategies can save you tens of thousands of dollars in retirement. Plan your withdrawals as carefully as you planned your contributions. The years of tax-free compounding are the reward for your discipline. Do not give it away to the IRS unnecessarily.

Required Minimum Distributions (RMDs) for Freelancers

Starting at age 73 (rising to 75 under the SECURE 2.0 Act), you must begin taking Required Minimum Distributions (RMDs) from traditional retirement accounts including SEP IRAs, Solo 401(k)s, and traditional IRAs. The penalty for missing an RMD is 25% of the amount that should have been withdrawn (reduced to 10% if corrected promptly). Roth IRAs are not subject to RMDs during your lifetime, which is one reason many freelancers use a Roth conversion ladder to move traditional funds to Roth accounts during low-income years.

To minimize the tax impact of RMDs, plan your withdrawal strategy years in advance. If you expect to be in a lower tax bracket during early retirement, consider converting some traditional IRA funds to Roth each year up to the top of your current bracket. This reduces future RMDs and creates tax-free growth. Work with a CPA or financial advisor to model different withdrawal scenarios. The goal is to smooth your taxable income across retirement years rather than creating a spike when RMDs kick in. A few hours of planning now can save tens of thousands in taxes later.

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Ruth Melton is a bookkeeper and accountant with over 10 years of experience helping freelancers, gig workers, and independent contractors manage their finances. She founded Gigmetry to share practical financial advice that actually works for irregular income.

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