The IRS decides when you're required to start taking money out of your retirement accounts and most people aren't ready for what comes next.
In this episode of The Perfect Retirement Plan?, Phillip Smith breaks down Required Minimum Distributions (RMDs), what they are, how they're calculated, and why they trigger a chain reaction most retirees don't see coming.
Whether you're approaching RMD age or already taking distributions, this episode covers the tax implications, Medicare premium surcharges (IRMAA), Roth conversion strategies, inherited IRA rules, and how to coordinate RMDs with Social Security and pension income so you're planning ahead, not scrambling to catch up.
Chapters:
00:00 The retirement surprise nobody asks for
01:26 What RMDs actually are (and why they exist)
01:55 The tax deferral deal you made with the IRS
02:56 How RMDs are calculated
04:36 Why delaying RMD age doesn't reduce taxes
07:07 RMD rules by account type: IRAs vs. 401(k)s
08:09 Why multiple accounts create compounding complexity
09:35 RMDs stacked on Social Security and pensions
11:32 How RMDs can trigger more Social Security taxation
13:15 IRMAA and Medicare premium surcharges explained
14:12 Inherited IRA rules and the 10 year rule
15:33 Roth conversions and managing RMD pressure
18:30 3 action steps to take now
19:55 Why good RMD planning is boring in the best way
Thanks for tuning in to this episode of The Perfect Retirement Plan, and remember: it's not about having the smartest financial advisor, the most money saved, or the highest probability of retirement success. The perfect retirement plan, for you – is the one you act on.
Phillip Smith, CRPC AIF | Financial Planner
Tidepool Wealth Strategies
450 Country Club Road, Suite 350 | Eugene, OR | 97401
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Additional Disclosures:
The opinions contained in this material are those of the author, and not a recommendation or solicitation to buy or sell investment products. This information is from sources believed to be reliable, but Cetera Wealth Services, LLC cannot guarantee or represent that it is accurate or complete.
All investing involves risk, including the possible loss of principal. There is no assurance that any investment strategy will be successful.