A K-shaped economy means different groups of Americans are experiencing very different financial realities, and that split is now showing up clearly in 2025 income and 2026 tax return outcomes. 

If you are a high earner, investor, or homeowner, your tax picture in this environment may look very different from that of workers with flat wages and rising everyday costs.

What Is a K-Shaped Economy?

In a K-shaped economy, some people and industries move upward, with rising incomes, investment gains, and job stability, while others trend downward, facing stagnant wages, job insecurity, and higher living costs.

Key characteristics include:

  • Strong profits and stock gains in sectors like technology, healthcare, and AI-related infrastructure.
  • Slower wage growth or job losses in areas such as manufacturing, some services, and housing-related industries.
  • Rising wealth for households that own financial assets or real estate, while non-owners struggle with higher prices and limited savings.

This divergence has intensified in recent years as stock markets and data-center construction surge, even as many families report weak confidence and pressure from everyday expenses.

How the K-Shaped Economy Shows Up in Today’s Tax Refunds

K Shaped Economy

The same forces driving the K-shaped split in income and wealth are now visible in 2026 tax refunds, especially under the “One Big Beautiful Bill” tax changes enacted in 2025.

Recent analysis shows:

  • The “average” refund is expected to rise to roughly the high-$3,000s, boosted by new and expanded tax breaks.
  • The typical taxpayer may see an increase of about $700–$750 in their refund compared with last year.
  • Higher-income households are projected to receive disproportionately larger refund increases, often several thousand dollars, due to expanded deductions and credits that scale with income, investment activity, and itemized deductions.
  • Lower-income households (roughly under $33,000 of income) may see only a modest additional refund, on the order of a few tens of dollars on average, despite facing greater strain from inflation and housing costs.

One study highlighted that households in the top 5% of earners could see their refunds rise by nearly $3,800 on average, while the lowest 20% may gain less than $20 compared to last year. That is a textbook example of a K-shaped outcome: the same tax law produces very different benefits depending on where you sit on the “K.”

Who May See Larger Refunds and Why

If you’re on the “upper” leg of the K, several factors may combine to boost your 2026 refund.

1. Higher and More Volatile Income: Many higher-earning professionals have seen wages, bonuses, or equity compensation rebound with strong sectors like technology, finance, and specialized services. Volatile income can create:

  • More opportunities to use above-the-line deductions and retirement contributions.
  • Larger itemized deductions (for example, mortgage interest and state taxes).
  • More room to benefit from phase-ins or expansions in new tax incentives tied to income or investment activity.

2. Expanded Deductions, Especially SALT: The 2025 legislation substantially lifted the cap on state and local tax (SALT) deductions to around $40,000 for many households, up from the prior $10,000 cap. While this phases out for the very top earners, higher-income taxpayers in high-tax states stand to benefit significantly.​

That can mean:

  • A larger itemized deduction total.
  • Reduced taxable income.
  • A bigger gap between taxes withheld and final tax due, resulting in a larger refund.

3. Asset Ownership: Stocks and Real Estate: Because the wealthiest 10% of Americans own the vast majority of the stock market, the strong performance of large technology and AI-related names has primarily lifted their balance sheets. That has several tax implications:

  • More capital gains to manage, but also more opportunities for tax-loss harvesting or strategic realization.
  • Greater use of tax-advantaged accounts (IRAs, 401(k)s, HSAs) thanks to higher incomes.
  • The ability to time income and deductions to maximize new tax breaks.

Put together, these dynamics mean many higher-income households will see refunds rise by hundreds or even thousands of dollars more than the average.

Who May See Smaller Refunds and Why

On the lower leg of the K, workers struggling with flat pay, reduced hours, or rising costs often experience the tax system very differently.

Key pressures include:

  • Slower wage growth compared to inflation, eroding real take-home pay.
  • Less room in the budget to contribute to retirement accounts or health savings accounts, which means fewer deductions.
  • Limited itemized deductions because they rent instead of owning, or live in areas with lower property and income taxes.

As a result:

  • Many lower- and moderate-income households rely primarily on the standard deduction.
  • Their main tax benefits come from refundable or partially refundable credits such as the Child Tax Credit or Earned Income Tax Credit, which may not have expanded as much as higher-income deductions.
  • The incremental refund increase from the latest law may be small, sometimes only a few dollars per month when averaged out.

In one widely cited analysis, the lowest earners saw an average increase in refunds of around $18, compared with hundreds or thousands of dollars for higher-earning groups. That difference amplifies the feeling that the economy, and the tax code, are working better for some than for others.

Practical Ways the K-Shaped Economy May Affect Your Tax Return

K Shaped Economy

How all of this shows up on your own return depends on your specific income, assets, and life stage. Here are several practical channels where the K-shaped environment can influence what you owe or receive.

1. Your Wage and Bonus Pattern

If your income has increased or become more variable, through raises, overtime, commissions, or bonuses, you may see:

  • Higher total tax owed for the year as you move into higher brackets.
  • Withholding that does not keep pace, which may reduce or eliminate your refund unless you adjust your Form W-4.
  • More value from planning moves like deferring bonus income, increasing retirement contributions, or bunching deductions.

Conversely, if your wages have stagnated or hours have been cut, your tax liability may not rise much, but you also have fewer levers to reduce it.

2. Investment Gains and Losses

Households with meaningful investment portfolios, stocks, mutual funds, ETFs, or rental properties are seeing very different tax realities than those living paycheck to paycheck.

  • Strong markets can generate substantial capital gains, which increase your tax bill unless offset by realized losses.
  • Tax-loss harvesting can help investors on the “upper” leg of the K manage their liability strategically, sometimes turning a large tax bill into a more modest one or even preserving a refund.
  • If you don’t own assets, you miss those planning opportunities but also avoid the added complexity and potential surprise bills.

3. Housing, Debt, and Deductions

Homeowners with larger mortgages and higher property taxes often benefit more from itemizing deductions, especially with a higher SALT cap. Renters typically cannot access those same deductions.

This can affect your return by:

  • Increasing the deduction for mortgage interest and property taxes for homeowners, which can translate into bigger refunds.
  • Leaving renters with the standard deduction, which, while helpful, may not grow as quickly as the new itemized opportunities for higher-income homeowners.

4. Small Business and Gig Work

The K-shaped economy has also widened the gap between thriving and struggling small businesses. Some owners in growing niches are enjoying record years, while others are fighting just to break even.

For your tax return, that can mean:

  • Larger deductions if you can write off business expenses, retirement contributions, or health insurance premiums.
  • Eligibility for qualified business income (QBI) deductions in certain circumstances.
  • More complexity in estimated payments and year-end tax reconciliation increases the risk of underpayment penalties without careful planning.

Workers in gig roles or side hustles often face self-employment taxes and may miss employer benefits such as 401(k) matches or pre-tax health coverage, which can shrink refunds if not carefully managed.

5. Tax Credits and Phase-Outs

Tax credits, especially those tied to children, education, and work, are often structured with income thresholds and phase-outs.

In a K-shaped economy:

  • Lower-income households may not have enough taxable income to fully benefit from certain nonrefundable credits.
  • Middle-income households may qualify for a mix of credits and deductions, but see only modest refund changes year to year.
  • Higher-income households may lose some credits due to phase-outs but gain more from expanded deductions and planning strategies under the new law.

The net result is that the same law produces widely different tax outcomes, depending on whether your income and wealth place you on the upward or downward branch of the “K.”

How Agemy Financial Strategies Can Help You Navigate the K-Shaped Economy

K Shaped Economy

You cannot control the shape of the overall economy, but you can control how prepared you are for the opportunities and risks it presents. Agemy Financial Strategies focuses on building tax-smart, resilient plans that respond to changing economic and legislative conditions.

Here are ways a guided approach can help in today’s environment:

1. Integrated Tax and Investment Planning: Agemy models the tax impact of your portfolio decisions, such as realizing gains, harvesting losses, or shifting between asset classes, before you act, so you can see how those moves may change your tax bill and refund. The goal is to help maximize after-tax outcomes, not just headline returns.

2. Tailored Strategies for Your “Leg” of the K: Whether your household is experiencing strong growth or feeling squeezed, a customized plan can:

  • Help higher earners manage bracket creep, deductions, and complex returns tied to equity compensation, business income, or large portfolios.
  • Help those under pressure prioritize cash flow, emergency savings, and the most impactful tax moves available at their income level.

3. Coordinated Professional Support: Agemy works alongside your CPA and estate planning attorney so that tax planning, retirement planning, and legacy planning reinforce each other rather than working at cross purposes. This coordination can be especially important when new legislation changes deductions, credits, or estate thresholds.

4. Long-Term, Tax-Smart Portfolio Design: In a world where economic and tax conditions evolve unevenly, Agemy emphasizes diversified asset allocation, thoughtful use of tax-advantaged accounts, and regular reviews to keep your strategy aligned with your goals and the current law. That can make your future refunds and tax bills more predictable, and your overall financial life simpler.

If you’re unsure which side of the “K” your household is currently on, or how the latest tax law might affect your 2026 refund, this is an ideal time to review your situation with a fiduciary financial professional. 

Agemy Financial Strategies can help you clarify where you stand, identify the levers you can pull, and design a plan that aims to keep more of what you earn in any economic environment.

Contact us today at agemy.com.


Investment advisory services are offered through Agemy Wealth Advisors, LLC, a Registered Investment Advisor and fiduciary to its clients. Agemy Financial Strategies, Inc. is a franchisee of Retirement Income Source®, LLC. Agemy Financial Strategies, Inc. and Agemy Wealth Advisors, LLC are associated entities. Agemy Financial Strategies, Inc. and Agemy Wealth Advisors, LLC entities are not associated with Retirement Income Source®, LLC. This content is for informational and educational purposes only and should not be construed as individualized investment, tax, or legal advice. Any review, reliance or distribution by others or forwarding without the express permission of the sender is strictly prohibited. To the extent permitted by law, Agemy Financial Strategies, Inc and Agemy Wealth Advisors, LLC, and Retirement Income Source, LLC do not accept any liability arising from the use or retransmission of the information in this article.

An educational guide for retirees and pre‑retirees, prepared by Agemy Financial Strategies

Estate planning is about far more than drafting a will. For those approaching and in retirement, it is a critical part of protecting what you’ve built, caring for loved ones, and helping ensure your money is transferred according to your wishes — not default rules or unnecessary taxes. One of the most misunderstood areas of estate planning is estate tax law.

While many retirees assume estate taxes only affect the ultra‑wealthy, the reality is more nuanced. Federal exemptions are high, but state estate taxes, income tax implications for heirs, and changing laws can still create unintended consequences without proper planning.

This guide explains estate tax laws retirees should understand, how current rules work, common misconceptions, and practical strategies to help preserve your legacy with confidence.

What Is an Estate Tax?

An estate tax is a tax imposed on the transfer of assets at death. It applies to the total value of everything you own at the time of your passing, known as your gross estate. This may include:

  • Cash and bank accounts
  • Investment portfolios
  • Retirement accounts (IRAs, 401(k)s, Roth accounts)
  • Real estate, including primary and vacation homes
  • Business interests
  • Life insurance proceeds (in certain situations)
  • Personal property such as vehicles, collectibles, and jewelry

If the value of your estate exceeds certain exemption thresholds, taxes may be owed before assets are distributed to heirs.

Importantly, estate taxes are different from inheritance taxes. Estate taxes are paid by the estate itself before assets are distributed. Inheritance taxes, which only apply in certain states, are paid by the beneficiary receiving the inheritance.

Estate Tax Laws

Federal Estate Tax Laws: The Basics for Retirees

Current Federal Estate Tax Exemption

Under current U.S. law, federal estate taxes apply only to estates above a generous exemption amount. As of 2026:

As of 2026: The federal estate/gift tax exemption is permanently set at $15 million per individual ($30 million for married couples), indexed for inflation going forward. This stability creates clear long-term planning—though state taxes, income tax basis planning, and asset growth still demand proactive strategies.

Only the portion above the exemption faces 40% federal tax.

Federal Estate Tax Rates

Federal estate tax rates are progressive, with a top rate of 40% on amounts above the exemption. While this rate is significant, proper planning can dramatically reduce — or eliminate — exposure.

The Unified Gift and Estate Tax System

The estate tax is unified with the gift tax. This means:

  • Gifts made during your lifetime count toward your lifetime exemption
  • The same exemption protects lifetime gifts and transfers at death

Large gifts do not usually trigger immediate tax, but they reduce the exemption available later.

Why Estate Tax Planning Still Matters for Retirees

Many retirees assume estate tax planning is unnecessary because their estate falls below federal thresholds. However, focusing only on the federal estate tax can be misleading.

Estate planning for retirees should also account for:

  • State estate or inheritance taxes
  • Income taxes heirs may owe on inherited assets
  • Distribution timing and control
  • Family dynamics, including blended families
  • Charitable goals
  • Protection against creditor or legal risk

Estate tax laws intersect with all of these considerations.

Estate Tax Laws

State Estate and Inheritance Taxes: A Hidden Risk

Even if your estate is not large enough to trigger federal estate tax, state‑level taxes may still apply.

Some states impose their own estate taxes with exemptions far lower than the federal level. Others levy inheritance taxes on beneficiaries, depending on their relationship to the deceased.

For retirees, this means:

  • An estate that owes no federal tax may still owe state tax
  • Planning strategies must account for where you live — and sometimes where your heirs live

State tax exposure is a common blind spot in retirement estate planning.

Estate Taxes and Retirement Accounts

Retirement accounts often represent one of the largest portions of a retiree’s estate — and they come with unique tax considerations.

Income Taxes for Heirs

Traditional IRAs and 401(k)s are funded with pre‑tax dollars. When heirs inherit these accounts, withdrawals are generally taxed as ordinary income.

Under current rules, many non‑spouse beneficiaries must withdraw inherited retirement accounts within a limited timeframe, accelerating income taxes.

This creates a double consideration:

  • The value of the account may count toward your taxable estate
  • Your heirs may face significant income taxes after inheriting

Roth Accounts

Roth IRAs offer different advantages. While still included in your estate value, qualified withdrawals by heirs are generally income‑tax‑free, making them a powerful legacy asset when coordinated properly.

Step‑Up in Basis: A Critical Tax Benefit for Heirs

One of the most valuable features of estate planning is the step‑up in cost basis.

Assets that pass through your estate typically receive a new tax basis equal to their fair market value at the date of death. This may reduce capital gains taxes for heirs who later sell the asset.

For example:

  • An investment purchased decades ago for $50,000 may be worth $500,000 at death
  • With a step‑up in basis, heirs may owe little or no capital gains tax if sold soon after

This is why gifting appreciated assets during life must be evaluated carefully — lifetime gifts do not receive a step‑up in basis.

Portability: What Married Retirees Should Know

Portability allows a surviving spouse to use any unused portion of a deceased spouse’s federal estate tax exemption.

This can be a powerful tool for married retirees, but it is not automatic. Certain elections must be made after the first spouse’s death to preserve unused exemptions.

While portability simplifies some planning, it may not replace the benefits of trusts, particularly when state taxes, asset protection, or remarriage risks are involved.

Trusts and Estate Tax Planning for Retirees

Trusts remain one of the most effective estate planning tools, even for retirees who do not expect to owe federal estate tax.

Common trust strategies include:

Credit Shelter (Bypass) Trusts

These trusts preserve the first spouse’s exemption while allowing the surviving spouse access to income or principal under defined terms.

Irrevocable Life Insurance Trusts (ILITs)

ILITs remove life insurance proceeds from the taxable estate, which can be critical for retirees with large policies.

Charitable Trusts

Charitable remainder and charitable lead trusts can provide income, tax benefits, and long‑term philanthropic impact.

Trust selection should align with your tax exposure, income needs, and family goals.

Estate Tax Laws

Charitable Strategies That Help Reduce Estate Taxes

For retirees with charitable intentions, philanthropy can be an effective estate planning tool.

Options may include:

  • Direct bequests to charities
  • Donor‑advised funds
  • Qualified charitable distributions (QCDs) from IRAs
  • Charitable trusts that provide lifetime income

Charitable gifts may reduce estate size while allowing you to support causes you value.

Common Estate Tax Mistakes Retirees Make

Even well‑intentioned retirees can make costly mistakes, including:

  • Assuming estate taxes will never apply
  • Failing to update beneficiary designations
  • Overusing joint ownership without understanding the consequences
  • Ignoring state estate or inheritance taxes
  • Not coordinating retirement income planning with estate planning

Estate planning should be revisited regularly, especially after retirement, the death of a spouse, or major tax law changes.

When Should Retirees Review Their Estate Plan?

You should review your estate plan:

  • At retirement
  • After major changes in tax law
  • After a significant change in net worth
  • Following marriage, divorce, or remarriage
  • After the birth of grandchildren
  • When relocating to a new state

Estate planning is not a one‑time event — it is an ongoing process.

Estate Tax Laws

How Agemy Financial Strategies Helps Retirees Plan Confidently

At Agemy Financial Strategies, estate tax planning is integrated into your broader retirement strategy. We help retirees:

  • Understand how estate taxes fit into their full financial picture
  • Coordinate income planning with legacy goals
  • Adjust strategies as laws and life circumstances evolve

Our goal is clarity, confidence, and continuity — so your wealth supports both your retirement and your legacy.

Final Thoughts

Estate tax laws may seem complex, but understanding how they apply to retirees is essential to protecting what you’ve earned. With thoughtful planning, most retirees can minimize taxes, reduce stress for loved ones, and help ensure assets are transferred efficiently and intentionally.

A proactive approach today can make a meaningful difference for generations to come.

If you’re approaching or already in retirement, now is the time to ensure your estate plan reflects current laws, your financial reality, and your long‑term wishes.

Contact us at agemy.com


Investment advisory services are offered through Agemy Wealth Advisors, LLC, a Registered Investment Advisor and fiduciary to its clients. Agemy Financial Strategies, Inc. is a franchisee of Retirement Income Source®, LLC. Agemy Financial Strategies, Inc. and Agemy Wealth Advisors, LLC are associated entities. Agemy Financial Strategies, Inc. and Agemy Wealth Advisors, LLC entities are not associated with Retirement Income Source®, LLC. This content is for informational and educational purposes only and should not be construed as individualized investment, tax, or legal advice. Any review, reliance or distribution by others or forwarding without the express permission of the sender is strictly prohibited. To the extent permitted by law, Agemy Financial Strategies, Inc and Agemy Wealth Advisors, LLC, and Retirement Income Source, LLC do not accept any liability arising from the use or retransmission of the information in this article.

For individuals with substantial retirement savings — especially those navigating multi-million-dollar portfolios — Required Minimum Distributions (RMDs) can be one of the most complex and impactful aspects of retirement planning. 

RMDs are mandated by the IRS to help ensure that tax-deferred retirement assets eventually generate taxable income. While the rules can be straightforward for smaller portfolios, when you’re managing significant wealth, RMDs intersect with broader tax planning, estate strategies, income management, investment allocation, and legacy goals.

At Agemy Financial Strategies, we believe that RMDs should not be treated as a compliance exercise; they must be integrated into a thoughtful long-term financial plan. This blog unpacks what RMDs are, how they function in large portfolios, key strategies for management, and how proactive planning can minimize taxes, maximize flexibility, and support your broader financial goals.

1. Understanding RMD Fundamentals

What Are RMDs?

Required Minimum Distributions refer to the minimum amount that individuals must withdraw annually from certain tax-deferred retirement accounts once they reach a specific age. These include:

The purpose of RMDs is to ensure that retirement savings are eventually taxed. The IRS views these assets as tax-deferred, meaning contributions and earnings grow without annual tax until withdrawn.

When Do RMDs Start?

Following recent tax law changes, RMDs generally begin at age 73 for those who reach 72 after December 31, 2022; for those who reached 72 before this date, the prior RMD age still applies. The rules change over time, so periodic review with a financial advisor is critical.

How Are RMDs Calculated?

RMD amounts are based on your account balance as of December 31 of the prior year and your life expectancy factor from IRS tables. For high-net-worth individuals with multi-million-dollar accounts, this calculation often results in substantial distributions that can significantly impact taxable income.

For example, if your IRA balance was $4 million on December 31 and your IRS life expectancy divisor is 25.6 (a hypothetical from IRS tables), your RMD would be approximately:

$4,000,000 ÷ 25.6 = $156,250

This distribution is taxable as ordinary income and must be taken before the RMD deadline (generally December 31).

RMDs

2. RMD Challenges for Multi-Million-Dollar Portfolios

When account balances are significant, RMDs present unique challenges:

Tax Liability Can Increase Dramatically

Large distributions can push you into higher marginal tax brackets, increasing your overall tax burden. Even if you don’t “need” the money for living expenses, the IRS requires you to take these withdrawals and pay taxes on them.

Bracket Creep and the Impact on Cash Flow

“Bracket creep” occurs when RMDs increase your taxable income significantly enough to move you into a higher tax bracket. This shift can also affect how Social Security benefits are taxed, Medicare premiums, and eligibility for certain tax deductions or credits.

Compounding Effects Over Time

Because RMDs are recalculated annually based on the prior year’s balance, poor market performance or strategic rebalancing can increase or decrease future RMDs unpredictably.

3. Strategic Approaches to RMD Management

To stay ahead of RMD issues and optimize outcomes, high-net-worth investors should consider a suite of strategies:

A. Roth Conversions Before RMD Age

One of the most powerful tools in RMD planning is the Roth IRA conversion. Unlike traditional IRAs, Roth IRAs do not have RMDs during the owner’s lifetime.

How it helps:

  • Reduces future RMD amounts because assets moved to a Roth no longer count toward RMD calculations.
  • Grew absolutely tax-free — qualified withdrawals, including earnings, are not taxable.
  • Converts when tax rates are relatively low, potentially saving more in the long run.

Considerations:

  • Roth conversions are taxable events. You’ll owe income tax the year of conversion.
  • Timing matters: converting too much in a single year can spike your tax bracket.
  • A well-timed conversion plan can balance tax liability while reducing future RMDs.

B. Qualified Charitable Distributions (QCDs)

Charitable giving can be both philanthropic and tax-efficient through Qualified Charitable Distributions (QCDs).

What is a QCD?

  • A direct transfer from your IRA to a qualified charity.
  • Only available for individuals age 70½ and older.
  • Up to $100,000 per year can count toward your RMD without being included in taxable income.

Why it matters:

  • QCDs help reduce taxable RMD income.
  • They satisfy your RMD requirement while supporting causes you care about.
  • Especially useful for wealthy retirees with philanthropic goals.

C. Timing and Frequency of RMDs

Although RMDs must be completed by year-end, you have flexibility in when and how often withdrawals occur:

  • Lump sum: simple, but can spike income.
  • Periodic distributions (monthly, quarterly): smooths income and may help with tax planning.
  • Planned timing with cash flow needs: aligns distributions with expenses or investment rebalancing.

D. Tax Diversification: Balance Between Account Types

A diversified retirement portfolio should include:

  • Tax-deferred accounts (Traditional IRA/401k)
  • Tax-free accounts (Roth IRAs)
  • Taxable investment accounts

With these layers, you gain flexibility in withdrawal strategies that can help minimize the tax impact of RMDs. For example:

  • Use taxable accounts to fund spending needs early in retirement.
  • Defer tax-deferred withdrawals until required.
  • Use Roth assets strategically to manage income in high tax years.

E. Strategic Asset Location

This involves placing investments in the accounts where they’re most tax-efficient:

  • High-growth assets (like equities) may be better in tax-free or tax-deferred accounts.
  • Low-yield assets may live in taxable accounts.
  • Municipal bonds often suit taxable accounts because of tax-free interest.

Proper asset location can help reduce taxes over time and affect RMD outcomes.

RMDs

4. RMDs and Estate Planning

For high-net-worth individuals, RMDs intersect strongly with estate planning. The decisions you make now will shape how your assets pass to heirs, how taxes are applied, and how your legacy is preserved.

A. Stretch or Inherited IRAs

Prior to the SECURE Act of 2019, beneficiaries could “stretch” IRA distributions over their lifetime. Today, most non-spouse beneficiaries must distribute accounts within 10 years, accelerating taxable income.

Key impacts:

  • Heirs may face steep tax bills if distributions are large.
  • Strategic planning during your lifetime can mitigate tax shock for beneficiaries.

B. Trusts and Beneficiary Designations

Aligning beneficiary designations and trust structures with your overall estate plan helps ensure that assets flow as intended.

  • Carefully drafted trust language, especially for retirement accounts, can prevent unintended tax consequences.
  • Coordination between your financial advisor and estate attorney is vital.

C. Gifting Strategies

Gifting retirement assets before death can help reduce the size of your RMD base.

  • Lifetime gifts reduce the value of your taxable estate.
  • Some clients use gifts to transfer assets to children or trusts, aligning with legacy plans.

RMDs

5. Navigating RMD Pitfalls and Avoiding Costly Mistakes

Given the complexity of RMD rules, even sophisticated investors can make costly errors. Here are common pitfalls we help clients avoid:

A. Missing the Deadline

The deadline for taking an RMD is usually December 31, with one exception for the first RMD, which can be delayed until April 1 of the year after you reach the required age. However, delaying can lead to two RMDs in one year, doubling taxable income in that tax year.

Penalty for missing an RMD?
The IRS penalty used to be a shocking 50% of the amount not withdrawn. While it has been reduced (to 25% or potentially 10% for corrected distributions), it’s still significant.

B. Miscalculating the Amount

Using incorrect life expectancy tables or outdated IRS rules can lead to under-distribution, exposing you to penalties.

We always verify:

  • Current IRS life expectancy tables
  • Correct account values
  • Proper calculation methods
  • Updated rules after legislative changes

C. Ignoring Market Impact

If market values drop, RMDs based on prior high valuations can force distributions during unfavorable conditions:

Example:
If a portfolio fell 20% after December 31, you may be forced to liquidate assets at a loss to meet your RMD.

Solution?

  • Maintain sufficient liquidity outside of your retirement account.
  • Rebalance regularly to avoid forced selling.

D. Overlooking State Tax Implications

State income taxes vary widely. Some states tax retirement income; others do not. For high-net-worth retirees who split time between states or relocate in retirement, state tax planning is crucial.

6. Modeling RMD Impact: A Hypothetical Case Study

To illustrate the strategic power of RMD planning, let’s consider a hypothetical scenario.

Client Profile

  • Age: 74
  • Traditional IRA: $6,500,000
  • Roth IRA: $1,500,000
  • Taxable Investments: $3,000,000
  • Tax bracket: 32%
  • Charitable goals: $50,000/year

Scenario: No Strategy Applied

  • RMD calculated at $6.5M ÷ 22.0 (hypothetical divisor) = $295,455
  • Total taxable income jump due to RMD
  • No QCDs or Roth conversions
  • Result: higher tax bracket, increased Medicare premiums, reduced flexibility

Tax consequence? Potentially several tens of thousands more in taxes annually.

Strategic Plan Implemented

Year 1:

  • Roth conversion of $500,000
  • QCD of $50,000
  • RMD adjusted with a mix of periodic distributions and QCDs

Result:

  • Smaller future RMD base
  • Reduced taxable income year over year
  • Philanthropic goals met tax-efficiently

Long-term impact:

  • Reduced tax drag over decades
  • More assets left to heirs with favorable tax positioning
  • Greater control over income timing

7. Partnering with Agemy Financial Strategies for RMD Excellence

RMD planning isn’t one-and-done. It’s continuous. Changes in tax rules, market performance, personal goals, and estate priorities all influence the plan. That’s why high-net-worth investors choose a proactive partner.

What We Provide

  • Customized RMD modeling and forecasting
  • Roth conversion strategy tailored to your tax situation
  • Charitable planning using QCDs and donor-advised funds
  • Tax-efficient withdrawal sequencing
  • Coordination with estate and tax professionals
  • Ongoing review as laws and circumstances evolve

RMDs

8. Final Thoughts: RMDs as a Strategic Lever, Not a Mandate

For many retirees, RMDs are viewed with frustration as an unavoidable headache. But for wealthy investors, they are also a strategic lever for:

  • Tax planning
  • Cash flow management
  • Legacy design
  • Charitable impact

With thoughtful planning, RMDs don’t have to be a tax burden; they can be an opportunity to align retirement income with your long-term goals.

At Agemy Financial Strategies, we help our clients see beyond the numbers to the impact those withdrawals have on lifestyle, family, and legacy. If you’re managing a multi-million-dollar portfolio and want to ensure your RMD strategy is optimized for tax efficiency, flexibility, and peace of mind, we’re here to help.

Contact us today at agemy.com. 

Investment advisory services are offered through Agemy Wealth Advisors, LLC, a Registered Investment Advisor and fiduciary to its clients. Agemy Financial Strategies, Inc. is a franchisee of Retirement Income Source®, LLC. Agemy Financial Strategies, Inc. and Agemy Wealth Advisors, LLC are associated entities. Agemy Financial Strategies, Inc. and Agemy Wealth Advisors, LLC entities are not associated with Retirement Income Source®, LLC. This content is for informational and educational purposes only and should not be construed as individualized investment, tax, or legal advice. Any review, reliance or distribution by others or forwarding without the express permission of the sender is strictly prohibited. To the extent permitted by law, Agemy Financial Strategies, Inc and Agemy Wealth Advisors, LLC, and Retirement Income Source, LLC do not accept any liability arising from the use or retransmission of the information in this article.

For decades, retirees and financial planners have relied on the “4% rule” as a guiding principle for safe withdrawal rates in retirement. First introduced in the 1990s by financial planner William Bengen, this rule suggests that retirees can safely withdraw 4% of their portfolio in the first year of retirement, adjusting for inflation each year thereafter, without running a significant risk of outliving their assets. While this rule has been a cornerstone of retirement planning, it is increasingly clear that a one-size-fits-all approach does not fully address the complexities faced by high-net-worth (HNW) retirees.

High-net-worth retirees often have unique financial circumstances, including larger and more diverse portfolios, more complex tax situations, multiple sources of income, and varying legacy goals. These factors make it essential to go beyond the 4% rule and consider more sophisticated income strategies that can provide longevity, flexibility, and tax efficiency. 

At Agemy Financial Strategies, we’re experienced in crafting retirement plans that help affluent individuals and families maintain confidence in their financial futures while achieving their lifestyle goals.

In this blog, we explore why the 4% rule may not be sufficient for HNW retirees and present a variety of income strategies designed to help optimize retirement security and flexibility.

Why the 4% Rule May Fall Short for High-Net-Worth Retirees

4% Rule

While the 4% rule provides a useful starting point, it has notable limitations, especially for HNW individuals:

  1. Market Volatility and Sequence of Returns Risk: The 4% rule assumes a relatively predictable market performance, but retirement portfolios are vulnerable to sequence-of-returns risk: the danger of experiencing poor market returns early in retirement. For retirees with larger portfolios, even a small percentage decline can translate into significant dollar losses. HNW retirees often have more to lose in absolute terms, and protecting wealth against market volatility becomes a primary concern.
  2. Longevity Risk: High-net-worth individuals, who often have access to superior healthcare, may have life expectancies well beyond traditional assumptions. The 4% rule, based on historical returns, may underestimate the capital required to sustain 30-40 years of retirement, especially if healthcare or lifestyle costs increase over time.
  3. Inflation Sensitivity: The 4% rule accounts for inflation, but it may not adequately address the impact of sustained high inflation or rising costs in specific categories such as healthcare, travel, and philanthropy, areas often significant in the lives of affluent retirees.
  4. Tax Considerations: High-net-worth retirees often have complex portfolios, including taxable accounts, tax-deferred retirement accounts, and tax-free vehicles like Roth IRAs. A fixed 4% withdrawal does not account for the tax consequences of selling assets in a particular order or the opportunity to optimize tax efficiency over the course of retirement.
  5. Lifestyle Flexibility and Legacy Goals: Many HNW retirees wish to maintain an active lifestyle, make charitable contributions, or leave a substantial inheritance. The rigid framework of the 4% rule does not provide flexibility to prioritize spending or legacy objectives over strict adherence to a fixed withdrawal rate.

Because of these limitations, high-net-worth retirees may benefit from a more nuanced and proactive approach to retirement income planning.

Key Strategies Beyond the 4% Rule

4% Rule

1. Dynamic Withdrawal Strategies

Rather than adhering to a fixed withdrawal rate, dynamic withdrawal strategies adjust withdrawals based on portfolio performance, spending needs, and market conditions.

Example approaches include:

  • Guardrails Approach: Set upper and lower limits for annual withdrawals. If your portfolio grows strongly, withdrawals can increase, and if the portfolio declines, withdrawals are reduced to preserve capital.
  • Percentage-of-Portfolio Approach: Withdraw a fixed percentage of your portfolio each year rather than a fixed dollar amount. This allows spending to naturally adjust with market performance.
  • Bucket Strategy: Allocate assets into “buckets” based on time horizon and risk. Short-term buckets hold cash and bonds to cover near-term expenses, while long-term buckets hold equities and alternative investments to support future growth.

Dynamic strategies help provide flexibility to adapt to changing market conditions and personal circumstances, which may be especially valuable for HNW retirees with multiple financial goals.

2. Tax-Efficient Withdrawal Sequencing

Taxes can dramatically impact retirement income, particularly for HNW retirees. Strategic withdrawal sequencing can help minimize taxes and extend portfolio longevity.

Common sequencing strategies include:

  • Taxable Accounts First: Selling appreciated assets in taxable accounts may be advantageous if long-term capital gains rates are lower than ordinary income rates.
  • Tax-Deferred Accounts Later: Preserving IRAs and 401(k)s allows tax-deferred growth to continue, potentially reducing the risk of early depletion.
  • Roth Conversions: Gradually converting tax-deferred accounts to Roth IRAs can help manage taxable income and future required minimum distributions (RMDs), creating a more tax-efficient income stream.

At Agemy Financial Strategies, we analyze each client’s unique tax situation to structure withdrawals in a way that balances current income needs with long-term tax efficiency.

3. Diversification Across Asset Classes

4% Rule

For HNW retirees, diversification is not just about stocks and bonds. It includes alternative assets that can also provide growth, income, and inflation protection.

Examples include:

  • Private Equity and Venture Capital: Potentially higher returns with longer horizons.
  • Real Estate Investments: Income-producing properties or REITs provide cash flow and diversification.
  • Alternative Credit or Private Debt: Offers yield enhancement and low correlation to public markets.
  • Hedge Funds and Managed Futures: Can provide risk mitigation and return smoothing in volatile markets.

Diversification helps reduce the dependency on traditional stock-and-bond portfolios, allowing retirees to pursue higher net returns while managing risk.

4. Cash Flow Planning with Lifestyle Integration

High-net-worth retirees often have complex lifestyles involving philanthropy, travel, second homes, and hobbies. Income planning should integrate these lifestyle elements into a cohesive cash flow plan.

Key considerations include:

  • Mapping out essential vs. discretionary spending
  • Aligning income sources to match the timing of expenses
  • Maintaining liquidity for major purchases or emergencies
  • Planning charitable contributions in a tax-efficient manner, such as donor-advised funds or charitable remainder trusts

A lifestyle-focused cash flow plan helps ensure that retirement is not only financially sustainable but also personally fulfilling.

5. Hedging Against Healthcare and Long-Term Care Costs

Healthcare expenses in retirement are a major concern, especially for affluent retirees who may face elective procedures, premium insurance coverage, or long-term care needs. Income planning should account for these potential costs.

Strategies include:

By proactively addressing healthcare costs, retirees can preserve portfolio value and avoid having unexpected expenses derail their financial plan.

6. Integrating Social Security and Pensions

High-net-worth retirees often have access to Social Security benefits or defined benefit pensions, which can complement other income sources. Strategic timing of these benefits can help enhance retirement income:

  • Delaying Social Security: Waiting past the full retirement age can increase benefits by up to 8% per year until age 70.
  • Optimizing Pension Payouts: Choosing between lump sum and annuitized options based on personal longevity expectations and tax implications.
  • Coordinating with Portfolio Withdrawals: Minimizing portfolio withdrawals in early retirement can allow assets to grow while leveraging guaranteed income streams.

Strategically layering guaranteed income sources with portfolio withdrawals can help enhance both security and flexibility.

7. Charitable Giving as a Retirement Income Strategy

Charitable giving is often a priority for HNW retirees. Properly structured, charitable strategies can reduce taxes while supporting philanthropic goals.

Common strategies include:

  • Donor-Advised Funds (DAFs): Allow immediate tax deduction while distributing funds to charities over time.
  • Charitable Remainder Trusts (CRTs): Provide income during retirement with a charitable donation at the end, offering both tax benefits and legacy fulfillment.
  • Qualified Charitable Distributions (QCDs): Enable tax-free donations directly from IRAs for individuals over 70½, reducing taxable income while supporting charitable causes.

Incorporating philanthropy into a retirement income plan can help optimize taxes, satisfy personal values, and leave a lasting legacy.

8. Periodic Portfolio Rebalancing and Income Reviews

Even with the best strategies, markets and personal circumstances change. Regularly reviewing and adjusting the retirement plan ensures alignment with goals and risk tolerance.

Considerations for HNW retirees include:

  • Annual or semi-annual portfolio rebalancing
  • Monitoring asset allocation against withdrawal needs
  • Reviewing tax impacts and adjusting withdrawal sequencing
  • Adjusting income streams for lifestyle changes, healthcare needs, or unexpected events

Proactive management helps prevent depletion, maintain income stability, and adapt to new opportunities.

Final Thoughts: A Holistic Approach to Retirement Income

4% Rule

For high-net-worth retirees, the 4% rule is a useful guideline but far from sufficient. Retirement planning must go beyond a simple fixed withdrawal rate, integrating dynamic withdrawal strategies, tax-efficient planning, diversified investments, guaranteed income, lifestyle considerations, healthcare planning, and philanthropy.

At Agemy Financial Strategies, we’re experienced in creating customized retirement income plans that address the unique challenges and opportunities faced by affluent retirees. Our goal is to help clients maintain financial confidence, protect wealth, and enjoy a fulfilling retirement. By adopting a holistic and flexible approach, high-net-worth individuals can achieve retirement success that extends far beyond the 4% rule.

Retirement is not just about managing money—it’s about living the life you’ve worked for with security, flexibility, and peace of mind. If you’re ready to move beyond traditional retirement rules and develop a strategy tailored to your unique circumstances, our team at Agemy Financial Strategies is here to help.

Contact us today to schedule a consultation and start building a retirement income strategy that gives you confidence and freedom for the years ahead.

Frequently Asked Questions

1. Is the 4% rule still relevant for high-net-worth retirees?

The 4% rule can serve as a starting reference, but it is often too simplistic for high-net-worth retirees. Larger portfolios, longer life expectancies, complex tax situations, and legacy goals require more flexible and personalized income strategies. Many affluent retirees benefit from dynamic withdrawal approaches, tax-efficient planning, and guaranteed income solutions rather than relying on a fixed withdrawal percentage.

2. What is the biggest risk to retirement income for high-net-worth individuals?

One of the greatest risks is sequence of returns risk—experiencing market downturns early in retirement while actively withdrawing income. This can significantly reduce portfolio longevity. Other major risks include longevity risk, rising healthcare costs, tax inefficiency, and inflation. A comprehensive retirement income strategy is designed to manage these risks proactively rather than reactively.

3. How do taxes impact retirement income planning for affluent retirees?

Taxes play a critical role in retirement income planning for high-net-worth individuals. Withdrawals from different account types—taxable, tax-deferred, and tax-free—are taxed differently. Strategic withdrawal sequencing, Roth conversions, charitable giving strategies, and careful timing of income can help reduce lifetime tax liability and extend the life of a portfolio.

4. How do high-net-worth retirees create reliable income without locking into rigid products?

High-net-worth retirees often build reliable retirement income by combining diversified investments, disciplined withdrawal strategies, and thoughtful cash-flow planning. Rather than relying on rigid or one-size-fits-all products, income is generated through a mix of market-based growth, tax-efficient withdrawals, and strategically held liquid assets. This approach allows retirees to maintain flexibility, adapt to changing markets, and align income with evolving lifestyle and legacy goals.

5. How often should a retirement income strategy be reviewed?

Retirement income strategies should be reviewed at least annually, or whenever there is a significant life, market, or tax change. Regular reviews allow adjustments for market performance, spending needs, tax law changes, healthcare costs, and evolving legacy goals. Ongoing monitoring helps ensure the strategy remains aligned with long-term objectives and provides confidence throughout retirement.


Investment advisory services are offered through Agemy Wealth Advisors, LLC, a Registered Investment Advisor and fiduciary to its clients. Agemy Financial Strategies, Inc. is a franchisee of Retirement Income Source®, LLC. Agemy Financial Strategies, Inc. and Agemy Wealth Advisors, LLC are associated entities. Agemy Financial Strategies, Inc. and Agemy Wealth Advisors, LLC entities are not associated with Retirement Income Source®, LLC. This content is for informational and educational purposes only and should not be construed as individualized investment, tax, or legal advice. Any review, reliance or distribution by others or forwarding without the express permission of the sender is strictly prohibited. To the extent permitted by law, Agemy Financial Strategies, Inc and Agemy Wealth Advisors, LLC, and Retirement Income Source, LLC do not accept any liability arising from the use or retransmission of the information in this article.

At Agemy Financial Strategies, we’re here to help you retire – AND STAY RETIRED. 

Turning 60 is a milestone that prompts reflection—not just on life, but on money. If you have $2 million in a Roth IRA and a projected $2,000 monthly Social Security benefit, it’s natural to wonder: Does this mean I’m ready to retire?

The short answer: maybe—but it depends on more than your account balances. True retirement readiness goes beyond dollars and cents; it’s about aligning your lifestyle goals, risk tolerance, healthcare needs, taxes, and longevity expectations with your assets.

In this guide, we’ll explore how to evaluate whether your financial foundation is sufficient to retire comfortably, and the steps you can take to make that decision with confidence.

Understanding Your Starting Point

At age 60, many financial experts suggest a sustainable withdrawal rate in the 3.5%–4.7% range from a diversified portfolio. For a $2 million Roth IRA, that translates to roughly $70,000–$94,000 in annual withdrawals.

Add in your $2,000 monthly Social Security, which provides $24,000 per year of guaranteed, inflation-adjusted income, and your potential total annual income could range from $100,000 to $118,000. That’s a solid foundation—but readiness isn’t just a number; it’s whether this income can realistically support your lifestyle over the next 30+ years.

Why the Roth IRA Matters

Your Roth IRA offers a unique advantage:

  • Tax-free withdrawals after age 59½ and five years of account ownership.
  • No required minimum distributions (RMDs) during your lifetime.
  • Flexibility to time withdrawals to meet income needs or tax planning goals.

This makes your Roth IRA both a spending vehicle and a long-term strategic tool. But having money isn’t the same as being ready; you need a plan for using it effectively.

Assessing Your Retirement Lifestyle Needs

Retirement Planning

Money alone doesn’t define retirement readiness. Lifestyle is equally important. To determine whether you’re ready, ask yourself:

  • How much do I spend now, and how might that change in retirement?
  • What lifestyle do I envision—travel, hobbies, supporting family, or philanthropy?
  • What level of financial security will give me peace of mind?

Sustainable Withdrawal Estimates

Research suggests retirees with a balanced portfolio (roughly 30–50% equities) may target 3.9% initial withdrawals as a conservative baseline. On $2 million, this is about $78,000 in year one. More flexible planning could allow $90,000–$94,000, depending on market conditions and risk tolerance.

Adding Social Security income of $24,000, your first-year retirement income could reach $100,000–$118,000, providing a solid foundation for a comfortable lifestyle.

Social Security: Timing Is Everything

Your $2,000 monthly Social Security benefit is a guaranteed income source, but the timing of claiming can make a significant difference:

  • Early claim at 62: reduces benefits permanently by ~25–30%.
  • Full Retirement Age (66–67): receive the full benefit of $2,000.
  • Delayed claim to 70: boosts your benefit by up to 32% through delayed retirement credits.

Many retirees use their Roth IRA or other savings to fund early retirement years while allowing Social Security to grow. This strategy can create a higher guaranteed income floor in your later 70s and 80s, helping to protect against longevity risk.

Building a Strategic Roth IRA Withdrawal Plan

Even with a tax-free Roth, a thoughtful withdrawal strategy matters:

Step 1: Confirm Your Roth Rules

  • You’re past age 59½, but ensure the five-year rule is satisfied.
  • Confirm how much of your withdrawals will be tax-free, particularly if you opened multiple Roth accounts at different times.

Step 2: Asset Allocation for Retirement

The goal is to balance growth and security, helping ensure your portfolio supports decades of spending while preserving upside potential.

Step 3: Roth + Social Security Coordination

  • Use Roth withdrawals to fund early retirement years if delaying Social Security.
  • Tax-free Roth withdrawals minimize taxable income, reducing Medicare and Social Security taxation.

A well-designed strategy blends guaranteed and flexible income to help maximize lifetime financial security.

Evaluating Risk in Retirement

Even with strong assets, retirement readiness also involves mitigating key risks:

Sequence of Returns Risk

Early withdrawals during market downturns can erode retirement assets

Mitigation strategies may include:

  • Maintaining a cash or short-term bond buffer for several years of expenses.
  • Adopting flexible withdrawal strategies: reduce spending after negative market years and increase after positive years.

Research indicates retirees willing to adjust spending may safely withdraw more initially than those with rigid inflation-adjusted budgets.

Inflation and Longevity

Over a 30–35-year retirement, inflation can erode purchasing power:

  • Maintaining some equity exposure is typically necessary.
  • Stress-testing to age 90–95 ensures your portfolio can support extended lifespans.

Your Roth IRA growth acts as a hedge against rising costs and market volatility.

Healthcare and Long-Term Care

Healthcare is often the largest expense in retirement:

  • Plan for Medicare premiums, supplemental insurance, and out-of-pocket costs.
  • Consider long-term care insurance, hybrid life/LTC policies, or self-funding a portion of expenses.

Retirement readiness isn’t just financial; it’s practical planning for real-life contingencies.

Tax Planning Considerations

Retirement Planning

Even tax-free Roth withdrawals can interact with other income sources:

  • Social Security may be partially taxable, depending on other income.
  • Withdrawals from taxable or traditional accounts can push you into higher tax brackets.
  • Roth IRAs give flexibility, but planning helps ensure that income sequencing and potential Roth conversions maximize tax efficiency.

Key takeaway: A tax-efficient strategy helps preserve wealth and reduces surprises in retirement.

Estate, Legacy, and Philanthropy Planning

Part of retirement readiness is ensuring your wealth works for you and your loved ones:

A comprehensive approach integrates income, legacy, and philanthropy, helping ensure your assets fulfill your long-term vision.

Lifestyle and Location Considerations

Agemy Financial Strategies serves clients in both Colorado and Connecticut, and location can impact readiness:

  • Colorado: Mountain or urban living may involve higher housing, property taxes, and lifestyle costs. Outdoor hobbies, vacation homes, and winter recreation can affect budgets.
  • Connecticut: High cost-of-living areas, especially near Hartford or Fairfield County, may require a higher income to maintain the same lifestyle. Property taxes and healthcare costs can also be significant.

Your retirement income needs should match your desired lifestyle in your specific location. A $2 million Roth IRA and Social Security may be more than sufficient in one area, yet barely cover expenses in another.

Checking Your Retirement Readiness

Retirement Planning

Here’s a practical checklist to assess if you’re truly ready:

  1. Lifestyle alignment: your income supports your ideal retirement lifestyle.
  2. Withdrawal strategy: Roth IRA and Social Security withdrawals are coordinated.
  3. Risk management: sequence-of-returns, inflation, longevity, and healthcare are addressed.
  4. Tax efficiency: your plan minimizes lifetime taxes.
  5. Estate planning: wills, powers of attorney, and beneficiaries up to date.
  6. Location considerations: income supports your preferred lifestyle in Colorado or Connecticut.

If these boxes are checked, you’re likely ready. If not, you may need adjustments or phased retirement strategies.

Practical Steps for Those Considering Retirement

Step 1: Build a Written Plan

Step 2: Model Social Security Options

  • Compare claiming at 62, FRA, and 70.
  • Identify how portfolio withdrawals can bridge the gap to delayed benefits.

Step 3: Coordinate Taxes and Investments

  • Sequence withdrawals for tax efficiency.
  • Consider Roth conversions where appropriate.
  • Maintain asset allocation aligned with income needs and risk tolerance.

Step 4: Address Risk Management

  • Review healthcare and long-term care strategies.
  • Maintain sufficient cash or bonds for emergencies.
  • Confirm insurance and estate planning align with retirement goals.

Does This Mean You’re Ready for Retirement?

Retirement Planning

Having $2 million in a Roth IRA and $2,000/month Social Security is a strong foundation, but readiness isn’t automatic. It depends on:

  • Whether your income supports your desired lifestyle for 30+ years.
  • How well you’ve planned for key risks like market downturns, inflation, and healthcare.
  • Whether Social Security timing and Roth withdrawals are coordinated for efficiency.
  • Whether you have a written plan integrating taxes, lifestyle, and legacy goals.

If yes, you’re likely ready.

If not, you may need planning tweaks, phased retirement strategies, or adjustments to lifestyle expectations to ensure comfort and security.

How Agemy Financial Strategies Can Help

Agemy Financial Strategies is highly experienced in retirement income planning, guiding clients from accumulation to sustainable income strategies. Our approach includes:

  • Detailed cash-flow projections for 30+ year horizons.
  • Social Security modeling to help maximize guaranteed lifetime income.
  • Coordinated withdrawal strategies across Roth, traditional, and taxable accounts.
  • Stress-testing for longevity, inflation, and market volatility.
  • Location-specific planning for Colorado and Connecticut clients, helping ensure retirement readiness in high-cost or mountain-area markets.

With offices in Colorado and Connecticut, Agemy helps clients turn impressive balances into confidence, allowing you to enjoy retirement without uncertainty.

Bottom line: Having $2 million in a Roth IRA and $2,000/month Social Security is impressive – but retirement readiness is about strategy, flexibility, and confidence. With the right plan, you can retire comfortably, with peace of mind, and fully enjoy the lifestyle you’ve worked for.

Retire and stay retired with Agemy Financial Strategies. Schedule a consultation here today.


Investment advisory services are offered through Agemy Wealth Advisors, LLC, a Registered Investment Advisor and fiduciary to its clients. Agemy Financial Strategies, Inc. is a franchisee of Retirement Income Source®, LLC. Agemy Financial Strategies, Inc. and Agemy Wealth Advisors, LLC are associated entities. Agemy Financial Strategies, Inc. and Agemy Wealth Advisors, LLC entities are not associated with Retirement Income Source®, LLC. This content is for informational and educational purposes only and should not be construed as individualized investment, tax, or legal advice. Any review, reliance or distribution by others or forwarding without the express permission of the sender is strictly prohibited. To the extent permitted by law, Agemy Financial Strategies, Inc and Agemy Wealth Advisors, LLC, and Retirement Income Source, LLC do not accept any liability arising from the use or retransmission of the information in this article.

When it comes to managing your financial life, retirement planning, investing, estate strategies, or navigating market volatility, one of the most important decisions you’ll make is who you trust with your money. 

Yet for many people, understanding the difference between various types of financial professionals and the level of care they provide can be confusing. That’s where the concept of a fiduciary comes in.

In this deep-dive, we’ll explore:

  • What a fiduciary actually is
  • How the fiduciary standard compares to other standards
  • Why, and for whom, working with a fiduciary matters
  • Potential risks of non-fiduciary advice
  • How to find and verify a fiduciary advisor

Let’s begin with the basics.

What Is a Fiduciary?

A fiduciary is someone who is legally and ethically obligated to put your financial interests ahead of their own and to act in your best interest. The term comes from the Latin word fiducia, meaning trust, and that’s exactly what it represents: a professional relationship grounded in trust and legal duty.

In practical terms, when someone acts as your fiduciary, they must:

  • Put your goals first
  • Act with loyalty, care, and diligence
  • Avoid conflicts of interest
  • Disclose any compensation or relationships that could influence their advice

This standard may apply not only to investment decisions but also to other financial recommendations they make for you, depending on their role and how your engagement is structured.

Fiduciary vs. Suitability Standard: What’s the Difference?

Fiduciary Advisor

Understanding the fiduciary standard makes more sense when you contrast it with the alternative: the suitability standard.

The Fiduciary Standard

Under the fiduciary standard:

  • Advisors must recommend what’s best for you, not just what’s acceptable
  • They must fully disclose fees and conflicts of interest
  • They often operate as fee-only advisors or Registered Investment Advisors (RIAs), and may limit or avoid commissions tied to specific products

This level of transparency and accountability helps ensure alignment between your financial success and the advice you receive.

The Suitability Standard

In contrast, a professional under the suitability standard:

  • Must only recommend products that are suitable, not necessarily the best available
  • May earn commissions on products they recommend
  • May be permitted to offer advice that is suitable for you but could still be influenced by compensation structures or incentives that benefit them

For example, a broker can suggest a suitable mutual fund that pays them a higher commission, even if a lower-cost alternative exists, and that’s perfectly legal under the suitability rule.

Not All Financial Advisors Are Fiduciaries

The term “financial advisor” is broad and does not guarantee a fiduciary duty. Anyone can call themselves a financial advisor, even without formal training or transparency requirements. 

This means:

  • Insurance agents
  • Brokers and broker-dealers
  • Commission-based sales representatives

…might all legally offer financial advice while being held to standards such as suitability rather than a full fiduciary ‘best interest’ obligation. This higher standard typically applies when an advisor is registered as an investment adviser (such as an RIA) and/or explicitly agrees in writing to act as a fiduciary for you.

So before entering into a financial planning relationship, asking this question is crucial:

Are you a fiduciary 100% of the time?
And get it in writing.

Why Fiduciary Duty Matters: Real Financial Impact

Fiduciary Advisor

You might wonder: Does this really make a difference? The answer is yes, and here’s why.

More Comprehensive Planning

Fiduciary advisors tend to take a holistic view of your finances. They don’t just manage investments; they look at:

This broad perspective often leads to better outcomes because your plan isn’t built around isolated pieces, but your whole financial life.

Transparency Builds Trust

A fiduciary must disclose:

  • How they get paid
  • Any relationships with product providers
  • Any potential conflicts of interest

This transparency sets a foundation of trust, something that’s hard to quantify but deeply valuable when you’re making life-impacting financial decisions.

Who Should Work With a Fiduciary?

While nearly anyone can benefit from fiduciary guidance, it’s especially important for individuals who:

✔ Are Saving for Retirement

Retirement planning involves decisions about Social Security timing, investment strategies, tax management, and income distribution. A fiduciary’s comprehensive, unbiased perspective can be invaluable.

✔ Have Complex Financial Situations

If your financial life includes:

…a fiduciary’s integrated approach can help avoid costly mistakes.

✔ Are Nearing Major Life Transitions

Buying a home, retiring, divorce, or wealth transfer events create financial crossroads where conflicts of interest in advice can hurt you. Fiduciary oversight ensures guidance aligned with your goals.

How to Verify Your Advisor Is a Fiduciary

Here are practical steps to ensure your advisor operates under a fiduciary standard:

1. Ask Directly

A simple but essential question:

“Are you a fiduciary at all times with all clients?”

Get this confirmation in writing. 

2. Check Credentials

Look for credentials that require fiduciary duty, such as:

  • Certified Financial Planner (CFP)
  • Registered Investment Advisor (RIA)

These designations and registrations typically include fiduciary obligations. 

3. Review Form ADV

Registered advisors file a Form ADV with the SEC or state regulators, disclosing:

  • Their fee structures
  • Any conflicts of interest
  • Disciplinary history

You can request this or review it online.

Common Misconceptions About Fiduciaries

Myth: All Advisors Are Fiduciaries

Many advisors only meet the suitability standard, meaning their recommendations simply need to be appropriate, not optimal, for you. 

Myth: Fiduciary Means Perfect Advice

Fiduciary status means your advisor must put your interests first, but it doesn’t guarantee perfect performance. The market is unpredictable, and no advisor can foresee every outcome. What fiduciary duty does guarantee is that your advisor’s recommendations are made with your best financial interests at the forefront.

Myth: Fiduciary Guidance Is Only for the Wealthy

Anyone with financial goals, whether saving for college, buying a home, or planning for retirement, can benefit from unbiased, goal-aligned advice. In fact, households with fewer resources sometimes gain the most from solid financial planning guidance. 

Why Choose Agemy Financial Strategies as Your Fiduciary Partner

Fiduciary Advisor

At Agemy Financial Strategies, we don’t just offer financial advice; we provide a trusted partnership designed to help you navigate every stage of your financial journey. Our team of fiduciary advisors operates under the highest standard of care, ensuring that your goals always come first.

Here’s what sets us apart:

  • Comprehensive Retirement Planning: From assessing your current assets to designing a strategy that helps sustain your lifestyle in retirement, we focus on creating income solutions tailored to you.
  • Holistic Approach: We integrate investments, tax planning, estate strategies, risk management, and cash flow considerations to give you a full picture of your financial life.
  • Fiduciary Commitment: Every recommendation we make is aligned with your best interest; we never receive hidden commissions or incentives that could compromise your plan.
  • Experienced Guidance: Led by our senior advisors, including Andrew A. Agemy himself, our team blends decades of financial experience with a client-first philosophy. Think of us as your financial sherpas, guiding you down the mountain of retirement planning safely and confidently.

Working with Agemy Financial Strategies means having a team of fiduciaries who are dedicated to your success, helping you make informed decisions, avoid costly missteps, and achieve your long-term financial objectives.

Final Thoughts: Do You Need a Fiduciary?

Fiduciary Advisor

For many people, especially when planning for long-term goals like retirement, estate preservation, or major life transitions, the answer is yes.

A fiduciary’s legal and ethical obligation to act in your best interests, coupled with greater transparency, reduced conflicts, and a holistic planning approach, can provide both peace of mind and better financial outcomes.

Making this choice isn’t about avoiding risk entirely; it’s about minimizing unnecessary conflicts, hidden costs, and misaligned incentives that can quietly erode your financial future.

At Agemy Financial Strategies, we believe in putting clients first, not products, not sales targets, and not commissions. That’s what fiduciary care truly looks like: your goals guiding every decision, every recommendation, and every strategy.

If you’re ready to explore whether working with a fiduciary makes sense for you, we’re here to help you make that decision with confidence. Contact us today to get started.


Investment advisory services are offered through Agemy Wealth Advisors, LLC, a Registered Investment Advisor and fiduciary to its clients. Agemy Financial Strategies, Inc. is a franchisee of Retirement Income Source®, LLC. Agemy Financial Strategies, Inc. and Agemy Wealth Advisors, LLC are associated entities. Agemy Financial Strategies, Inc. and Agemy Wealth Advisors, LLC entities are not associated with Retirement Income Source®, LLC. This content is for informational and educational purposes only and should not be construed as individualized investment, tax, or legal advice. Any review, reliance or distribution by others or forwarding without the express permission of the sender is strictly prohibited. To the extent permitted by law, Agemy Financial Strategies, Inc and Agemy Wealth Advisors, LLC, and Retirement Income Source, LLC do not accept any liability arising from the use or retransmission of the information in this article.

Retirement is one of life’s most exciting transitions. After decades of working and saving, you finally get the chance to enjoy the lifestyle you’ve dreamed of: travel, hobbies, family time, and the freedom to pursue your passions. But along with that freedom comes an important question:

How long will your retirement savings last – especially if you’ve saved $2.5 million?

At Agemy Financial Strategies, we know that retirement planning isn’t one-size-fits-all. Today, we’re breaking down how long $2.5 million can last, what factors influence its longevity, and how smart strategies can help make your money work for you throughout your lifetime.

The Big Picture: What Does $2.5M Really Mean in Retirement?

On its face, $2.5 million sounds like a lot. And in many cases, it is a solid foundation for a comfortable retirement. But the real question isn’t just how much you have; you also need to know:

All of these will determine how long your $2.5M can last.

Disclaimer: The following information is for illustrative purposes only and is not intended to provide specific financial, investment, tax, or legal advice. Example outcomes are hypothetical and not guarantees of future results. Always consult with a qualified financial professional regarding your personal situation before making investment decisions.

The “4% Rule”: A Starting Point (But Not the Only Strategy)

How Long Does $2.5M Last in Retirement

Financial planners often begin with a guideline called the 4% Rule. It suggests that if you withdraw 4% of your initial retirement portfolio in the first year of retirement, and then adjust that amount each year for inflation, your money may last about 30 years.

What Does That Look Like with $2.5M?

  • Year 1 withdrawal at 4%:  0.04 × $2,500,000 = $100,000
  • Each following year, you adjust this figure upward for inflation.

At a 4% withdrawal rate, $2.5 million could support about $100,000 per year in today’s dollars for roughly 30 years.

This means you could retire comfortably in your mid-60s and potentially support yourself through your mid-90s.

But here’s the important part: The 4% Rule is a general guideline, not a guarantee. It doesn’t consider individual spending patterns, market fluctuations, changing tax laws, or unexpected expenses.

That’s where personalized planning comes in.

How Spending Patterns Affect How Long $2.5M Lasts

How Long Does $2.5M Last in Retirement

Not all retirees spend the same way. Your unique lifestyle will dramatically change how long your savings last.

Scenario A: Conservative Spender

  • Annual expenses: $70,000
  • Social Security income: $30,000
  • Net expense from portfolio: $40,000
  • Replacement ratio from $2.5M: ~1.6%

Outcome: Your portfolio could last well beyond 30–35+ years, potentially into your lifetime (and possibly leaving a legacy).

Scenario B: Moderate Spender

  • Annual expenses: $100,000
  • Social Security: $30,000
  • Net: $70,000
  • Withdrawal rate: ~2.8%

Outcome: Money could last 30+ years with disciplined investing and adjustments.

Scenario C: High Spender

  • Annual expenses: $150,000
  • Social Security: $30,000
  • Net: $120,000
  • Withdrawal rate: ~4.8%

Outcome: Higher probabilities of portfolio depletion without strategic management, especially if returns are low or health care costs spike.

Inflation Is a Silent Savings Killer

One of the biggest threats to retirement longevity is inflation, the rising cost of goods and services over time.

Even a modest 3% inflation rate can significantly erode buying power over decades.

For example:

  • $100,000 today won’t buy $100,000 worth of goods 20 years from now.
  • At 3% inflation, it’s like prices double every 24 years.

What this means for your $2.5M:

If you don’t account for inflation, you could underestimate how quickly your money is spent. A disciplined, inflation-adjusted withdrawal plan is essential.

Investment Returns Matter, But So Does Risk

How Long Does $2.5M Last in Retirement

Your $2.5M sitting in investments isn’t static. Its growth depends on:

  • Market returns
  • Your investment mix (stocks, bonds, cash)
  • Fees and taxes

Long-Term vs. Short-Term Returns

In retirement, the sequence of returns risk (the order in which you earn returns) is critical. Negative returns early in retirement can dramatically shorten the life of your portfolio.

That’s why most advisors recommend:

A balanced approach can help cushion downturns and smooth withdrawals.

Social Security, Pensions, and Other Income

$2.5M isn’t your only resource. Other steady lifetime income sources can dramatically help extend the life of your retirement savings.

Social Security

  • Claiming earlier can help reduce monthly benefits.
  • Delaying until age 70 may increase benefits significantly.
  • A strong Social Security income can help reduce your withdrawal needs from investments.

Pensions

If you have a pension, that guaranteed stream can cover essential expenses, freeing up investments for discretionary spending.

Part-Time Work or Gig Income

Many retirees supplement income with part-time work, consulting, or passion projects, further reducing pressure on savings.

The more guaranteed income you have, the longer your $2.5M can last.

Health Care & Long-Term Care: Often Underestimated Costs

How Long Does $2.5M Last in Retirement

One of the biggest wildcards in a retirement plan is health care.

  • Medicare doesn’t cover long-term care.
  • Assisted living and nursing homes can cost tens of thousands per year.
  • Chronic conditions can require costly ongoing care.

Planning for health care and long-term care insurance can help protect your portfolio and prevent a financial shock late in life.

A $2.5M portfolio might be more than enough for daily expenses, but unexpected medical costs can change the game if you’re unprepared.

Taxes: A Hidden Retirement Expense

Withdrawals from tax-deferred accounts (like traditional IRAs and 401(k)s) are taxable.

Even Social Security benefits can be taxable depending on your income.

Taxes matter because:

  • They reduce your net spending power
  • They impact withdrawal timing and strategy
  • They influence where you invest (taxable vs. tax-deferred vs. Roth accounts)

Smart tax planning keeps more of your money working for you.

Estate Planning and Legacy Goals

Some retirees want their portfolio to last not only for their lifetime but also to leave a legacy.

With $2.5M, you can:

  • Support heirs
  • Donate to charities
  • Fund education or family goals

Estate planning strategies like trusts, Roth conversions, and beneficiary designations shape how your legacy lives on.

But leaving money behind means spending a little less in retirement. It’s a balancing act and one best done with a professional.

Personalized Planning: The Agemy Difference

At Agemy Financial Strategies, we believe that retirement spending isn’t about arbitrary rules. It’s about you.

We help you build a plan that considers:

Together, we’ll create a roadmap that answers:

“Not just how long will $2.5M last, but how do I make it last as long as I need it to, with confidence and peace of mind?”

Real-World Example: Meet Jerry & Susan

Their Profile

  • Retired at age 65
  • $2,500,000 portfolio
  • Social Security: $35,000 combined per year
  • Annual expenses: $100,000
  • Moderate risk tolerance

Their Strategy

  • Targeted withdrawal: $65,000 from investments (remainder covered by Social Security)
  • Investment mix: diversified, with growth and income components
  • Healthcare plan: Medicare + supplemental insurance
  • Annual review and adjustment

Outcome

With disciplined spending, inflation adjustments, and periodic rebalancing:

  • Their portfolio is expected to last into their 90s
  • They have flexibility for travel and legacy gifts

Their success shows how solid planning and disciplined execution can stretch $2.5M further than a simple rule might suggest.

What If You Spend More? What If You Spend Less?

One of the strengths of a personalized plan is scenario testing.

If You Spend More

  • Your portfolio may experience earlier depletion
  • You may need to adjust spending
  • You could redesign investment strategies
  • You might consider delaying Social Security for higher benefits

If You Spend Less

  • The portfolio could last significantly longer
  • You may have opportunities to increase gifts or legacy plans

The key is flexibility and readiness to adjust with life’s changes.

Frequently Asked Questions

Q: Is $2.5M enough to retire comfortably?

A: It depends on your lifestyle, health, inflation, investment returns, and other income sources.

Q: What if the market goes down early in retirement?

A: That’s sequenced risk. We plan withdrawals and investment allocations to help protect your portfolio during downturns.

Q: Can my money last if I retire early?

A: Early retirement increases the timeframe your portfolio must support. Planning becomes even more critical, especially with health insurance and long-term care.

Final Thoughts: Longevity, Legacy & Peace of Mind

The question “How long will $2.5 million last?” doesn’t have a one-size-fits-all answer. It depends on your spending habits, income streams, investment strategy, health, tax situation, and personal goals.

But here’s the empowering truth:

With proper planning, $2.5M can provide a comfortable retirement for decades, possibly your entire lifetime, and even support legacy goals.

At Agemy Financial Strategies, our mission is to help you transform wealth into confidence.

Your financial journey doesn’t have to be uncertain. When you plan with purpose and partner with the right advisors, you’ll not only know how long your money can last, you’ll know how long it should last based on your goals.

Ready to Plan for Your Best Retirement?

If you’re wondering whether $2.5M (or any amount) will last your retirement, let’s talk. Our advisors are experienced in personalized retirement income planning that matches your needs, priorities, and lifestyle.

📞 Contact Agemy Financial Strategies today for a customized retirement projection and peace of mind about your financial future.


Investment advisory services are offered through Agemy Wealth Advisors, LLC, a Registered Investment Advisor and fiduciary to its clients. Agemy Financial Strategies, Inc. is a franchisee of Retirement Income Source®, LLC. Agemy Financial Strategies, Inc. and Agemy Wealth Advisors, LLC are associated entities. Agemy Financial Strategies, Inc. and Agemy Wealth Advisors, LLC entities are not associated with Retirement Income Source®, LLC. This content is for informational and educational purposes only and should not be construed as individualized investment, tax, or legal advice. Any review, reliance or distribution by others or forwarding without the express permission of the sender is strictly prohibited. To the extent permitted by law, Agemy Financial Strategies, Inc and Agemy Wealth Advisors, LLC, and Retirement Income Source, LLC do not accept any liability arising from the use or retransmission of the information in this article.

Many HNWI were left frustrated by their monumental tax bill in 2025. In 2026, Agemy Financial Strategies is here to guide you on keeping more of what you earn this year — thoughtfully, legally, and strategically.

As markets evolve and tax law adjusts for inflation and policy, a tax-aware investment plan is no longer a “nice to have;” it can be central to helping preserve wealth and improve after-tax returns. 

Whether you’re a high-net-worth individual (HNWI) planning distributions in retirement, an owner of concentrated stock positions, or someone building generational wealth, 2026 brings both familiar rules and specific inflation-adjusted thresholds worth planning around. 

What’s Changed for 2026: The Numbers That Matter

Before we dig into strategy, here are a few headline adjustments for the 2026 tax year you should lock into your planning:

  • The IRS increased standard deductions for 2026 to $16,100 for single filers, $32,200 for married filing jointly, and $24,150 for heads of household; small but important inflation adjustments that change marginal planning decisions. 
  • Federal ordinary income tax still uses seven brackets (10% → 37%), and the inflation-adjusted bracket thresholds for 2026 have shifted upward compared with 2025; these adjustments matter when timing income, Roth conversions, or large one-time gains. 
  • Long-term capital gains tax rates remain at 0%, 15%, and 20%, but the income thresholds that determine which rate applies were adjusted upward for 2026. That affects where selling assets, or managing taxable income, makes the most sense.
  • Required Minimum Distribution (RMD) rules remain adjusted under the SECURE Act changes; retirement account owners should confirm RMD start ages tied to birth year rules and plan distributions accordingly. 
  • The federal estate and gift tax exemption and related amounts have been adjusted (the estate/gift exemption rose in 2026), while the annual gift exclusion remains important for lifetime wealth transfer planning. 

These are the guardrails. The rest of this guide explains how to use them to your advantage.

Start with Asset Location: Where Each Holding Should Live

2026 Tax Planning

“Asset allocation” decides risk and return; “asset location” decides taxes. A tax-smart portfolio places assets in account types that can help minimize future taxes:

  • Tax-deferred accounts (IRAs, traditional 401(k)s): best for high-growth but tax-inefficient assets (taxable interest, taxable bonds, REITs). Growth is sheltered until withdrawn, but withdrawals are taxed as ordinary income, so plan withdrawals around your tax bracket and RMD timing.
  • Tax-free accounts (Roth IRAs/401(k)s): ideal for assets expected to grow the most, because qualified withdrawals are tax-free. Consider Roth conversions in lower-income years (see Roth conversion section).
  • Taxable brokerage accounts: work well for low-turnover equity investments where favorable long-term capital gains and qualified dividends apply; they’re also useful for tax-loss harvesting.

The goal: maximize after-tax terminal wealth, not pre-tax portfolio value. Asset location alone can add materially to client outcomes over decades.

Manage Realized Gains and Losses Intelligently

Capital gains strategy is a core lever of tax efficiency:

  • Harvest losses to offset gains. When positions fall, realize losses to offset current or future capital gains and up to $3,000 of ordinary income (excesses carry forward). But be mindful of the wash-sale rule: repurchasing “substantially identical” securities within 30 days disallows the loss deduction. Use similar-but-not-identical ETFs, or wait the 31 days, or strategically use tax-efficient replacements. 
  • Time sales to hit the favorable long-term capital gains treatment. Holding more than 12 months qualifies gains for 0/15/20% long-term rates. With 2026 thresholds shifted upward, work with your advisor to time sales across tax years so gains fall into the most favorable bracket. 
  • Split gains across years when feasible. If you’re facing a big capital gain event (sale of a business or concentrated stock block), consider spreading dispositions across tax years to avoid pushing income into higher marginal brackets.

Use Roth Conversions When the Math Lines Up

Roth conversions remain one of the most powerful tax tools for HNWIs when used selectively:

  • Convert traditional IRA assets to Roth in years with temporarily lower taxable income (e.g., after a business sale, sabbatical, or early retirement before Social Security/RMDs kick in). You’ll pay tax now, but future qualified withdrawals are tax-free, and Roths are not subject to RMDs.
  • Because 2026 standard deductions and bracket thresholds were adjusted, there may be small windows where a partial conversion captures a lower marginal rate without pushing you into a higher bracket. Coordinate conversions with expected income, capital gains, and filing status.

A careful conversion plan, implemented over multiple years, can help materially reduce lifetime taxes for many clients.

Plan Distributions Around RMD Rules and Social Security Timing

RMDs can force higher taxable income late in life if not anticipated:

  • Know your RMD start age (which changed under recent legislation and related IRS guidance) and model how required withdrawals will push taxable income and capital gains into higher brackets. Consider Roth conversions earlier to help reduce future RMD pressure. 
  • Coordinate withdrawals with Social Security claiming: taking large IRA distributions earlier can increase temporary tax liability and may affect the taxation of Social Security benefits, another reason to model scenarios with your advisor.

Tax-aware withdrawal sequencing (taxable first vs. tax-deferred first vs. Roth first) should be customized to your cash needs, tax profile, and estate objectives.

Dealing with Concentrated Stock Positions

Executives and entrepreneurs often hold concentrated company stock, a major tax planning challenge:

  • Explore equity compensation strategies. Net-settlement, same-day sales, and withholding strategies can minimize taxes at exercise/vesting. For large blocks, consider structured selling (10b5-1 plans), pre-planned sales during blackout periods, or hedging strategies.
  • Use charitable strategies for appreciated stock. Donating highly appreciated securities directly to charity can yield a deduction for fair market value without recognizing capital gains, an efficient alternative to selling then donating. 
  • Consider partial gifting to family or trusts. Transferring shares via annual gift exclusions or into trusts can be useful for multi-generational planning, particularly with estate/gift exemption amounts adjusted for 2026. Always consider the gift tax reporting implications. 

Concentration decisions should balance diversification, tax cost, and emotional/behavioral considerations.

Tax-Efficient Income: Municipal Bonds, Qualified Dividends, and Tax-Managed Funds

2026 Tax Planning

For investors seeking tax-efficient income:

  • Municipal bonds (and muni funds) can offer federally tax-exempt interest that may be attractive to high-bracket taxpayers; state tax treatment depends on residency and bond issuance.
  • Qualified dividends retain favorable tax rates when the holding period requirements are met, favorable for portfolios that emphasize dividend growers.
  • Tax-managed mutual funds and ETFs intentionally minimize distributions and capital gains; they can be valuable in taxable accounts for long-term investors.

Match income sources to account types and client tax brackets to help optimize after-tax yield.

Charitable Giving and Donor-Advised Funds (DAFs)

Charitable giving is both philanthropic and tax-strategic for many HNWIs:

  • Donor-Advised Funds allow immediate tax deductions (in the year of funding) while you distribute grants over time; useful in high-income years or when you want to bunch charitable deductions above the standard deduction.
  • Gifting appreciated securities to charity avoids capital gains and provides a deduction for fair market value, often superior to selling and then donating.

Philanthropy is highly personalized, but tax efficiency can help increase the impact of every dollar given.

Estate, Gift, and Multigenerational Planning

For high-net-worth families, tax planning extends beyond income taxes:

  • 2026’s increased estate and gift exemption numbers change the calculus for lifetime gifting vs. bequests; incremental opportunities exist to transfer wealth tax-efficiently while regulatory windows remain. Annual exclusions remain useful for smaller, recurring gifts.
  • Consider GRATs, intentionally defective grantor trusts (IDGTs), and other estate tools if preserving business value or removing future appreciation from the taxable estate fits your goals. These techniques require careful legal and tax coordination.

Always coordinate with estate counsel and your advisor, as tax and legal rules interact tightly here.

Stay Mindful of the Wash-Wale Rule and New Reporting Realities

Tax optimization must be done within the rules:

  • The wash-sale rule prevents claiming losses where you buy substantially identical securities within a 30-day window; that rule is enforced, and modern brokerage reporting makes it easier for the IRS to detect disallowed losses. Use tax-efficient replacements or plan repurchases outside the wash-sale window. 

Good tax planning is proactive: avoidance of common traps is as valuable as capturing opportunities.

Connecticut State Tax Considerations for 2026

2026 Tax Planning

For HNWIs based in Connecticut, state taxes play a crucial role in overall tax-smart planning. Connecticut has its own set of income, capital gains, and estate considerations that must be factored into any comprehensive strategy.

  • Income Tax Rates: Connecticut has progressive income tax rates ranging from 3% to 6.99% for 2026. High-net-worth residents should carefully plan the timing of income recognition, including bonuses, dividends, and distributions from retirement accounts, to avoid unnecessary bracket creep.
  • Capital Gains: Unlike some states, Connecticut taxes capital gains as ordinary income. That means that gains from the sale of appreciated assets are subject to the same top marginal rate (6.99%) as other income. Consider strategies like tax-loss harvesting or charitable contributions of appreciated securities to help mitigate state-level gains taxes.
  • Retirement Income: Connecticut offers some exemptions for retirement income, but they are limited. Traditional IRA distributions, pensions, and 401(k) withdrawals are fully taxable at the state level. This makes Roth conversions or strategic timing of withdrawals even more relevant for Connecticut residents.
  • Estate and Gift Taxes: Connecticut maintains a state estate tax, independent of the federal exemption. In 2026, the exemption is $13.1 million (inflation-adjusted). For estates exceeding this threshold, planning strategies such as lifetime gifting or trusts may reduce exposure to Connecticut estate taxes.

Actionable Tip: Connecticut HNWIs should coordinate federal and state planning, particularly around Roth conversions and RMDs, to help optimize after-tax outcomes. Working with your Agemy Financial Strategies advisor can help ensure that your plan considers both sets of tax rules, avoiding surprises at filing time.

Colorado State Tax Considerations for 2026

2026 Tax Planning

For HNWIs in Colorado, understanding state-specific rules is equally important in building a tax-smart portfolio. Colorado’s tax structure is simpler than Connecticut’s but has key implications for investment and retirement planning.

  • Flat Income Tax Rate: Colorado has a flat income tax rate of 4.4% for 2026. While simpler than a progressive system, this means that all ordinary income, including wages, traditional IRA withdrawals, and taxable interest, is taxed at the same rate. For HNWIs, timing distributions to align with federal planning strategies remains essential.
  • Capital Gains: Capital gains in Colorado are treated as ordinary income at the flat 4.4% rate. While lower than top federal or Connecticut rates, this still reinforces the value of long-term gain strategies, loss harvesting, and charitable giving to offset taxable gains.
  • Retirement Income: Colorado generally taxes retirement income at the flat rate as well, with no additional deductions for pensions or Social Security. This makes tax-efficient retirement planning strategies, including Roth conversions and carefully timed withdrawals, especially beneficial.
  • Estate and Gift Taxes: Colorado does not have a state estate tax. This simplifies estate planning compared to Connecticut but highlights the importance of federal planning, charitable strategies, and multi-generational wealth transfer techniques.

Actionable Tip: For Colorado HNWIs, simplicity in the flat tax rate can help with predictability, but it still rewards tax-smart investment decisions. Coordinating your federal and state tax strategies through Agemy Financial Strategies helps ensure that your portfolio maximizes after-tax growth efficiently.

Implementation Checklist for HNWIs in 2026

This practical checklist helps translate ideas into action:

  1. Run a tax scenario model for 2026–2030: include RMDs, Social Security, sale events, and projected capital gains.
  2. Revisit asset location: move tax-inefficient holdings to tax-deferred accounts and growth assets to Roth when appropriate.
  3. Consider staged Roth conversions in lower-income years; model their effect on bracket thresholds and long-term estate tax planning.
  4. Identify concentrated positions and set a multi-year diversification plan (using options, trusts, or charitable giving where appropriate).
  5. Harvest losses intentionally, but avoid wash-sale traps.
  6. Evaluate charitable bunching and DAFs if itemized deductions are lumpy across years.
  7. Confirm gift and estate planning windows with estate counsel, particularly if you intend to make lifetime large gifts.
  8. Coordinate with your advisor on timing major realizations around bracket thresholds and capital gains levels for 2026. (Small timing differences can change the tax treatment materially.)

Why Work with Agemy Financial Strategies?

At Agemy Financial Strategie, we take a fiduciary approach: we model tax impacts, recommend tailored implementation strategies, and coordinate with your CPA and estate attorney to ensure everything is aligned. 

Tax-smart investing is not a one-time event; it’s continuous: annual tax inflation adjustments, life changes, and market events all create new opportunities and risks. We build plans that are resilient, flexible, and designed to help maximize after-tax outcomes while keeping your financial life simple and purposeful.

2026 Tax Planning

Final Thoughts

Taxes are a predictable friction, and the better you manage that friction, the more wealth you keep and the sooner your financial goals are realized. For 2026, that means paying attention to inflation-adjusted thresholds, intelligently locating assets, using Roth conversions and charitable strategies when they make sense, and coordinating distributions around RMDs and Social Security. Small, disciplined decisions compound over the years, and a disciplined tax plan can be one of the most potent drivers of long-term financial success.

Reach out to Agemy Financial Strategies to schedule a planning session. Let’s make 2026 the year your portfolio works smarter for you.


Investment advisory services are offered through Agemy Wealth Advisors, LLC, a Registered Investment Advisor and fiduciary to its clients. Agemy Financial Strategies, Inc. is a franchisee of Retirement Income Source®, LLC. Agemy Financial Strategies, Inc. and Agemy Wealth Advisors, LLC are associated entities. Agemy Financial Strategies, Inc. and Agemy Wealth Advisors, LLC entities are not associated with Retirement Income Source®, LLC. This content is for informational and educational purposes only and should not be construed as individualized investment, tax, or legal advice. Any review, reliance or distribution by others or forwarding without the express permission of the sender is strictly prohibited. To the extent permitted by law, Agemy Financial Strategies, Inc and Agemy Wealth Advisors, LLC, and Retirement Income Source, LLC do not accept any liability arising from the use or retransmission of the information in this article.

Financial Wellness Month is an opportune time to pause and assess your financial health; not just for today, but for the long-term stability and enjoyment of your retirement years. 

For high-net-worth individuals (HNWI), retirement planning often involves complexities beyond those faced by the general population. Balancing asset preservation, tax efficiency, legacy planning, and lifestyle goals requires a nuanced approach and strategic foresight.

Understanding Financial Wellness in Retirement

Financial wellness is more than just having a robust bank account; it’s about achieving security, freedom, and confidence in managing your finances. For retirees or those approaching retirement, financial wellness encompasses:

  • Income sustainability: Ensuring your assets provide a reliable income stream for life.
  • Risk management: Protecting your portfolio from market volatility, inflation, and unexpected life events.
  • Legacy planning: Structuring your wealth to support family, philanthropic goals, or succession plans.
  • Lifestyle alignment: Ensuring your wealth allows for the lifestyle you desire, from travel to hobbies to charitable pursuits.

High-net-worth retirees often face unique challenges: complex investment portfolios, multiple income sources, concentrated holdings, and tax optimization issues. Addressing these effectively requires careful planning and skilled guidance.

Key Pillars of Financial Wellness for HNWI Retirees

Financial Wellness Month

Achieving financial wellness in retirement involves balancing several key pillars:

1. Strategic Retirement Income Planning

A central concern for retirees is ensuring that their money lasts through their retirement. High-net-worth individuals often have multiple income streams, such as:

The goal is to create a retirement income plan that provides stability while minimizing tax liabilities. Strategies may include:

  • Tax-efficient withdrawals: Coordinate distributions from retirement accounts, taxable investments, and tax-exempt accounts to minimize tax burden.
  • Dynamic income planning: Adjust your withdrawal strategy based on market performance, lifestyle changes, or healthcare needs.

For HNWI, incorporating alternative income strategies, such as structured notes, private credit, or real estate investment trusts (REITs), can help provide portfolio diversification and enhance income potential.

2. Portfolio Management and Risk Mitigation

Preserving wealth requires careful attention to market risk, inflation, and portfolio concentration. Key considerations include:

  • Diversification across asset classes: Even sophisticated investors benefit from spreading investments across stocks, bonds, private equity, and alternative assets.
  • Downside protection strategies: Hedging, options, or low-volatility investments can help manage portfolio risk.
  • Regular portfolio rebalancing: Periodic reviews help ensure your allocations remain aligned with your risk tolerance and financial goals.

High-net-worth retirees may also consider tail-risk management strategies, preparing for rare but severe market downturns, to protect their lifestyle and preserve intergenerational wealth.

3. Tax Planning Optimization

Taxes are often one of the largest expenses in retirement. HNWIs must navigate complex tax environments, including federal, state, and local considerations. Effective strategies include:

  • Roth conversions: Gradually converting traditional retirement accounts to Roth accounts can reduce required minimum distributions (RMDs) and future tax exposure.
  • Charitable giving: Utilizing donor-advised funds, charitable remainder trusts, or direct gifts can reduce taxable income while supporting philanthropic goals.
  • Estate tax planning: Proper structuring can help minimize estate taxes, preserve wealth for heirs, and prevent forced asset liquidation.

By integrating tax planning with investment and income strategies, retirees may significantly enhance their overall financial wellness.

4. Healthcare and Long-Term Care Planning

Healthcare is a major and often underestimated cost in retirement. For high-net-worth retirees, planning for healthcare and long-term care expenses is critical to maintaining financial security and lifestyle freedom. Considerations include:

  • Medicare planning: Understanding premium timing, supplemental insurance, and Medicare Advantage options.
  • Long-term care insurance: Policies can protect assets from the high cost of assisted living, home care, or nursing facilities.
  • Health savings accounts (HSAs): Even in retirement, HSAs can provide tax-advantaged resources for medical expenses.

Preparing for healthcare costs can help reduce financial stress and ensure access to quality care without disrupting long-term financial goals.

5. Estate and Legacy Planning

Financial wellness isn’t only about the present; it’s also about the legacy you leave. HNWIs often have complex family dynamics, philanthropic ambitions, and business succession considerations. Essential steps include:

  • Wills and trusts: Ensure that your estate plan reflects your intentions and maximizes tax efficiency.
  • Gifting strategies: Use annual exclusion gifts, lifetime exemptions, and charitable contributions to manage estate tax liability.
  • Business succession planning: Plan for smooth transitions of family-owned businesses or closely-held entities.

Integrating estate planning with retirement income and tax strategies can help ensure a holistic approach to wealth management.

Practical Strategies for Maximizing Financial Wellness

Financial Wellness Month

Here are actionable strategies that can help HNWIs enhance financial wellness in retirement:

1. Conduct a Comprehensive Financial Audit

Start by reviewing every aspect of your financial life:

  • Net worth, including assets and liabilities
  • Income sources and expected cash flows
  • Investment portfolio performance and risk profile
  • Tax situation and estate planning documents

This audit identifies gaps, opportunities, and potential risks, forming the foundation for an effective financial plan.

2. Develop a Personalized Retirement Income Plan

High-net-worth retirees should tailor income strategies to their unique goals. Consider:

  • Essential vs. discretionary expenses
  • Market volatility and withdrawal flexibility
  • Tax implications of each income source
  • Legacy intentions and philanthropic commitments

A dynamic, scenario-based plan can help navigate uncertainties, from market downturns to unexpected expenses.

3. Optimize Investments for Retirement Goals

Investments should support both income needs and long-term wealth preservation:

  • Evaluate portfolio risk in relation to withdrawal rates
  • Diversify across asset classes and geographies
  • Consider alternative investments for income and tax efficiency
  • Review liquidity needs to cover short-term expenses

Working with experienced fiduciary advisors helps ensure that your investment strategy aligns with your retirement objectives.

4. Integrate Tax Planning into Every Decision

Taxes can erode retirement wealth if not managed proactively. Strategies include:

  • Timing capital gains and losses
  • Strategic Roth conversions
  • Utilizing charitable giving vehicles
  • Implementing tax-efficient withdrawal strategies

An integrated approach helps ensure you retain more of your wealth while maintaining lifestyle flexibility.

5. Prepare for Healthcare Costs

Healthcare planning is essential to avoid unexpected financial strain:

  • Estimate long-term medical and assisted living expenses
  • Evaluate long-term care insurance or hybrid policies
  • Use HSAs or other tax-advantaged accounts to cover costs

Being proactive prevents healthcare surprises from derailing your financial wellness.

6. Review Estate and Legacy Goals

High-net-worth retirees should periodically review estate plans to help ensure alignment with goals:

Proper estate planning safeguards your legacy and simplifies transitions for heirs.

Common Financial Wellness Mistakes HNWIs Should Avoid

Financial Wellness Month

Even with substantial wealth, retirees can make mistakes that undermine financial wellness. Common pitfalls include:

  1. Overconcentration in a single asset: Relying too heavily on one stock, property, or business increases risk.
  2. Ignoring tax implications: Large withdrawals or poor estate planning can trigger unnecessary tax liabilities.
  3. Underestimating healthcare costs: Medical expenses often exceed projections, especially with long-term care needs.
  4. Lack of liquidity: Excessive investment in illiquid assets can create cash flow challenges.
  5. Not planning for longevity: With retirees living longer, ensuring your portfolio lasts 25+ years is critical.

Avoiding these missteps can be key to helping sustain financial wellness throughout retirement.

The Role of a Trusted Fiduciary Advisor

For HNWIs, working with an experienced fiduciary advisor is often the difference between a comfortable retirement and financial uncertainty. Advisors can help:

At Agemy Financial Strategies, we take a holistic approach to wealth management, focusing on the unique needs of high-net-worth individuals and retirees. Our fiduciary advisors are committed to placing your financial goals first, providing personalized strategies that balance risk, growth, and income. 

With 35+ years of experience, we guide clients through complex financial landscapes, helping ensure that every decision supports your lifestyle, preserves your wealth, and safeguards your legacy. Choosing a fiduciary advisor like Agemy Financial Strategies helps ensure that your retirement plan is both robust and tailored to your long-term vision.

Measuring Financial Wellness in Retirement

Financial wellness isn’t an abstract concept; it can be measured. Metrics to track include:

  • Net worth trajectory: Are your assets growing or being preserved relative to your spending?
  • Cash flow sufficiency: Can your income reliably cover your lifestyle and emergency needs?
  • Portfolio risk alignment: Does your investment strategy match your risk tolerance and goals?
  • Tax efficiency: Are you minimizing taxes across income, investments, and estate planning?
  • Legacy readiness: Are your estate and philanthropic goals achievable with your current plan?

Regular assessment helps ensure your retirement plan remains on track.

Financial Wellness Month: A Time for Reflection and Action

Financial Wellness Month

Financial Wellness Month is the perfect opportunity to:

  • Review your current financial plan
  • Identify areas for improvement or optimization
  • Discuss strategies with your financial advisor
  • Implement actions that strengthen your wealth, reduce stress, and enhance your lifestyle

Even for high-net-worth retirees, taking time to focus on financial wellness can result in better decision-making, increased confidence, and a more fulfilling retirement.

Final Thoughts

Financial wellness in retirement is an ongoing process that requires intentionality, expertise, and proactive planning. For high-net-worth individuals, the complexity of managing substantial assets, mitigating risks, and optimizing income and legacy requires a sophisticated approach.

By focusing on strategic income planning, portfolio management, tax optimization, healthcare preparedness, and legacy planning, retirees can achieve true financial wellness: the peace of mind that comes from knowing your wealth is secure, your lifestyle is protected, and your legacy will endure.

Agemy Financial Strategies is committed to helping HNWIs navigate these challenges, providing tailored guidance to help ensure your retirement years are not only financially secure but also deeply rewarding.

Schedule a complimentary consultation with us today at agemy.com. 


FAQs: Financial Wellness for HNWIs

  1. What is the ideal withdrawal rate for HNWIs in retirement?
    Withdrawal rates depend on portfolio size, risk tolerance, and lifestyle goals. HNWIs often use a dynamic approach, adjusting withdrawals based on market conditions and income sources.
  2. How can I help minimize taxes on my investment income in retirement?
    Tax-efficient strategies include Roth conversions, charitable giving, and coordinating withdrawals from taxable, tax-deferred, and tax-exempt accounts.
  3. Should I consider long-term care insurance if I’m wealthy?
    Yes. Even high-net-worth individuals face potentially high long-term care costs. Policies can protect assets and ensure access to quality care.
  4. How often should I review my estate plan?
    At least annually, or after major life events such as marriage, divorce, birth of grandchildren, or significant changes in asset values.
  5. How can I help ensure my financial plan aligns with my lifestyle goals?
    Regularly review expenses, desired lifestyle, and legacy objectives with your advisor, ensuring income, investments, and risk management strategies support your vision.

Investment advisory services are offered through Agemy Wealth Advisors, LLC, a Registered Investment Advisor and fiduciary to its clients. Agemy Financial Strategies, Inc. is a franchisee of Retirement Income Source®, LLC. Agemy Financial Strategies, Inc. and Agemy Wealth Advisors, LLC are associated entities. Agemy Financial Strategies, Inc. and Agemy Wealth Advisors, LLC entities are not associated with Retirement Income Source®, LLC. This content is for informational and educational purposes only and should not be construed as individualized investment, tax, or legal advice. Any review, reliance or distribution by others or forwarding without the express permission of the sender is strictly prohibited. To the extent permitted by law, Agemy Financial Strategies, Inc and Agemy Wealth Advisors, LLC, and Retirement Income Source, LLC do not accept any liability arising from the use or retransmission of the information in this article.

If you’re planning retirement income for 2026, Required Minimum Distributions (RMDs) remain one of the most important, and sometimes confusing, tax and cash-flow rules to manage. 

Over the last few years, Congress and the IRS have made several changes that affect when RMDs begin, how they’re calculated, and which accounts they apply to. This post breaks down the key updates heading into 2026, explains practical tax and planning implications, and offers clear steps you can take now to help reduce tax surprises and make your retirement income strategy more efficient.

Quick Summary: The Headlines You Must Know

  • The SECURE 2.0 Act permanently raised the RMD starting age to 73 for many taxpayers (and schedules a further increase to age 75 for future cohorts). 
  • The first-year RMD deadline rule still allows a delay until April 1 of the year after you turn the RMD age, but that can create the “two RMDs in one year” tax effect. 
  • The IRS has issued updated worksheets and guidance on life-expectancy tables and calculation methods; some proposed regulation effective dates were delayed, so watch plan-specific rules for 2026. 
  • Several practical rule changes from SECURE 2.0 (including Roth treatment in employer plans and catch-up contribution rules) indirectly affect RMD planning and tax brackets heading into 2026.

What Changed and What’s Staying the Same

RMD Updates for 2026

1. Age to Start RMDs: Still Rising, But Staged

The most material change affecting “when” RMDs start came from the SECURE 2.0 Act. It raised the RMD starting age to 73 (effective January 1, 2023) for people born in certain years, and it includes a scheduled increase to 75 for later cohorts (effective in the early 2030s). That’s why many people who were previously concerned about taking RMDs at 72 now have more flexibility. 

Important nuance: the exact year you must begin RMDs still depends on your birthdate. That means two people close in age could have different first-RMD years. Always check the IRS rules for your specific birth year. 

2. The “First Distribution” Timing and the Two-RMD Year Problem

You may still delay your first RMD until April 1 of the year after you reach the RMD age. But if you do, you’ll typically owe two taxable RMDs in that calendar year: the delayed first distribution (reported in that tax year) plus your regular RMD for that same year (due by Dec. 31). That can push you into a higher bracket unexpectedly, so plan accordingly. 

3. IRS Technical Updates, Worksheets, and Delayed Effective Dates

The IRS has updated worksheets and guidance (including updated life expectancy tables), but some portions of proposed regulations related to plan valuation and certain complex treatments were delayed or had effective dates adjusted. That means plan administrators must follow IRS guidance closely in 2025–2026 for which technical rules apply immediately versus which will come later. 

4. Indirect SECURE 2.0 Effects That Matter for RMD Planning

SECURE 2.0 introduced several changes that don’t alter RMD mechanics directly but affect retirement tax planning: expanded catch-up contribution options for certain ages and Roth conversion/catch-up rules for high earners, elimination of pre-death RMDs from Roth accounts inside employer plans (for distributions before death), and other features. Those provisions change the taxable balances you’ll have at RMD start, and influence strategies like Roth conversions and qualified charitable distributions (QCDs). 

How RMDs Are Calculated in 2026

RMD Updates for 2026

RMD calculation basics haven’t changed: for most accounts, you divide the account balance as of December 31 of the prior year by an IRS life-expectancy factor (from the Uniform Lifetime Table, Joint Life & Last Survivor Table, or the Single Life Table, depending on circumstances). Here’s a practical walk-through:

  1. Find your account balance: Use the fair market value as of December 31 of the previous year (for a 2026 RMD, use the Dec. 31, 2025 balance). 
  2. Choose the correct divisor: If your spouse is the sole beneficiary and more than ten years younger, use the Joint Life & Last Survivor Table; otherwise, use the Uniform Lifetime Table. The IRS provides worksheets to help pick the right factor. 
  3. Divide and report: Divide the account balance by the life expectancy factor. That’s your RMD for the year; you must withdraw that amount by Dec. 31 (or by April 1 only for your first RMD year if you choose to delay). 

Example: If your traditional IRA balance was $500,000 on 12/31/2025 and your life expectancy factor is 24.7 (example number), your 2026 RMD would be $500,000 ÷ 24.7 ≈ $20,243. That amount is taxable as ordinary income in 2026 unless it’s from after-tax contributions.

Tax Consequences and Common Pitfalls for 2026

A. “Two RMDs in One Year” Tax Spike

If you delay your first RMD to April 1, 2026 (because you turned 73 in 2025), you’ll likely need to take another RMD by Dec. 31, 2026, resulting in two taxable distributions in 2026. That can bump you into a higher tax bracket or affect the taxation of Social Security and Medicare IRMAA calculations. Plan for that cash-flow and tax effect if delaying makes sense. 

B. Penalty Risk

Failure to take the full Required Minimum Distribution (RMD) can still trigger a tax penalty, though it’s now less severe than in the past. Under SECURE 2.0, the excise tax for missed RMDs has been reduced from 50% to 25% of the amount not withdrawn. If the mistake is corrected quickly, that penalty may be lowered further—to 10%—provided the distribution is taken and a timely correction is made. Still, don’t count on relief; it’s best to treat RMD deadlines as firm. Learn more from the IRS.

C. Roths, Employer Plans, and Inheritance Complications

While Roth IRAs continue to be exempt from lifetime RMDs for original owners, SECURE 2.0 changed how Roth accounts inside employer plans are treated pre-death (elimination of RMDs before death for plan Roths). Additionally, inherited IRAs (especially post-2019 death rules) have special 10-year distribution windows and different rules for eligible designated beneficiaries. These distinctions can change both timing and tax exposure, and many of these details remain areas where IRS guidance is evolving into 2026, so consult up-to-date guidance. 

Practical Strategies to Manage RMD Impact in 2026

RMD Updates for 2026

Below are commonly used tactics; not all are appropriate for everyone, but they’re worth evaluating with your advisor.

1. Consider Timely Roth Conversions (But Mind the Tax Bracket)

Converting some traditional IRA dollars to a Roth IRA before RMDs begin (or in lower-income years) can permanently remove that money from future RMD calculations, shrinking future RMDs and future taxable income. Be mindful: conversions trigger tax now, so run year-by-year tax projections to avoid unwanted bracket creep.

2. Use Qualified Charitable Distributions (QCDs)

If you’re age-eligible, QCDs allow direct transfers from an IRA to a charity (up to $100,000 per year) that count toward your RMD but are not taxable income. For 2026, confirm eligibility and limits with the latest IRS guidance and your advisor. QCDs can be powerful for retirees with charitable intent and RMD pressure. 

  1. Coordinate Workplace Plan Roth Options and Rollovers

If you have both pretax and Roth balances in an employer plan, SECURE 2.0’s employer-plan Roth rule changes may make conversions or intra-plan Roth rollovers more attractive. Also, confirm whether your plan allows in-service rollovers to IRAs (for example, to convert to a Roth IRA on your timetable).

4. Time Withdrawals and Tax Management Across Years

Avoid taking your first RMD in April if it would cause two very large distributions in the same year that push you into a higher tax bracket (unless you calculated that the bracket impact is acceptable). Likewise, plan taxable income across other sources (Social Security, capital gains) to smooth bracket exposure.

5. Consider Longevity and Cash-Flow

If you expect to need retirement income later rather than sooner, delaying distributions (within the law) can give tax-deferred growth more time, but also increases future RMDs because of larger account balances. Model the tradeoff: tax now vs. potentially higher future RMDs.

Common Questions (FAQ) 

Q: Do I still have to take RMDs in 2026?
A: If you are at or past your applicable RMD starting age (which for many is 73), yes — RMDs are required. For the specific age that applies to your birth year, refer to IRS rules. 

Q: Can I avoid RMDs by keeping money in my 401(k)?
A: Not indefinitely. Employer plans may allow workers still employed to delay RMDs from that employer plan until retirement (if you’re a 5% owner rules don’t apply), but IRAs generally require RMDs when you reach the applicable age. Check plan rules and timing carefully.

Q: Are Roth IRAs subject to RMDs?
A: Roth IRAs owned by the original account owner are not subject to lifetime RMDs. However, Roth accounts inside employer plans have different rules; SECURE 2.0 reduced some pre-death RMD implications for plan Roth. Always confirm which account type you hold. 

Q: If I miss an RMD, can I fix it?
A: The IRS can reduce penalties if you correct the shortfall promptly and show reasonable cause. Historically, the penalty could be severe; always address missed RMDs immediately with your advisor. 

Action Checklist: What to Do Now for 2026

  • Review your birth year and confirm the precise first RMD year that applies to you. Use the IRS RMD page or ask your advisor. 
  • If you may face two RMDs in 2026 (you turned the RMD age in 2025 and delayed to Apr. 1, 2026), run a tax projection to estimate bracket impacts and Medicare IRMAA effects. 
  • Evaluate Roth conversion opportunities in low-income years, modeling tax cost vs. long-term RMD and tax benefits.
  • If charitable giving is planned, calculate QCDs to offset RMDs and reduce taxable income. 
  • Coordinate with your plan sponsors and custodians to help ensure correct worksheets/tables and any plan amendments are applied for 2026 distributions. 
  • Schedule a year-end review with your advisor to confirm you’ll take the correct RMD amounts on time and to address any last-minute plan or tax changes.

Final Thoughts From Agemy Financial Strategies

RMD Updates for 2026

RMDs can feel like an administrative annoyance, but they’re a powerful lever in retirement tax planning, for better or worse. The staged increases in RMD starting age from SECURE 2.0 give many retirees extra flexibility, but they also create complexity: mismatched birth-year rules, delayed IRS technical guidance, and new employer-plan Roth rules all create moving parts for 2026.

Your best defense is proactive planning: calculate projected RMDs, consider Roth conversions or QCDs where appropriate, communicate with plan administrators, and model the tax impact of timing choices like taking the first RMD in April versus December. In many cases, a modest change in distribution timing or a small conversion can save tens of thousands in taxes over a retirement horizon.

Ready to Take Control of Your RMD Strategy?

Navigating new RMD rules can be overwhelming, but you don’t have to do it alone. Agemy Financial Strategies specializes in helping retirees minimize taxes, optimize withdrawals, and build a confident, efficient income plan for every stage of retirement.

Contact Agemy Financial Strategies today to schedule your personalized RMD review and help ensure you’re fully prepared for 2026 and beyond.

Investment advisory services are offered through Agemy Wealth Advisors, LLC, a Registered Investment Advisor and fiduciary to its clients. Agemy Financial Strategies, Inc. is a franchisee of Retirement Income Source®, LLC. Agemy Financial Strategies, Inc. and Agemy Wealth Advisors, LLC are associated entities. Agemy Financial Strategies, Inc. and Agemy Wealth Advisors, LLC entities are not associated with Retirement Income Source®, LLC. This content is for informational and educational purposes only and should not be construed as individualized investment, tax, or legal advice. Any review, reliance or distribution by others or forwarding without the express permission of the sender is strictly prohibited. To the extent permitted by law, Agemy Financial Strategies, Inc and Agemy Wealth Advisors, LLC, and Retirement Income Source, LLC do not accept any liability arising from the use or retransmission of the information in this article.