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Baby Boomers Are Upsizing Homes In 2026. Here’s The Silent Social Security Tax Trap That Follows.

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The post Baby Boomers Are Upsizing Homes in 2026. Here’s the Silent Social Security Tax Trap That Follows. appeared first on 24/7 Wall St..

The Bigger House Next Door

The old advice was to downsize in retirement. A Wall Street Journal trend piece, published July 16, 2026, describes wealthy boomers doing the opposite: one Northern California couple traded a ranch house under 2,000 square feet for a 5,000-square-foot sprawling property they bought next door, more than doubling their footprint in the same neighborhood. Home equity makes it feel affordable.

Picture a retired couple in their late 60s, both on Medicare, drawing Social Security. They love the neighborhood, the grandkids visit often, and a larger place goes up for sale. To bridge the price gap and cover renovations, they pull a single large withdrawal from a traditional IRA. That one move, done in one tax year, is where Social Security and Medicare silently bite back. A common question in retirement forums: whether taking $200,000 from an IRA to buy a house will “mess anything up.” The answer is yes, in two specific ways.

The Two-Year Medicare Lookback and the Tax Torpedo

Medicare prices Part B premiums using income from two tax years prior. A big 2026 IRA withdrawal shows up on the 2028 premium bill. The 2026 standard Part B premium is $202.90 a month, and the Income-Related Monthly Adjustment Amount, or IRMAA, only kicks in for joint filers with modified adjusted gross income (MAGI) above $218,000. About 8% of Part B beneficiaries pay it. A one-time upsizing withdrawal can easily push a normally modest retirement income into that group for a single year, which then follows the couple for a full 12 months of higher premiums two years later.

The tiers matter. For a joint MAGI between $274,000 and $342,000, the Part B premium jumps to $405.80 per person per month. Between $342,000 and $410,000 it is $527.50. For two spouses, that is roughly an extra $4,900 to $7,800 a year combined ($2,400 to $3,900 each) in premiums, plus a Part D surcharge on top. It lasts one year, then rolls off. Appealing it away is not simple, either: the income has to stem from a listed life-changing event, and voluntarily selling assets is not one of them.

The second bite comes the same year as the withdrawal. Social Security uses provisional-income thresholds that have been frozen for decades at $25,000 for singles and $32,000 for joint filers. Once a couple clears those, up to 85% of their Social Security benefit becomes taxable. A retiree drawing $40,000 in Social Security who takes a large IRA distribution will very likely have $34,000 of that benefit added to taxable income, taxed at whatever bracket the withdrawal pushed them into. That is the tax torpedo.

Where This Collides With the Rest of the Plan

The 2.8% Social Security cost-of-living adjustment (COLA) for 2026 is helpful, but a single IRMAA year can mysteriously claw back most of a year of COLA raises for a household. Layer in the ongoing cost of a bigger house, higher property taxes, insurance, utilities, and maintenance, and required minimum distributions (RMDs) still coming, and the upsize keeps generating taxable income long after the move. The personal savings rate has slipped from 5.2% a year ago to 3.9% in Q1 2026, a sign that older households are leaning on accumulated wealth rather than current income to fund big purchases.

What Actually Helps

Two ideas do most of the work:

  1. Split the withdrawal across tax years. Taking 50 percent in December and 50 percent in January can keep MAGI below the next IRMAA tier in both years and soften the Social Security taxation hit. The calendar matters more than the calculator.
  2. Price in the two-year echo before you sign. Ask what your MAGI will look like the year of the withdrawal, then look up which IRMAA tier that lands you in for two years out. If the extra premiums plus the tax on 85% of your Social Security add up to real money, a HELOC, bridge loan, or partial Roth funding may cost less than one clean IRA distribution.

The hardest mistake to undo is the timing one. Once the withdrawal hits the 1099-R, the two-year clock is running and Medicare will find it. Talk with a tax preparer before the wire goes out, not after. Everyone’s numbers land a little differently, and the tier you avoid by a few thousand dollars of MAGI is often worth more than the convenience of writing one check.

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The post Baby Boomers Are Upsizing Homes in 2026. Here’s the Silent Social Security Tax Trap That Follows. appeared first on 24/7 Wall St..