
FINANCIaL
FIELd NOTES
Making Sense of Medicare, Part 1 – The 5 Pieces
Medicare is a confusing topic to navigate, in part because there are so many choices. In the first part of this series, I will discuss the various parts of Medicare. Next week I will discuss the cost of putting these pieces together.
There are 5 pieces to Medicare…
Roth Conversion Ladder Strategy
Roth conversions are the process of transferring money from tax-deferred accounts, such as 401ks or IRAs, to tax-free accounts like Roth 401ks or Roth IRAs.
When you move money from one account to the other, you generally pay taxes on the full amount converted. The money then grows tax-free from there on out.
One strategy to consider is to implement small Roth conversions, a little at a time, over multiple years…
How Flexibility Can Give You $10,000/year In Retirement
The 4% rule by Jonathan Guyton is one of the most widely cited strategies for preserving wealth over a full retirement. It states that historically a balanced portfolio could have kept a 4% withdrawal rate, adjusted for inflation each year, throughout a 65-year-old’s hypothetical 30-year retirement.
However, it fails to account for a retiree’s ability to lower withdrawals during bad market environments…
Why Average Life Expectancy Is Deceptive
When I start working on a financial plan, I sometimes joke “And when would you like to die?” It’s a bad joke that rarely gets a sympathy laugh.
But when we’re planning for a lifetime, we have to make an educated guess on when that life might end. I often get pushback when I suggest as late as age 90 or 95. But average life expectancy can be deceiving…
My Retirement Checklist
My family thrives on checklists because without them we would almost certainly head to the beach for a long vacation without sunscreen or our swim trunks.
Preparing for retirement can feel a bit like a really long vacation, constantly wondering if there’s something you haven’t thought of. That’s why I created my 33 item retirement checklist to walk clients through as they prepare for retirement.
My Retirement Checklist (Part 3)
Last week we discussed how to evaluate whether your investment and tax plan are optimized to be working toward your retirement income goals.
In the final part of my Retirement Checklist series, we will discuss how to make sure you’re making cost-effective decisions about Medicare and other insurance, and evaluating the best Social Security strategy for yourself.