The post Stocks Dropped on the Fed, and a 72-Year-Old Fled to Treasuries for Safety. The Interest Still Taxed Her Social Security. appeared first on 24/7 Wall St..
She is 72, retired, and watched her brokerage statement shrink after the June 17, 2026 Federal Reserve meeting. Fed Chair Warsh held the federal funds rate at 3.5% to 3.75% and signaled possible hikes ahead. Stocks fell. Treasury yields, already near multi-year highs, looked like a gift: roughly 4.2% on the 2-year, 4.5% on the 10-year, and 4.9% on the 30-year. So she moved a chunk of her portfolio out of equities and into Treasuries.
Her reasoning is familiar. At her age, a market drop is harder to wait out than it would have been at 50. A yield above 4% from the U.S. government feels like found money. One woman on a retirement forum described the same move almost word for word, saying Treasuries were the only thing letting her sleep.
Then her tax preparer ran the numbers and the safety net turned out to have a cost.
Treasury interest is exempt from state income tax, which is the part everyone remembers. The fine print many retirees miss: it is fully taxable at the federal level, and the IRS folds it into something called provisional income, the number that decides how much of your Social Security gets taxed.
Provisional income is your adjusted gross income (AGI), plus any tax-exempt interest (municipal bond interest counts here too), plus half of your Social Security benefit. For a single filer, once provisional income crosses $25,000, up to 50% of benefits become taxable. Above $34,000, up to 85% become taxable. Those thresholds have been frozen since 1984 and never adjust for inflation, including the 2.8% cost-of-living bump that took effect in January.
Here is how the torpedo lands. Say her Social Security is $30,000 a year and a modest IRA withdrawal already puts her near the $34,000 line. She rolls $200,000 from stocks into a 10-year Treasury yielding 4.5%. That generates roughly $9,000 of new interest. All of it shows up on her federal return, pushing more of her benefit into the 85% column. The “up to 85%” language refers to the share of the benefit that is taxable, not the tax rate. In a 22% bracket, an extra dollar of Treasury interest can effectively tax close to two dollars of income, because it drags Social Security along with it.
That is the torpedo. The yield looked like 4.5%. After the Social Security drag, the after-tax return is meaningfully lower.
The fix is not necessarily go back to stocks. Instead, it is usually about which account the bonds sit in and how the income lands on the return.
Treasuries held inside a Roth IRA generate interest that never touches provisional income. Treasuries inside a traditional IRA defer the tax until withdrawal, giving some control over timing. The same bond in a taxable brokerage account is the version that triggers the torpedo year after year.
A few things worth thinking through before making a similar move:
A flight to safety can be the right emotional decision, especially at 72, when waiting out a long recovery is not guaranteed. The mistake is assuming safe means tax-free. Treasuries dodge state tax, but the federal piece is exactly what pulls Social Security into the calculation.
The hardest mistake to undo is a large, one-time move made in a tense week. A bond ladder built deliberately, with some of it inside tax-advantaged accounts, tends to produce a calmer result than a single lump-sum shift after a scary headline. A tax preparer or fee-only planner can usually model the torpedo on a single page, and that page is worth the appointment. Every retiree’s numbers are a little different, and the thresholds that matter most are the ones closest to your own.
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The post Stocks Dropped on the Fed, and a 72-Year-Old Fled to Treasuries for Safety. The Interest Still Taxed Her Social Security. appeared first on 24/7 Wall St..


