01-26-2025, 01:00 PM | #23 | |
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01-26-2025, 01:12 PM | #24 | |
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Their training/residency is so long they often don't start "working" until the age of 30. They make a comfortable living once they start working in their specialty, and retire quite young. |
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01-26-2025, 04:42 PM | #25 | |
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If my plan goes well we will retire well on our retirement, and that is not including my wife's business and building that she'll sell when she retires, but maybe hang around and put some hours in for spare cash. |
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01-27-2025, 12:43 PM | #26 | |
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01-27-2025, 02:21 PM | #27 | |
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Registered FA speaking: Cannot convert funds from inherited to ROTH, the IRS has these accounts specifically titled as such so you they can tax you. With that being said the biggest considerations are your current income level (married JNT / vs SNGLE) and when you inherited the funds. Pre <2020 you have lifetime expectancy ruling, post 2020 under the TCJA you have the 10Y rule. IRS requires to withdraw every penny within 10Ys. Each dollar withdrawn will go towards your taxable income bracket.
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01-28-2025, 08:26 AM | #29 | |
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I didn't have to delve into a possible Roth conversion. I inherited an IRA back in 2014 and the annual RMD was of course appreciated but except for redoing how the money was invested I didn't do anything else. But in the case of the OP he should seek out a good tax advisor someone infinitely more qualified to help him than I. |
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01-28-2025, 08:33 AM | #30 | |
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He graduated in 1950 and began full time employment shortly after he graduated. Oh, Dad was born in 1919 so in 1950 he was 31. |
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01-28-2025, 09:03 AM | #31 | |
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Running out of money, or the fear of it, is real to retired folks. Of course the amount of fear differs. With Dad he never expressed any concern about running out of money while they lived in their paid for home. But the fear became something he began to express when he and Mom were living in assisted care. This began sometime in late 2012. I'd visit Mom and Dad every day, sometimes twice a day. Every day early in our visit Dad would ask me how much was he paying for this care? I'd tell him: $2800/month each for Mom and him or $5600/month total. Dad would come back with that's almost $70,000/year. Can we afford that? I said yes you can afford it. I didn't talk details at the care home because I didn't want the staff to know anymore about Mom and Dad's financial situation beyond the fact the check Dad wrote every month was good. But more than half the cost per year was covered by their combined income mainly from pensions and SSA benefits and investments. Savings made up the difference. I didn't have the heart to tell Dad neither he nor Mom would outlive their money. And they didn't. They died in November of 2014 just a few weeks apart. |
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01-28-2025, 01:30 PM | #32 | |
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01-28-2025, 01:35 PM | #33 | |
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Last edited by lowkey_domm; 01-28-2025 at 01:46 PM.. |
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Yesterday, 07:16 AM | #34 | |
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It makes one consider long term care insurance, especially as you get closer to retiring. |
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