Tax-Deferred

Client Recommendations High Relevance

Investment earnings (interest, dividends, capital gains) that grow without current taxation until withdrawn. Common examples: Traditional IRA, 401(k), 403(b), 457 plans, and annuities. Contributions may be pre-tax (Traditional IRA, 401k) or after-tax (annuities, non-deductible IRA). Distributions taxed as ordinary income. Required Minimum Distributions (RMDs) begin at age 73 for most accounts.

Example

A 45-year-old client contributes $6,500 annually to a Traditional IRA (pre-tax). Over 20 years, the account grows from $0 to $250,000 through contributions and investment gains, with zero taxes paid during growth. At age 65, withdrawals are taxed as ordinary income. If the client is in the 22% bracket at retirement, each $10,000 withdrawal incurs $2,200 in taxes. Tax deferral allowed decades of compounding without annual tax drag.

Common Confusion

Students often confuse tax-deferred with tax-free (Roth accounts are tax-free; Traditional accounts are tax-deferred). Another common error: thinking all withdrawals are taxed (only the gains are taxed in after-tax annuities; everything is taxed in pre-tax retirement accounts). Critical distinction: tax-deferred means postponed taxation, not eliminated taxation. Distributions are taxed at ordinary income rates, not capital gains rates.

How This Is Tested

  • Distinguishing between tax-deferred (Traditional IRA) and tax-free (Roth IRA) account treatment
  • Identifying which investment vehicles offer tax-deferred growth (401k, Traditional IRA, annuities)
  • Understanding that tax-deferred distributions are taxed as ordinary income, not capital gains
  • Calculating the tax impact of withdrawals from tax-deferred accounts based on client tax bracket
  • Determining when RMDs are required for tax-deferred retirement accounts (age 73)

Regulatory Limits

Description Limit Notes
RMD starting age Age 73 For individuals who turn 72 after December 31, 2022 (SECURE 2.0 Act)
Early withdrawal penalty 10% penalty IRS penalty on distributions before age 59½ (with certain exceptions)

Example Exam Questions

Test your understanding with these practice questions. Select an answer to see the explanation.

Question 1

Jennifer, a 35-year-old software engineer earning $120,000 annually, is deciding between contributing to a Traditional 401(k) (tax-deferred) or a Roth 401(k) (tax-free). She is currently in the 24% tax bracket and expects to be in the 12% bracket at retirement due to lower income needs. She plans to retire at age 65. Which account type would provide the greatest tax advantage?

Question 2

Which of the following investment accounts provides tax-deferred growth, where earnings are not taxed until withdrawal?

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Question 3

A client has $200,000 in a Traditional IRA, consisting of $100,000 in contributions (all pre-tax) and $100,000 in investment gains. At age 66, she withdraws $50,000. If she is in the 22% tax bracket, what is her tax liability on this withdrawal?

Question 4

All of the following statements about tax-deferred accounts are accurate EXCEPT

Question 5

A 50-year-old client asks about the benefits of contributing to a Traditional 401(k) plan (tax-deferred) versus a taxable brokerage account. Which of the following statements accurately describe advantages of the tax-deferred 401(k)?

1. Contributions reduce current taxable income
2. Investment gains compound without annual tax drag
3. Withdrawals in retirement are tax-free if held for 5+ years
4. No 10% early withdrawal penalty after age 59½

💡 Memory Aid

Think of tax-deferred as "Pay Me Later": The IRS says "I'll wait" while your money grows, but eventually you must pay ordinary income tax on withdrawals. Compare to Roth (tax-free) = "Pay Me Now, Never Again" (taxed contributions, tax-free growth). Remember: Deferred ≠ Deleted. The tax bill is postponed, not eliminated.

Related Concepts

This term is part of this cluster:

Where This Appears on the Exam

This term is tested in the following Series 65 exam topics: