Episode 53: Turning Retirement Savings into a Steady Income Plan Then joined by Eric from The Garden Artisan
Hosts: Madison Demora and Mike Garry
Guest: Eric Korn, from The Garden Artisan
Episode Overview
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TIMESTAMPS
00:08 – 01:02 – Introduction to episode topic: Turning Retirement Savings into a Steady Income Plan
01:03 – 04:16 – Social Security Timing Strategy
04:17 – 06:41 – Tax-Smart Retirement Withdrawals
06:42 – 08:06 – Managing Sequence Risk During Market Downturns
08:07 – 09:47 – RMDs and Roth Conversions
09:48 – 12:31 – Planning for Heirs: Roth Conversions and Inherited IRA Taxes
12:39 – 41:15 – Interview with Eric from The Garden Artisan
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Contact with Eric Korn




Social Security Claiming Strategy
Mike: So, some clients get where we’re coming from. But a lot of clients like their default is to either take it as soon as they’re eligible or maybe to take it once they stop working. And our baseline default is to wait until 70 to take it because your benefit goes up 8% a year, every year you wait. So your benefit at 70 is almost 2/3 higher than your benefit at 62. That’s a big difference. Right. So if it’s going to be 3,000 at 62, it would be 5,000 at 70. Right. That is a big number. And that number will be adjusted for inflation for as long as you live. So I’m not saying we always recommend 70. It depends on the situation. If somebody really can’t afford to retire but needs to, they can’t find another job, they’re physically unable to work longer, or if they have some sort of like known life threatening illness where they might not live long enough for the claiming later strategy to work, then we will talk about taking out before 70. And when I say like live long enough for that to work, when we use our financial planning software, Moneyguide Pro, it will come up with like a break-even analysis. Whether like how long somebody would have to, live beyond claiming at 70 for it to be worthwhile not claiming earlier. Right. Because if you claim at 62 and there’s smaller benefits, you get that benefit for eight years. Right. That higher benefit’s going to have to be higher for some number of years for it to be worth it to you to wait. And generally, when we do that analysis, it comes back somewhere around 78 or 79. And well, most people that get into their 60s have a life expectancy higher than that. One thing that sometimes people forget is they think, oh, like men live to 75 or 77 and women live to 78 or 79. And that might be true at birth, but if you are 70, your life expectancy is in the 80s, right. Because you haven’t fallen illness or got hurt for some reason before that. Right. So the older you are, the older your life expectancy is. It’s just the way that math works. How’s that for a nice long answer on Social Security?
Madison: It’s perfect.