A surviving spouse filing single faces a federal tax increase of roughly $3,700 annually on identical RMD and Social Security income compared to their married filing jointly status, due to a lower standard deduction ($16,100 vs. $32,200) and earlier entry into higher tax brackets (22% vs. 12%).

Roth conversions before RMDs begin and qualified charitable distributions can reduce the RMD base and MAGI exposure, protecting surviving spouses from the widow’s penalty and IRMAA Medicare surcharges that trigger at half the income threshold for single filers versus married couples.

A recent study identified one single habit that doubled Americans’ retirement savings and moved retirement from dream, to reality. Read more here.

A married couple, both 73, holds a traditional 401(k) that has grown to $1.5 million. They collect Social Security. Their tax bill looks manageable. Then one spouse dies, and the survivor faces the same RMDs, the same Social Security income, and a federal tax burden that rises several thousand dollars annually on identical dollars. This is the scenario most 401(k) planning conversations skip entirely.

At 73, the IRS Uniform Lifetime Table assigns a distribution period factor of 26.5. On a $1.5 million 401(k), that produces a first-year required minimum distribution of roughly $56,600. Add $30,000 in annual Social Security income, and total household income reaches approximately $86,600.

Because that combined figure exceeds $44,000 for joint filers, 85% of Social Security benefits become subject to federal income tax. That pulls an additional $25,500 into the taxable column. After the 2026 married filing jointly standard deduction of $32,200, the taxable income sits near $49,900. In 2026 brackets, where the 12% rate applies to income between $24,801 and $100,800 for joint filers, the federal tax bill runs roughly $5,500, which feels manageable by most standards.

Read: Data Shows One Habit Doubles American’s Savings And Boosts Retirement

Most Americans drastically underestimate how much they need to retire and overestimate how prepared they are. But data shows that people with one habit have more than double the savings of those who don’t.

When one spouse dies, the survivor inherits the same 401(k) balance, RMD schedule, and Social Security benefit. Filing status changes to single, starting the year after the spouse's death, and that one change reshapes the entire tax picture.

The 2026 standard deduction for single filers is $16,100, compared to $32,200 for married filing jointly. The same $82,100 in gross taxable income, now reduced by only $16,100, leaves roughly $66,000 in taxable income. The 22% bracket for single filers begins at $50,401 in 2026, so approximately $15,600 of that income now faces a higher marginal rate than it did under joint filing. The resulting federal tax bill rises to approximately $9,200, a difference of roughly $3,700 per year on identical income.

That gap compounds. RMDs grow as the distribution factor shrinks with age. A portfolio still generating returns produces larger required withdrawals each year. The single filer's 22% bracket exposure widens annually.

The 2026 IRMAA surcharge for Medicare Part B begins at a MAGI of $109,000 for single filers and $218,000 for married filing jointly. With RMDs of nearly $56,600 and Social Security of $30,000, the surviving spouse starts roughly $22,000 below the single-filer threshold. But RMDs increase annually. Once total income exceeds $109,000, the first IRMAA tier adds $1,148 per person per year in Medicare surcharges on top of the standard $202.90 monthly Part B premium. The married couple would not approach that threshold until their combined income exceeded $218,000. The single-filer threshold is half the married filing jointly threshold.

Scenario

Filing Status

Standard Deduction

Taxable Income

Est. Federal Tax

IRMAA Threshold

Both spouses living

Married Filing Jointly

$32,200

~$49,900

~$5,500

$218,000

Surviving spouse

Single

$16,100

~$66,000

~$9,200

$109,000

With the same RMD, Social Security income, and portfolio, the tax outcome diverges by several thousand dollars per year, and the IRMAA exposure window narrows by half.

If you look at the statistics, women are outliving men, and in households where the husband managed the retirement accounts, the surviving wife inherits both the asset and the tax liability without having planned for the filing-status shift. The widow's penalty is the ordinary operation of the tax code applied to a predictable life event that most 401(k) projections ignore.

Modeling the single-filer scenario explicitly involves running the current RMD projection assuming one spouse dies within the next five to ten years. The single-filer figures typically exceed the joint-filing projection.

Roth conversions before RMDs begin can reduce the future RMD base. Converting a portion of a traditional 401(k) to a Roth account between ages 60 and 72 is one option. Conversions done in lower-income years, before Social Security begins or while one spouse still works part-time, can be executed at the 12% rate. The two-year IRMAA lookback means a large conversion in 2026 affects 2028 Medicare premiums. Sizing each conversion to stay below the next IRMAA tier limits that exposure.

Qualified charitable distributions reduce RMD income. The 2026 QCD limit is $111,000 per person. A QCD counts against the RMD and reduces MAGI dollar-for-dollar, lowering both income tax and IRMAA exposure. If combined income as a single filer already exceeds $109,000, a fee-only advisor who specializes in retirement tax planning can model the QCD strategy alongside Roth conversion sequencing to keep income below the next IRMAA tier each year.

Most Americans drastically underestimate how much they need to retire and overestimate how prepared they are. But data shows that people with one habit have more than double the savings of those who don’t.

And no, it’s got nothing to do with increasing your income, savings, clipping coupons, or even cutting back on your lifestyle. It’s much more straightforward (and powerful) than any of that. Frankly, it’s shocking more people don’t adopt the habit given how easy it is.