Helping Your Clients Determine if a Roth IRA Conversion is Right for Them

One of the most powerful tools in long-term tax planning is also one of the most misunderstood: the Roth IRA conversion. For advisors, understanding when and how to guide clients through this decision is critical. A conversion can yield significant benefits, but only if it aligns with a client’s broader financial picture.

In this article, we provide a practical framework to help you assess when a Roth IRA conversion may be the right recommendation, what constraints may limit the benefits of a traditional IRA, and how to evaluate the tradeoffs with your clients in a thoughtful, strategic way.

Why Even Consider a Roth IRA Conversion?

At its core, a Roth IRA conversion allows a client to move pre-tax retirement savings from a Traditional IRA (or other qualified account) into a Roth IRA. This triggers a taxable event in the year of conversion but opens the door to:

Tax-free growth and withdrawals in retirement

No required minimum distributions (RMDs) during the client’s lifetime

Greater estate planning flexibility for heirs

This shift may prove beneficial, especially for clients concerned about rising tax rates, large future RMDs, or maximizing tax-efficient wealth transfer.

But a conversion is not an automatic recommendation. It must be weighed against the client’s unique tax situation, retirement timeline, income strategy, and estate objectives.

Constraints Within Traditional IRAs That May Limit Their Future Value

When evaluating a Traditional IRA’s long-term fit for a client, consider these limitations:

RMDs reduce control over taxable income in retirement, often pushing clients into higher brackets later in life.

Distributions are always taxed as ordinary income, regardless of investment performance or time horizon.

Heirs face accelerated distribution timelines (due to the SECURE Act’s 10-year rule), often while in their peak earning years.

No flexibility to strategically reduce future taxable income once distributions begin.

These constraints can meaningfully erode the long-term value of a Traditional IRA for certain clients and may indicate an opportunity to explore conversion.

A Framework to Guide Clients Through the Decision

Helping clients make a Roth conversion decision requires more than simply running the numbers. It requires a structured dialogue that uncovers goals, timelines, and tax implications. Below is a framework you can use:

Partial Conversions: A More Flexible Approach

Rather than converting an entire IRA at once, consider phasing in conversions over multiple years — especially if a full conversion would push the client into higher tax brackets.

“Bracket filling” (converting just enough to top off a lower tax bracket) is a common strategy that balances tax efficiency with long-term benefits.

The Advisor’s Role: Translate Complexity into Clarity

Clients rarely come to you asking for a Roth IRA conversion. More often, they come with questions about taxes, retirement income, or legacy goals; it’s up to you to identify when a conversion fits into the bigger picture.

Final Thought

Roth IRA conversions aren’t about timing the market; they are about timing the tax. For the right clients, and under the right circumstances, a Roth conversion can unlock decades of tax-free growth and empower a more flexible retirement.

As with all advanced planning strategies, the value lies in the process:  your ability to lead with clarity, model with precision, and personalize every recommendation to the individual sitting across the table.

Dan Greene
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