Blog

The Deferred Compensation Strategy

How High Earners Use It to Reduce Their Tax Bill

Image created using AI by Google Gemini

Key Takeaways

  • Deferred compensation works by shifting income from peak earning years when tax rates are highest into future years when income, and therefore taxes, may be lower
  • For early retirees, deferred compensation can also provide penalty-free income before age 59½, bridging the gap before penalty-free distributions from traditional retirement accounts become available
  • The strategy requires deliberate planning well in advance, including decisions about how much to defer and when to receive payouts

The fundamental idea behind deferred compensation is simple: income recognized today is taxed at today’s rate, and income recognized in the future is taxed at whatever tax rate applies then.

The Core Strategy: Defer Income Now, Pay Taxes Later (At a Lower Tax Rate)

For most high earners, their peak income years, typically their mid-40s to late 50s, are also their highest-tax years. Retirement, by contrast, often brings lower taxable income, and therefore lower tax rates. Deferred compensation is designed to capture that opportunity.

This is the “tax-rate arbitrage” that makes the strategy compelling: defer income from a high-tax year, receive it in a lower-tax year, and keep the difference.

A Hypothetical Example: Meet Sarah

To see how this works in practice, consider a hypothetical example with Sarah:

  • Sarah and her husband (whose tax status is married filing jointly) are set to recognize $450,000 of taxable income, placing them in the 32% federal tax bracket
  • Sarah elects to defer $150,000 into her employer’s deferred compensation plan
  • Their taxable income drops to $300,000, moving them into the 24% federal tax bracket
  • Both plan to retire early at age 55
  • Sarah elects to receive her deferred compensation paid out over 10 years, from ages 55 to 65

During retirement, even while receiving the deferred compensation payments, Sarah’s total taxable income is likely to be meaningfully lower than during her peak earning years. As a result, the deferred income is taxed at a lower rate than it would have been had she recognized it while still working.

This is the tax-rate arbitrage at work. The same dollars that would have been taxed at 32% are now taxed at a lower rate in retirement, simply by choosing when to recognize those dollars on her tax return.

An Additional Benefit: Bridging the Gap to Age 59½

For high earners who plan to retire before the traditional retirement age, deferred compensation offers a second meaningful advantage beyond tax-bracket management.

Withdrawals from Traditional IRAs and 401(k)s before age 59½ typically trigger a 10% IRS early withdrawal penalty. However, deferred compensation plans don’t carry this restriction. When structured properly, deferred compensation can provide penalty-free income during the years between early retirement and age 59½, often with greater flexibility and tax control than tapping retirement accounts prematurely.

In Sarah’s case, retiring at 55 means there are nearly five years before penalty-free distributions from her traditional retirement accounts become available. Her deferred compensation payout, structured to begin at her retirement, fills that gap without triggering penalties or forcing sizeable early withdrawals from her IRA or 401(k) to maintain her lifestyle.

The Planning Decisions That Make It Work

Deferred compensation doesn’t execute itself. The strategy requires deliberate decisions, often made years before the income is received. The key planning decisions include:

  • How much to defer: Deferring too little limits the tax benefit, but deferring too much can create concentration risk with the employer or leave too little take-home income during working years. The right amount depends on current income, future income projections, and the overall financial plan.
  • When to receive payouts: Employees must elect a payout schedule, either a lump sum or installments, typically before the income is even earned to become deferred. Getting this right requires projecting future income as accurately as possible, including Social Security timing, other retirement income like pensions, and potential taxable windfalls like inheriting a Traditional IRA.
  • How deferred comp fits the broader plan: Deferred compensation doesn’t exist in isolation. It interacts with 401(k) balances, Traditional and Roth IRAs, Social Security, and taxable investments. The most effective strategies treat it as one piece of a coordinated, long-term tax and retirement plan.

Summary

Deferred compensation can be a powerful strategy for high earners who want to manage their lifetime tax burden, but it works best when the mechanics are understood and the planning decisions are made intentionally.

Good financial planning isn’t a “one size fits all” experience. If you’re thinking about how this applies to your own situation, you’re already at the point where having a conversation makes sense. That’s where partnering with our practice begins:

This post was researched and written by the author with the assistance of AI writing tools. All content reflects the author’s own views, has been independently verified, and has been reviewed and approved prior to publication.

Get the FREE High-Earner’s Tax Advantage Blueprint

DOWNLOAD NOW

Ready to take the first step?

Let’s schedule a 7 minute call.
LET’S DO IT!

We’ve Prepared Your Tax Advantage Blueprint

…Just Tell Us Where To Send It

Let us know you are human: