The post A Retired Couple Loaded Up on Tax-Free Municipal Bonds. In Their 70s, the Interest Still Taxes Their Social Security. appeared first on 24/7 Wall St..
A married couple in their early 70s shifted their fixed-income money into municipal bonds for the simple pitch: tax-free interest, steady payments, less to worry about at tax time. Then they opened their tax return and saw a larger share of their Social Security benefit listed as taxable. Their lifestyle had not changed. They had simply earned more muni-bond interest. Another retiree posted the same confusion: he had moved into munis specifically to lower his tax bill, only to watch the tax on his benefit check go up instead.
The disconnect is a common blind spot in retirement tax planning. It has a name in the industry: the tax torpedo.
The IRS decides how much of your Social Security is taxable using a number called provisional income, sometimes called combined income. The formula is short: adjusted gross income (AGI), plus any tax-exempt interest, plus half of your Social Security benefits.
That middle piece is the catch. Municipal bond interest is exempt from federal income tax, but it is explicitly added back when calculating provisional income. Tax-free for the bracket calculation, fully counted here.
For a married couple filing jointly, the thresholds are $32,000 and $44,000. Above the first line, up to 50% of benefits become taxable. Above the second, up to 85% of benefits become taxable. Those numbers have not moved since 1984, which is why more retirees bump into them every year.
The 85% figure is the share of the benefit that becomes taxable, not the tax rate. If a chunk of benefits gets pulled into the taxable column, it is then taxed at your ordinary bracket, meaning your regular rate applies to a much larger slice of the benefit than you expected.
Picture the couple’s numbers in rough strokes. Their pensions and required minimum distributions (RMDs) land them just under the upper threshold on provisional income before any muni interest is counted. They add $15,000 of “tax-free” muni coupons. That interest pushes them well past the upper threshold, and a larger portion of their Social Security gets added to taxable income. The federal tax on the benefit rises even though the muni interest itself stays exempt.
The very investment they chose for tax efficiency increased their tax bill through a side door.
Two other forces are pulling in the same direction. The 2026 cost-of-living adjustment (COLA) of 2.8% lifted benefit checks, which also lifts the “half of benefits” piece of provisional income. CPI-W, the index the Social Security Administration (SSA) uses to calculate the COLA, has climbed from 315.9 to 328.8 over the past year, so the upward pressure has more room to run.
Municipal interest also counts toward modified adjusted gross income (MAGI) for Medicare’s income-related premium surcharges (IRMAA). A couple sitting near a Medicare bracket can find their Part B and Part D premiums step up the year after a strong muni-coupon year. The Social Security taxation effect is the main story, but the Medicare premium effect often rides in the same car.
For many retirees, municipal bonds remain one of the cleanest sources of income available. The term “tax-free” describes the coupon, though, and not the full effect on the return. A conversation with your tax preparer before year-end, with last year’s return in hand, will tell you exactly where you sit on the provisional-income ladder and whether the next bond purchase is helping or working against you. Every household’s numbers land in a slightly different spot, and a small shift in one input can change the answer.
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The post A Retired Couple Loaded Up on Tax-Free Municipal Bonds. In Their 70s, the Interest Still Taxes Their Social Security. appeared first on 24/7 Wall St..

