Most retirees know Social Security can be taxed. Fewer know what triggers it. The formula comes down to three specific numbers, and getting them wrong could result in an unexpected tax bill or a missed opportunity to avoid one.
The IRS uses “combined income” to determine how much of your Social Security benefit is taxable. This amount differs from total income: it’s the result of a specific calculation where three numbers matter.
The Three Numbers That Determine Your Tax Exposure
- Your adjusted gross income (AGI). This includes withdrawals from traditional IRAs and 401(k)s, pension income, wages, capital gains, and rental income.
- Your nontaxable interest. Mostly municipal bond interest. Even though it’s exempt from federal income tax, the IRS counts it in this formula. Many retirees are caught off guard by this.
- 50% of your Social Security benefits. Not all of it, half of it. This gets added regardless of how much you receive.
Add those three numbers together for your combined income. Then compare it to the earnings thresholds. For a single filer: above $25,000, up to 50% of your benefits may be taxable; above $34,000, up to 85% may be taxable. For married couples filing jointly: above $32,000, up to 50% may be taxable; above $44,000, up to 85% may be taxable.
These thresholds were fixed when Congress set them in 1983 and 1993 and have remained unchanged ever since. Meanwhile, the CPI index now sits at 330.3 (baseline 1982-1984=100). That means these cutoffs are worth far less in real terms than when lawmakers wrote them, and more retirees cross them every year without realizing it.
How Quickly Combined Income Adds Up
Take a married couple receiving $36,000 per year in Social Security. With only a $15,000 pension and no municipal bonds, their combined income is $15,000 plus $0 plus $18,000 (half of $36,000), totaling $33,000. That exceeds the $32,000 threshold but stays below $44,000, so up to 50% of their benefits may be taxable.
Change one thing: add a $30,000 AGI and $5,000 in municipal bond interest. Combined income suddenly becomes $30,000 plus $5,000 plus $18,000, totaling $53,000. That’s well above the $44,000 married threshold, and now up to 85% of their Social Security is taxable.
The Municipal Bond Trap
Number two catches people off guard. A retiree holding $200,000 in municipal bonds generating $8,000 yearly for “tax-free income” may actually increase their Social Security tax bill. That $8,000 flows directly into combined income, potentially pushing them into or deeper into the 85% zone. The interest itself isn’t federally taxed, but it makes more of the Social Security benefit taxable.
This is more relevant of late given that the 10-year Treasury yield is near 4.3%, which means retirees with bond portfolios are generating real interest income. Higher yields boost income but can quietly push combined income past a threshold.
What to Do Before Year-End
April is a useful moment to address this. According to USA Today’s Social Security tax guide, retirees can use Form W-4V to adjust voluntary tax withholding from Social Security benefits, and doing it now means the rest of the year can be managed rather than scrambled at filing time.
Your Social Security tax situation isn’t fixed. The three numbers driving it can each be influenced by decisions you make during the year. A Roth conversion in a low-income year cuts future IRA withdrawals and lowers AGI. Choosing taxable bonds over municipal bonds might nudge combined income lower if you’re near a threshold. None of these moves work for everyone, but they’re worth running through with a tax professional before year-end, not after.
The average retired worker receives $2,076 per month in Social Security as of early 2026. At 85% taxability, a meaningful portion flows back to Uncle Sam. Understanding which three numbers determine that outcome is the first step toward managing it.