Retired 18 months ago at age 63. The hardest thing is spending money. The saving habit had been ingrained for 35 years and switching over to spending is harder than I thought it would be.
@johnzemetra61063 күн бұрын
I agree with you that the saving habit is hard to break. I am 70 years old and just started Social Security this year and my wife started 2 years ago. I also have a pension, between these three sources of income we have more than enough income. I also have retirement accounts and inheritance. It is still hard to tell myself that I have enough money, go spend it.
@KathleenMcNe3 күн бұрын
Same. I retired 3 years ago at age 63. I was so accustomed to living very frugally and saving/investing aggressively and consistently that switching from saving to spending did not come easy. My brokerage accounts have a combined $4.5 million balance, but I have a phobia about withdrawing from them, so I never do. It's as if there is a red, flashing "DO NOT SPEND" sign on the accounts. I use the income from my mortgage-free rental properties to pay my bills. My CPA finally told me that I should start spending money on myself.
@baron70242 күн бұрын
I think this approach is the result of being children and grandchildren of Depression Era parents and grandparents. Frugality and putting away for a rainy day were a way of life passed down to those currently in their 60's and older. We'd rather have financial security than a lot of things that really don't enrich life.
@johnzemetra61062 күн бұрын
@@baron7024 I agree with you 100%, my father was unemployed and under unemployed when I was in high school. My mother died when I was 11 so my brother and I had to grow up fast. My father taught us how to fix things, bikes, cars, plumbing, etc.. It could have been a lot worse, a friend in Boy Scouts father lost his job in the aerospace industry and his wife flipped out, resulting in murder/suicide, life in the early 70’s was brutal. I was always looking to make a buck, save a buck, or not spend a buck. I am so glad at this point in my life I don’t have to worry about money.
@ralphmowery2898Күн бұрын
@@johnzemetra6106 Sort of the same for me. Retired at 62 and now at 74 and I have a hard time spending the money. SS plus pension plus IRA is lots more than I made working. Plus everything is paid for. Just not much that I do not have at this age that I want. A few years ago I traded in a 10 year old car with less than 25,000 miles on it for a new one just because it was 10 years old. Sometimes it is just hard for me to justify paying the price for some things. There is something I would like to have for about $ 5000 and can afford it but no more than I would use it, say about 10 times a year, it just does not seem worth getting it. Now if it was say $ 1000 or less I would get it. Just as I bought a new tiller for my very small garden because I wanted a rear tine instead of the front tine that I already have. I only use that thing about 5 times a year.
@Tsunaniis-j5l13 сағат бұрын
I sold most my positions during the dip at a loss and now those stocks are doing well. Most of my holdings are in cash of about 300 grand now. How do I stay invested and think long-term to help me ride out the market’s ups and downs.
@MakeamericaGreatagain-h7j13 сағат бұрын
Follow the S&P 500 by investing in ETFs like VOO, SPY, and SCHD. Dollar-cost averaging into these ETFs will likely outperform most investors in this bull run.
@Damncars45613 сағат бұрын
It is very easy to buy in on trending stocks but the problem is knowing when to sell or hold, which is why having guidance is important. I've been in touch with my CFA for about 3 years now and although I was initially skeptical about it, I will say I've made more progress within a that time frame generating 7-figure profits.
@MARSHMALLOWwhimsy13 сағат бұрын
This is incredible. Could you recommend who you work with? I really could use some help at this moment.
@Damncars45613 сағат бұрын
My CFA is ’Sophia Irene Powell’ , a renowned figure in her line of work. I recommend researching her credentials further. She has many years of experience and is a valuable resource for anyone looking to navigate the financial market.
@DreamweaverShade-h9p13 сағат бұрын
I’ve just looked up her full name on my browser and found her webpage, very much appreciate this
@RetiredPilot3 күн бұрын
I am 82 and had a stroke 18 months ago. My greatest pleasure is managing our acounts and counting our good fortune. We enjoyed our early retirement with boats, and a home in Florida. Now we enjoy getting up in the am and realizing we are still happy. (married 62 years). Like your grandma we are slowing down and accept that. Our enjoyment now is more in giving than taking, putting money away for our grandchildren's education and helping our kids. Having extra money is a blessing not a curse and yes the government will reap some of the rewards, but we will never worry about how we spend our final days. Having too much money in old age is what life is about. JMHO
@paulbrungardt98232 күн бұрын
Blessings to you. BTW, my son flies 737 for American Airlines. I am 70 year of age and married 44 years. I practiced optometry for 30 years. We fund our charity which provides optometry services and free eyeglasses to children in Central America. Do Well, then -- Do Good !
@Batirtze-b6xКүн бұрын
There you go!!!!! Keep at it. ❤
@BobbyCondaКүн бұрын
Hit 240k today. Appreciate you for all the knowledge and nuggets you had thrown my way over the last months. Started with 24k in September 2024.
@RichardArthurBakerКүн бұрын
I would really love to know how much work you did put in to get to this stage
@BobbyCondaКүн бұрын
I will be forever grateful to you, you changed my whole life and I will continue to preach on your behalf for the whole world to hear that you saved me from huge financial debt with just a small Investment, thank you Jihan Wu you're such a life saver
@PauletteSmith-s8nКүн бұрын
As a beginner in this, it’s essential for you to have a mentor to keep you accountable. Jihan Wu is also my trade analyst, he has guided me to identify key market trends, pinpointed strategic entry points, and provided risk assessments, ensuring my trades decisions align with market dynamics for optimal returns.
@haldorsonsmolarekКүн бұрын
Jihan Wu Services has really set the standard for others to follow, we love him here in Canada 🇨🇦 as he has been really helpful and changed lots of life's
@StevenHackersКүн бұрын
Waking up every 10th of each month to £210,000 it’s a blessing to I and my family… Big gratitude to this same Jihan Wu🙌
@mopsman2 күн бұрын
This is spot on. I retired as a multimillionaire and was living with a goal of not using my 401ks until RMD. Even to the (foolish) point of timing cashing out funds and stocks to timing dividends. My new epiphany is to have plenty of cash quickly available for whatever I want, and not have to think about the timing details. One more point you might want to add to your "legacy" discussion: if you leave a lot money in 401ks, your heirs will have to pay the taxes. I had to deal with that with 2 relatives who left 401ks, it's a pain.
@vinyl1Earthlink4 күн бұрын
This entirely depends on your personal financial situation. Some people are short of money, and will have to take money from retirement accounts just to survive. Others have plenty of money, and don't need anything from their retirement accounts. You have to look at you total situation, including the tax consequences, and decide what to do.
@fdm21554 күн бұрын
Yes, I think he acknowledge that by pointing that some will want to leave funds and others will want/need to spend most if not all of the funds. These decisions always have to be tailored to the individual. I think this video is a good reminder that the RMD is a floor, not a ceiling.
@pauldelray58394 күн бұрын
Every RMD is listed on your Tax form 1040 under Line 2A. This new income will be added to your adjusted income Line 11. Medicare will use both figures to determine possible increases to your Medicare IRMA’s. They go back two years. A large withdrawal can leave you with an unexpected large new monthly IRMA. Also applies to your prescription fee part of Medicare. So please, plan accordingly.
@RetrieverTrainingAlone4 күн бұрын
EXCELLENT! We are 5 years off RMD age at 73. We are using a recent inheritance to pay taxes on Roth Conversions to minimize our tax liability associated with large RMDs.
@mitchburk51124 күн бұрын
On my financial advisor's advice I started yearly withdrawals from my trad IRA when I retired at age 59. We shoot to stay mostly in the lower two tax brackets with a bit in the third 22% bracket. If you wait to take your RMD at 73 there is a good chance you will have a significant portion in the upper brackets so withdrawing earlier and carefully watching the tax brackets will save you on taxes in the long run.
@jimlow68244 күн бұрын
Good advice from your financial planner. If you didn't need the money, you could also have done ROTH conversions. Hopefully, this will keep you clear of Medicare IRMAA payments when you start taking RMDs.
@ramyhuber83922 күн бұрын
This is helpful for me to clarify within myself what "quality of life" means. Thank you for posting the video! Am 72, semi-retired, female, single, no children. . I enjoy my friends, my animals, beauty of nature, good food. It is true that I worked and saved for many years, and also inherited some money unexpectedly. Right now, it will be plenty to last me the rest of my life, barring a huge crash of US economy, which did happen in the 20s. I am taking minimum RMDs at present.
@Batirtze-b6xКүн бұрын
From a very happy single woman with no kids at working age to another, GOOD FOR YOU. ❣️❣️❣️❣️
@scottsinnott26364 күн бұрын
I am 61 and I already started drawing from my IRA. I can reduce those withdrawals once social security kicks in.
@commonsense69674 күн бұрын
My gift to myself in retirement is NOT to be forced into some state-paid for poorly run nursing home at life's end, but to have enough to live well, with adequate assistance with ADLs and cooking/cleaning chores out of the way and no home maintenance worries. THAT may well require $100K per year in 10 or 15 years, when I'll likely need it. (I'm 73.) Why impoverish myself now, taking away my choices later? If for some reason I never need the funds for that, then I'm happy to leave my kids andgrandkids an inheritance. They'll surely need it.
@sactopyrshep4 күн бұрын
I'm doing the exact same thing. Between my SS and my pension, I am able to fully fund a comfortable lifestyle. Yes. My biggest concern is that I might end up in an old-person warehouse where they tear up worn towels for washcloths. I am 75, in good health, and take no medications. I may live another 15 years or more before I need care assistance. Until then, I will continue to only take RMDs from my retirement account to ensure a comfortable and dignified old age.
@rocketscientist0072 күн бұрын
Your numbers are way off. It was $100k per year 15 years ago. 15 years from now, it will be at least $200k per year. Nursing home costs are 100% deductible from federal income tax.
@ediefrasier29322 күн бұрын
Thank you for sharing the story of your grandmother. Happy Thanksgiving to you and your family.
@edb3877Күн бұрын
Agreed. It really added a nice human touch to a subject that is very often excessively dry. My grand parents were born in the 1890s and were members of "the working poor". They worked hard almost all their lives and never had much. But when we would visit, Gram always made a great dinner for us and cooked it as only she could. She didn't have a lot in the way of worldly possessions but she had great love for her children and grand children. She has been gone for many years now and is still greatly missed.
@richardc4884 күн бұрын
Mr S, taking my money out early and having fun with all my traveling. Going on world cruise for two and my account didnt even move with the fund increase!
@fdm21554 күн бұрын
That sounds amazing!
@j.m.70564 күн бұрын
Enjoy yourself!
@janeolinger80383 күн бұрын
My mother lived to be 98, the last 10 years of her life in an assisted living facility. There was no tax deduction and insurance doesn’t cover assisted living. By the end of her life, she was paying $8,000/ month. Even with a substantial monthly income, Mom went through half of her assets. Many, if not most, of the other residents outlived their assets. This was a major shock for them, because most had what seemed like wealth. As people seem to be living longer and longer, this is going to happen more and more.
@user-roadwander3 күн бұрын
I plan to use my pre-tax IRA to pay for my assisted living. My doctor needs to document that I can’t live on my own, is my understanding. This was how my father lived out his last 3 years.
@marktapley75712 күн бұрын
People are not living longer. In fact the life expectancy in U.S. has dropped almost 3 years since 2020 due to the “just trust the science” program. Earlier excess mortality was merely due to childhood deaths, not decrease in longevity.
@janeolinger8038Күн бұрын
@@marktapley7571 I was referring to the people who live to a very advanced age. There are many living well into their nineties and even into their hundreds. I have known a good many personally. These are mostly the people outliving their assets.
@chinesecrested95284 күн бұрын
Thank you for those wonderful story and the financial modeling. I am 70 living in Thailand. My kids and grandkids are grown. I noticed the slowing upon my arrival a year ago.
@quaternion-pi4 күн бұрын
If you or your family are not able to care for you, it currently costs ~ $10K/month in a nursing home. Medicare does not provide long term nursing home care. If you are indigent you might be able to find a nursing home that accepts Medicaid, but it won't be pretty. Dementia care is even more costly and becoming more prevalent.
@timdowney67214 күн бұрын
Having done nursing visits in many long-term care facilities, I will enact my expiration date before “living” that way…..even in decent ones.
@fdm21554 күн бұрын
Yep. Family member recently opted to move into a facility that offers nursing care to help with a chronic condition. They chose this over hiring help at home. It's a beautiful modern facility. They have a very nice one bedroom apartment with some good amenities ie entertainment options, onsite cafe and restaurant, option to have meals delivered, great public spaces. They choose the mid level option and yeah, it's gonna cost $100K/year. Obviously it will only go up from there. They are nearly 90 and have very robust retirement savings so it's okay for them financially. But wow. Not many could afford this place.
@James4cycling4 күн бұрын
@@timdowney6721How? Suicide? No one wants to go there.
@quaternion-pi4 күн бұрын
@@James4cycling The unexamined life is not worth living - Socrates. My personal perspective is that a life devoid of self-awareness, introspection, and critical thinking has no value to me. Both my parents required nursing facilities after the family could no longer take care of them at home, even with hired assistance. Luckily, funds were still available for these "no-go" years of retirement. At a minimum these issues should be addressed by the family.
@MichaelPrudhomme-u7x4 күн бұрын
Hospice is much less expensive ❤
@allen_p4 күн бұрын
Wonderful story about your gramdmother
@commonsense69674 күн бұрын
I love the story about your grandma, too! I may do the same, as my kids and grandkids are located cross-country from me.
@sharontabor77183 күн бұрын
And then there is the fear of not having enough money to pay for assisted living or home health care. I don't want to be 90 and trying to figure out how to pay for my care-I have no children. I would rather be frugally comfortable and leave money to charities than be put out on the streets with nowhere to go in my old age.
@alanhill25083 күн бұрын
I agree with you 100%. One thing Jeff never addresses in this video is lifestyle. IMHO, too many people want too much. Like you, I truly enjoy a frugal life. I don't want a new car (mine is 16 years old and runs like a top); I have no desire to travel to Europe; I enjoy my state and local communities, all drive-able. Also like you, I have no children, but that doesn't mean I don't care about the future. My trust is set up to distribute my assets to a scholarship organization and a well known children's research hospital. I would much rather enjoy a simple, frugal life and have fewer worries about ending up destitute.
@EJJ-EvArmsКүн бұрын
Thanks for sharing your memories of your endearing grandmother. How fortunate you are to have had her in your life. God bless you and your family. Your videos are appreciated.
@Columbus11522 күн бұрын
I officially retired in 2018 at age 66, both my mother and my wife's mother had medical issues and we were both involved in their care. My wife was her mother's caregiver who suffered from severe dementia, my mother lived with a family member and we shared responsibility when needed. My mother passed in 2022 and my MIL 2023, so the first 5 years of our retirement have been spent on our responsibilities to our families. We haven't needed to pull much from our IRA's,
@willjay9164 күн бұрын
I disagree with your analysis, perhaps because my means and scale of living are more modest (no complaints, it's just the way life played out for me). I anticipate that as I age that I will need to hire more help or assistance - I've already started down that road with the yard guy. I expect that in a few years I'll need a housekeeper, and periodic trades people for handyperson services, gutter cleaning, and household maintenance. It is my hope that the RMDs will cover these foreseeable future expenditures. If I croak before then, there will be funds to settle the estate. The unknown is my lifespan. The men in my family tend to die young (when my father was my age he'd been dead for three years), although there were a few who lived into their 80's and a grandmother born in the late 19th century who lived into her 80's. My intention is to be healthy and comfortable as best as I am able to be.
@johnzemetra61063 күн бұрын
I agree with you on the unknown of lifespan. My mother died just short of her 49th birthday when I was 11 years old. My father lived until 96 with only the last 4 months in assisted living. I am 70 years old, active and relatively good health,but you never know what will happen.
@ralphmowery2898Күн бұрын
I retired and find that some things that I would have done to save money I now hire out. Such as the water heater needed replacing which I could do and have done in another house I lived in. I hired it out as the labor was less than $ 200. Wife wanted a new sink so that was hired out. I really hate pluming even though I can do it.
@willjay916Күн бұрын
@@ralphmowery2898While I am grateful for my reasonably good health, I find that I am not as flexible as I was years ago, so squatting or bending into positions for the extended periods of time necessary to do the work is making it more difficult and that's before considering whether or not I have the right glasses on owith me at that moment to do any detail work.
@williammccaslin8527Күн бұрын
I will take the minimum distribution at 72, but we will reinvest it. As other commentors have said, I just can't bring myself to spend anything, but I've always lived like that. Now in the process of downsizing alot of stuff I have aquired over my working years that I no longer need, an its just taking up space. Thx for the vid Geoff
@17713bb3 күн бұрын
I retired this year, RMD is scheduled to begin in another year. I just initiated withdrawals to max out the 24% tax bracket every year. My new objective is to minimize size of the IRA. Removal from IRA with the least amount of overall tax is the primary concern. If/when faced with RMD at single tax payer rate, the tax will be excessive. Taxes seem to far exceed IRMMA cost concerns.
@prieten494 күн бұрын
Have you checked out some of those monthly fees for assisted living or nursing homes? They are expensive! If you spend all of your 401(k) or traditional IRA when you have a lot of "energy," you might not have enough later to get into a nice retirement facility.
@christopherprice32264 күн бұрын
Thanks for this lovely memory and lesson.
@SurfCityBill4 күн бұрын
I former work colleague that I still stay in touch with turned 85. He says he has more in his portfolio than when he retired 20 years ago. Very likely he falls into a minimal spending category.
@Riggsnic_co3 сағат бұрын
Retirees who struggle to meet their basic needs are the ones who could not accumulate enough money during their active years to meet their needs. Retirement choices determine a lot of things. My Husband and I both spent same number of years in the civil service, she invested through a wealth manager and myself through the 401k. We both still earning after our retirement.
@kevinmarten3 сағат бұрын
This is true. I'm in my mid 50's now. My wife and I were following this same trajectory. Last two years, I pulled out my money and invested with her wealth manager. Not catching up with her profits over the years, but at least I earn more. I'm making money even before retiring, and my retirement fund has grown way more than it would have with just the 401(k). Haha...
@JacquelinePerrira3 сағат бұрын
Interesting . I think this is something I should do, but I've been stalling for a long time now. I don't really know which firm to work with; I feel they are all the same but it seems you’ve got it all worked out with the firm you work with so i surely wouldn’t mind a recommendation..
@kevinmarten3 сағат бұрын
There are a handful of experts in the field. I've experimented with a few over the past years, but I've stuck with ‘’ Carol Vivian Constable” for about five years now, and her performance has been consistently impressive. She’s quite known in her field, look-her up.
@JacquelinePerrira3 сағат бұрын
She appears to be well-educated and well-read. I ran a Google search on her name and came across her website; thank you for sharing.
@snoringdog16764 күн бұрын
So glad you visited this critical topic which luckily my financial advisor has been touching on quarterly/ annually during our planning calls.
@peziki4 күн бұрын
Seems like I'm missing the pt of this discussion. Holding back spending to prep for the future need of declining health. Is that not wise?
@edb3877Күн бұрын
IMO, it is. Consider the reverse of that and its effect upon your life. Getting old has plenty of problems of its own without adding poverty to the mix. I usually take my RMDs rounded up to the next thousand dollars. I have more cash invested today than when I retired 20 years ago at age 55. It doesn't buy as much as it used to but it's still more than enough. Spending money doesn't excite me. Saving and investing for my family does. I live a simple but satisfying life, which pleases me and those around me. Leaving a substantial legacy is a good thing, if one can, as it is the final gift we can leave our heirs and / or favorite charity. Perhaps some people should consider investing a part of their savings in some solid blue-chip dividend-paying stocks? That way, their heirs will get a step up in basis such that if they sell quickly they won't owe any tax on them.
@squidward664 күн бұрын
I don't care if I leave money behind. Whatever. The kids can have it, goodness knows they'll need it.
@splitliving4 күн бұрын
Die Broke😅
@kw72924 күн бұрын
@@splitlivingdon’t want to be the richest in the graveyard
@markbajek2541Күн бұрын
Don't you want a high school named after you?
@kennethspeaks24083 күн бұрын
First time to your site. Excellent content
@donnareedfanКүн бұрын
Mr. Schmidt, the popping noise heard every time you put your hands together or bump the table: There are mic holders that suspend the mic with bands so that the mic is isolated from the stand vibrations. You could also use a better pop filter on the mic itself. Thanks for the RMD information!
@donaldmiller96484 күн бұрын
Convert traditional IRAs to Roth IRAs gradually watching taxes and IRMMA trigger levels until you reach RMD age. Will be in better shape if you have larger traditional IRA accounts, if lower amounts wait until RMD age.
@user-yj3ob9kd3l2 күн бұрын
Good advice, thanks. It's hard to switch the thought process from saving to spending. I haven't needed any funds from retirement accounts, and that has kept me in the saving mode. I have been a bit more loose with spending, though, like doing home improvements. None of it from retirement accounts. I'm also thinking about self-insuring for LTC. It's all good to think about.
@pubmeatman4 күн бұрын
I’m about 5 years into retirement and I’m still concerned about sequence of returns risk. I live well with a 3% withdrawal rate before SS. My guess is I will leave a lot to my heirs. They have no idea how much I was able to save. Going to buy my first luxury car next year. Hard to turn from saver to spender.
@carolemurdoch86713 күн бұрын
@pubmeatman I just purchased a new car, cash, as a pre retirement gift to myself. It's a car that I've always wanted. I love it! So I urge you to give yourself the joy of buying your luxury car! If you can afford it, and it sounds like you think that you can, then enjoy! 😊
@The-Armed-Pacifist4 күн бұрын
Thank you. I always learn something here.
@tom-kz9pbКүн бұрын
Watch out that if you defer your 1st RMD as long as possible, you can get hit with the need to take your first two RMDs in the same tax year, which might have negative tax consequences. Be careful then when you start needing RMDs, you cannot have for example all your IRA funds tied up in long-term investments that have penalties for early withdrawal. You need to keep enough funds available and liquid for the RMD amount. IRS cares about the TOTAL amount of RMD taken across your IRAs and 401Ks, not needing the funds necesarily to be deducted per individual account. So you have some ability to juggle, if trying to preserve some long-term investments.
@ralphmowery2898Күн бұрын
I try to keep enough in short term investments to get the rmd paid. Such as 3 months to 1 year Tbills or something that pays interest even if it is not much. Sometimes in stocks that seem safe enough and may even pay some money..
@T_1357_F4 күн бұрын
My decline in physical ability became noticable in my 50s. It has become even more readily apparent in my 60s. I fear how much steeper that decline will be in my 70s and onwards. Maybe if I keep my 401K sufficiently funded, I will be able to afford to replace my worn out body parts with artificial replacements as I transition into a cyborg in the later 21st Century.
@vernholdforth84232 күн бұрын
My wife and I (both in our 70’s) have been of the philosophy to ‘do what we can, while we can’, because we can’t take it with us.
@markgoodsmith72292 күн бұрын
Excellent point! Thank you.
@dianediliberto18764 күн бұрын
Excellent video. Thank you.
@HolySchmidt4 күн бұрын
Glad it was helpful!
@JBoy340a3 күн бұрын
I am taking my accounts with RMDs first and letting my equities grow.
@joycewright53864 күн бұрын
I’m old enough this year to start QCDs on my IRA so I will be giving a lot to my church and favorite charities.
Күн бұрын
He waited till the age limit 71, took the RMD We live the lifestyle we want, incl soem travel. It will last until he is 92 or ten more years, unless he takes out more. My retirement is in Muni's, I bonds and our joint CD's and building up w/ interest, also his military pension and 401 civil service. With some inheritance from his parents, we stick w/ the RMD so far.
@peterbedford26102 күн бұрын
At 66, I am getting pretty tired of travel. Especially since I traveled the world in my career. Cutting back on travel really saves a lot of money.
@J123G2 күн бұрын
Leaving extra funds in your accounts is absolutely necessary for most US citizens. Take a look at health related expenses as they relate to aging. Everyone in the US can relate to this and no doubt have had close relatives who all of a sudden needed to pay large medical bills they never could have expected. Yes .. spending funds when younger all sounds fine but there will be a time for most people that "surprise" expenses pop up and that unused cash is needed most.
@good.living17 сағат бұрын
From the comments, many seemed to have excuses justifying their saving habits after retirement even having a sizable traditional taxable retirement account. I think the key here really is to improve your quality of life while your body is able. What is your quality of life if you are no longer able to travel or already living in a nursing home needing 24-hour home care assistance? Do you want to use your retirement money for paying taxes and for just living longer (but without any quality) in the future or do you rather spend on yourself when you can enjoy life??
@Hank520TubeКүн бұрын
The whole issue is one about Too much government. Bureaucrats whose "job" it is to rake in the $, and the working person who is just trying to have a decent, good life. The problem is the bureaucrats and they need to be diminished or we'll all be in poverty and despair.
@mspock74 күн бұрын
RMD vs IRMMA, a mini-max story.
@katmeup74 күн бұрын
My 403b is worth more than when I retired despite 3 years of RMDs. I don’t take any more than that because my taxes are already too high.
@j.m.70564 күн бұрын
Me too. After being told taxes would decrease in retirement -- NOT!
@James4cycling4 күн бұрын
It will only get worse. I watched my mother get pushed into higher tax brackets.
@j.m.70564 күн бұрын
@James4cycling Yikes!
@splitliving4 күн бұрын
I agree. Not to mention the Medicare supercharges.
@ralphmowery2898Күн бұрын
Same with my IRA. Worth much more now than when the RMD was required.
@josephcarames32493 күн бұрын
really useful information!
@williamdavis45114 күн бұрын
Cashing out no matter what and let the chips fall....
@skippylippy5474 күн бұрын
William, What do you mean by "cashing out"? At what point do you think you'll cash out?
@jeromedion57232 күн бұрын
Okay . . . without consideration of preserving assets for the potential of long-term care for each of the spouses. Even taking more than the RMD can result in the creation of taxable accounts that sweep up any "excess" RMDs. Of course, those with more modest beginning balances may be in the position described in this video, but not everyone will escape long-term care in the later years.
@jeanjasinczuk75434 күн бұрын
That video in my opinion muddle more than clarify anything. It seems to link RMD with spending, but that would not be correct. RMD means one has to withdraw a percentage based on age to pay taxes. But one can withdraw the money and transfer it after paying taxes to a taxable brokerage account.
@user-yj3ob9kd3l2 күн бұрын
Spending the funds from an RMD is an option that is doable, but not implemented by many. It's not necessarily to pay taxes, but to satisfy a requirement and enjoy the additional cash. It's better for those who can, to make the RMD and enjoy it. It's a quality of life improvement.
@leisure057blank34 күн бұрын
Maybe they are afraid of IRMAA, and higher taxes
@kw72924 күн бұрын
Our home’s value is the first line of defense for assisted living/nursing. One parent spent 7 months in hospice, the other did 14 months of assisted living and 3 months of nursing. Plan on leaving nothing, if there’s anything left our heirs are welcome to it.
@user-yj3ob9kd3l2 күн бұрын
Good thought about home equity. It's always going to be there and can be earmarked for LTC.
@davidlawson42814 күн бұрын
Having an attorney familiar with these ins and outs is worth the money. I am not advertising, as I am actually a retired doctor. I also have an accountant of 34 years who will coordinated, at my will.
@aldntnКүн бұрын
Just because you take money from your retirement funds doesn't mean you have to spend it. I look at it as a way to ease out of the stock market.
@jerryholder6999Күн бұрын
Maybe a couple of examples would be useful here. Seems there's risks everywhere you look: a risk of successful investments and a risk of not withdrawing enough at an age where it could be useful. Assuming of course, there's not an unplanned, end of life major expense. Just another risk...
@davidanson61154 күн бұрын
I enjoy your channel. In 1963 my father was stationed in Pearl Harbor and I was 4 years old. Any chance you were in Hawaii in 1963-1965?
@jeffb.24694 күн бұрын
Wait, I thought RMD age was 75 for those born 1960 and later?
@rooster30192 күн бұрын
So, what should a "mother" do? I do not have a lot, but I have enough without taking pre-RMD withdraws. I could take a hit by taking it all out and averaging taxes or I could decide to not worry and be happy. Hmmm. Choice two seems nice.
@AnOldGuy164Күн бұрын
life is not always unicorns and rainbows. So one arrives at their 90s and has a situation where they need money. Having spent their IRAs or other savings because some financial advisor forgets the expected becomes a problem. But not the financial advisor's problem. My wife and I could live comfortably on our Social Security plus RMDs. Paying for all we want.
@Armychuck4 күн бұрын
Sorry Geoff, but you kind of lost me on the chart. Is "RMD-years" the same as what the government calls a life expectancy factor? Is each RMD-year number the same for everyone if we begin at age 73? How does the government get those strange numbers? Couldn't they just count down the years we have left by a whole number (minus one each year)?
@chinabob174 күн бұрын
Please clarify what no tax on social security actually means it's a very ambiguous statement. If I have a job and make over the The limit do I get taxed on the job and no tax on the social security? It's very confusing I really appreciate your input and I'm sure to help others seniors as well thanks a lot.
@pensacola3213 күн бұрын
You can have a quality and enjoyable retirement without having to die broke. It is foolish to deny yourself if you can afford it. But it is equally foolish to spend money just for the sake of spending. And you might need the money for end of life comfort spending.
@edwardcotter70964 күн бұрын
Interesting presentation. I guess everyone is different. I have a disabled adult daughter, so I want to leave as much for her as possible. I make qualified charitable distributions from my traditional IRA which are at least the RMD. At 73 I still don't take anything for myself.
@jdenino60223 күн бұрын
I have a disabled 30 year old child too who had a job in retail for over 10 years but they were abusive to him so he quit and is now seeking a new job. I don’t know if he’ll ever get another job.😢
@edwardcotter70963 күн бұрын
@jdenino6022 My daughter works at our local psychiatric hospital in food service. She also used to work in retail which was very different. Nothing is perfect but the hospital environment is much more understanding. The food service hires disabled individuals for jobs of varying difficulty, both part-time and full-time. You might want to check a hospital in your area. Good luck.
@esthernoel37934 күн бұрын
Thank you 💚
@HolySchmidt4 күн бұрын
You’re welcome
@mkmariak4 күн бұрын
Is there a rule of thumb for starting with larger withdrawals and then tapering off to rmd amounts later in life?
@James4cycling4 күн бұрын
Never use a rule of thumb. You need to do what works for you.
@mikespangler984 күн бұрын
Not really. Don't break into the 24% rate if you can help it, and don't hit the IRMAA limit. If you are single IRMAA is the limiting number. $103,000 for 2024, $106,000 for 2025. Stay under that.
@user-yj3ob9kd3l2 күн бұрын
@mikespangler98 thanks!
@clbcl54 күн бұрын
My IRA is at 19.49% this year, guess I'm screwed.
@thomasrourke16903 күн бұрын
Thank You
@juliebee614 күн бұрын
i find these rules of thumb just dont work for me. its likely ill outlive my husband who is 20 yrs my senior. we have plenty, but he's afraid to spend anything. i know I'll have more than enough, although I anticipate some sort of care for him at some point. i want to give financial gifts to family now while i can see them enjoy it, not after we're gone. i want to spend and live a little more generously than we currently do. i want to give to others. but i dont get to make that call on my own.
@lylestavast76524 күн бұрын
before it's all over ???? what???? what are you referring to ????
@liveinthepresent2194 күн бұрын
Croaking
@peziki4 күн бұрын
Probably the date of our demise, right? "All over" usually means the end of something... i.e. your life.
@WealthyChronicleКүн бұрын
Anyone else here rethinking their entire retirement strategy? 😂
@robertharker2 күн бұрын
Is the money counting machine in the B roll at 0:28 AI generated footage?
@nightlightabcdКүн бұрын
You can start by telling what RMD" is the title!!!
@vincentdesalvo14644 күн бұрын
Hit the nail with the hammer with this video. In our case with no debt and with our SS check and our broker account paying dividends we don't come close to spending from the retirement account. We buy what we want when we want so maybe we are blessed to be here at this time in our life. For the last 8 years we have been doing the Roth conversion thing every year to the point of not affecting IRMAA. So next year when RMD's do start it will be easier to handle. To your point on RMD's, well that was the deal we made with Uncle Sam when we opened that tradition account (401k or IRA) and got the tax break.
@stanleymartins-o3s2 күн бұрын
Election is one of those things that could really contribute to portfolio growth and vice versa. I've been going hard with my investments this year and have been able to build up to 180k, Are there tips I could apply to help me grow my portfolio even more during this election season?.
@stanleymartins-o3s2 күн бұрын
How can I participate in this?... I sincerely aspire to establish a secure financial future and am eager to participate. Who is the driving force behind your success?
@marktapley75712 күн бұрын
All of this is a violation of our fourth amendment right to be secure in our personal effects. It should be no ones business how much money (or any assets) you have, especially the government. The great majority retired plantation livestock in the U.S. will not be concerned with your analysis because 80% of them have less than 200,000 in investments other than their socialist insecurity. You have to take the RMD or else you pay penalties to the government and giving money to that is the worst possible scenario. Best plan for most is to meet the RMD and then make sure you stay under the 4% rule. The fiat banking cartel is depreciating your currency at ap. 50% every 17 years and the insiders are always coming up with new scams to steal even more wealth from producers.
@joejoe-lb6bw2 күн бұрын
This video makes no sense. Quality of life for when? For today? What about in the coming years? Health always deteriorates and managed care is expensive. So maybe you don’t need a shiny new golf cart when the old one does its job.
@kwaichangcaine82344 күн бұрын
Chicago has got to hold a special place in your heart ? It's such an awesome city
@ScooterOnHisWay20243 күн бұрын
It is a dump. Sorry, but true.
@reynoldslacybrleroymeuschke4 күн бұрын
I am at the beginning of my "investment journey", planning to put 385K into dividend stocks so that I will be making up to 30% annually in dividend returns. any good recommendation on great performing stocks will be appreciated..
@DerickSams4 күн бұрын
As a newbie investor, it’s essential for you to have a mentor to keep you accountable. Ruth Ann Tsakonas is my trade analyst, she has guided me to identify key market trends, pinpointed strategic entry points, and provided risk assessments, ensuring my trades decisions align with market dynamics for optimal returns.
@ElizabethHansick4 күн бұрын
I managed to grow a nest egg of around 120k to over a Million. I'm especially grateful to Adviser Ruth Ann Tsakonas, for her expertise and exposure to different areas of the market.
@DerickSams4 күн бұрын
I don't really blame people who panic. Lack of information can be a big hurdle. I've been making more than $200k passively by just investing through an advisor, and I don't have to do much work. Inflation or no inflation, my finances remain secure. So I really don't blame people who panic.
@ElizabethHansick4 күн бұрын
Without a doubt! Ruth Ann Tsakonas is a trader who goes above and beyond. she has an exceptional skill for analysing market movements and spotting profitable opportunities. Her strategies are meticulously crafted on thorough research and years of practical experience..