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Frittering away Frugality 

"Where do I start... Rotisserie chicken, toilet paper, bottled water, coffee, $1.50 hot dog and a soda,$1.99 massive slice of pizza, the optical department, clothes, and using Costco Travel,gas. Other than these, we may buy one other item per trip to Costco. Our eye glasses alone save us much more than the cost of our membership. We go because we actually do enjoy the journey And I didn't even mention all of the samples"
- L H
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Thinking of a possible reason to tap Roth earlier then planned

"I'm assuming you're retired, and income verification for a loan may be challenging with some lenders for a HELOC or bridge loan. A thought might be to see if the institution where you hold your retirement accounts may offer securities lending. I would only leverage up to or around 50% of the assets you may secure the loan with (assuming you are paying the loan back in the near future when selling the property you are in?). It's my understanding the institution could liquidate assets should there be a market correction of some sort. I've been meaning to look into a LOC from my institution since my HELOC recently expired. I'd be hesitant to liquidate the Roth IRA given it's tax benefits, but life is short, and if it's the only option to get you to your goal of spending more time with your family, might be worth considering. Question- what % of your Roth are you liquidating? Some folks hold large Roths, and maybe your thought isn't so bad..."
- Bill C
Read more »

Every Writer Has a Beginning: Jonathan’s First Essay

"Thank you Dana! I had to smile at your fourth-grade opening line, and especially the giant Hershey bar! One thing I’ve discovered during this journey is that every writer really does have a beginning. I’m also glad Jonathan’s title suggestions helped you. He certainly had a gift for them."
- Andrew Clements
Read more »

Reluctantly Saving Money

"With good reason, Dan. I know a story of a do-it-yourselfer that’s too sad to share here."
- Linda Grady
Read more »

A $30,000 Mistake

IF YOU’RE IN YOUR early 60s and retired, you probably have a lot of financial questions on your mind. The next few years may be among your lowest-income and lowest-tax-paying years. Your salary and bonus years are behind you. Social Security and required minimum distributions from your IRAs and 401(k)s have not started yet. You are hearing advice about doing Roth conversions during this low-tax window, and the arguments are compelling. You may also be thinking about consulting or part-time work to stay active and bring in some income. This article is about the hidden cost of those decisions: how income choices you make now can affect both your health insurance costs today and your Medicare premiums later. If you don’t understand the interaction, the surprise can cost thousands of dollars. The ACA cliff is back… and it’s steep The enhanced ACA subsidies that softened premium costs from 2021 through 2025 expired at the end of last year. Congress didn’t extend them. That means the hard cliff is back in full effect for 2026. The cliff sits at 400% of the federal poverty level. Cross it by even $1 and you lose your entire premium tax credit. It’s not a partial reduction; it’s all of it. If you aren’t prepared, that can create real cashflow problems. For 2026 coverage, based on the 2025 federal poverty guidelines, those thresholds are:
  • Single filer: $62,600 
  • Married couple: $84,600
  • Family of three: $106,600
Per KFF’s analysis, a 60-year-old earning $62,000 pays roughly $515 a month in health premiums, about 10% of income. The same person earning $64,000, or just $2,000 more, pays around $1,244 a month, roughly 23% of income. That’s not a typo. Two thousand dollars of extra income triggers roughly $8,750 in extra annual premiums.  The income figure that determines your eligibility is your MAGI. It includes everything you might be doing in retirement to manage your finances: Roth conversions, capital gain realizations, dividends, interest, part-time income and Social Security if you’re already drawing it.  The IRMAA clock starts when you’re 63, not 65 The ACA cliff is only part of the issue. Medicare uses a two-year lookback to set your premiums. Your 2028 Medicare Part B and Part D costs will be determined by your 2026 income, the same year you’re managing your ACA cliff right now. The 2026 IRMAA thresholds reflect 2024 income for those already on Medicare. They give us a reasonable proxy for what 2028 will likely look like, as the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services won’t publish the actual 2028 brackets until late 2027. The first IRMAA tier kicks in at $109,000 for single filers and $218,000 for couples. Cross that threshold in 2026, and when you turn 65 in 2028, you’ll be looking at roughly an extra $81.20 per month per person in Part B premiums or $974 per person per year, on top of the standard $202.90/month premium. That’s the first tier. The surcharges climb from there. And both Part B and Part D carry their own IRMAA surcharges, so couples can easily see $2,000 to $4,000 in added annual Medicare costs from a single income year that was too high. It is ironic but the income year most likely to push you over an IRMAA threshold is often one of your last years before Medicare when you might be selling an asset, doing a large Roth conversion, or drawing down a pre-tax account to fund living expenses. Why do these two cliffs need to be planned together? Put these two together and you can see the problem clearly. Take a 63-year-old couple with $80,000 of MAGI: they’re under the $84,600 cliff, subsidies intact. Now add a $20,000 Roth conversion. That one decision pushes them to $100,000 and it wipes out the entire ACA subsidy this year. The same conversion, sized larger or stacked with a capital gain that crosses $218,000, would also raise their Medicare premiums starting in 2028. That is why the two cliffs need to be modeled together, not checked separately after the fact. Where the $30,000 comes from:
ScenarioEstimated Cost
Couple crosses the ACA cliff in 2026, full subsidy lost≈ +$21,500/yr
Same 2026 MAGI over the first IRMAA tier triggers the 2028 Medicare surcharge (Part B + D, couple)+$2,297
If 2027 income also stays over the ACA cliff≈ +$21,500 more
Combined two-year exposure from the same income patternPotentially $45,000+
The chart below plots 2026 MAGI against both costs at once: the bars are your annual ACA premium (indigo while subsidized, red past the cliff), and the line is the annual Medicare surcharge that same income locks in for 2028. If you’re 63 in 2026: Too much income this year and you lose ACA subsidies, costing potentially $10,000 to $25,000 more in health premiums in 2026 and 2027. Too much income this year and you trigger IRMAA, paying $2,000 to $8,000+ more in Medicare premiums annually starting in 2028. Both cliffs draw from the same income year at once, not in sequence. Your 2026 MAGI sets your ACA subsidy right now, and that same 2026 return sets your 2028 Medicare premium through the two-year lookback. Because the two systems are run separately (one by the IRS and the Department of Health and Human Services, the other by Social Security and the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services) most people never see the combined exposure until it’s already locked in. What you can do about it The goal is to keep your 2026 MAGI below both cliffs where possible, or at least to be deliberate about which cliff you’re willing to cross and why.
  • Traditional IRA contributions: reduce MAGI dollar-for-dollar, if you have earned income
  • HSA contributions: a pre-tax reduction, but watch the Medicare timeline
  • Capital gain timing: deferring a sale past Medicare can bypass the pincer entirely
  • Roth conversions: the opposite, since they add directly to MAGI
For people with earned income, deductible Traditional IRA contributions can be one of the most direct MAGI reducers. If you or your spouse has earned income, you can contribute to a Traditional IRA and deduct it, reducing MAGI dollar-for-dollar. The 2026 limit is $7,500 per person, or $8,600 if you’re 50 or older. For a couple where one spouse is still working, that’s potentially $17,200 off your MAGI. One catch: if you’re covered by a workplace retirement plan, the deduction phases out at higher incomes. For 2026, between $81,000 and $91,000 of MAGI for single filers, or $129,000 and $149,000 for joint filers when the contributing spouse is covered. The counterintuitive part: you’re putting money into a pre-tax account when your tax rate is relatively low, with the understanding that you’ll pay taxes on it later and possibly at higher rates. For some people, that trade doesn’t pencil out. For others, protecting a $10,000 ACA subsidy this year is worth the future tax cost. The math depends on your specific situation, and it’s worth modeling rather than assuming. Health savings account contributions work similarly. Pre-tax contributions reduce MAGI directly. The catch is that you must be on an HSA-eligible high-deductible health plan to contribute. If your ACA marketplace plan qualifies, and you’re not yet on Medicare, this can be a meaningful lever. The 2026 limits are $4,400 for self-only coverage and $8,750 for family coverage, plus an extra $1,000 catch-up if you’re 55 or older. Plan to stop contributions before Medicare begins. Medicare’s Part A coverage can backdate up to six months, which can turn recent contributions into excess contributions, so watch that timeline carefully. Capital gain timing is often the biggest swing. If you’re planning to sell appreciated assets, a taxable brokerage position, a rental property, anything with embedded gain, the year you do it matters enormously. Deferring a large realization from 2026 to 2029, after Medicare begins, sidesteps both the ACA cliff and the IRMAA lookback simultaneously. That’s not always possible, but it’s worth asking whether the transaction needs to happen this year. Roth conversions don’t reduce MAGI, they add to it. If you’re in the pincer zone, aggressive Roth conversion in 2026 can push you over the ACA cliff and set your 2028 IRMAA tier at the same time. That’s not an argument against Roth conversions generally. It’s an argument for sizing them carefully relative to where you are on both cliff structures. If you’re already below both thresholds with room to spare, a modest conversion can make sense. If you’re hovering near either line, the math changes quickly. One longer-horizon point, separate from the two-year window this article is about: if you’re in the pre-pincer years, your late 50s or early 60s, modest Roth conversions now can reduce the size of your future RMDs. Smaller RMDs mean less forced taxable income in your late 60s and beyond, which means less pressure on the IRMAA tiers you’ll face once you’re on Medicare. That is a multi-decade trade, not a fix for the immediate cliff, and it works best when you have a decade or more of runway before Medicare enrollment. Plan this out The two-year lookback means you lose the ability to affect your 2028 Medicare premiums after December 31, 2026. You can’t file an amended return and get a different IRMAA. There is an appeal process through Social Security, but it’s designed for genuine life-changing events like retirement or divorce, not for voluntary income decisions that turned out to be more expensive than expected. For ACA purposes, 2026 is the year in question. January 1, 2027 starts a new calculation. That means the window for planning is now. Not 2027, when you’re closer to Medicare. ________________________________________________________________________________ John Urban is the founder of RetireSmartIRA, a retirement tax-planning app. Earlier, he founded GT Nexus, a supply-chain software company acquired by Infor in 2015. He lives in Northern California with his wife, Kathy, and enjoys time with family, travel, reading, Bay Area sports, and the occasional deep dive into the fine print of the tax code.
Read more »

Happy 250th Birthday America

"My Irish paternal great-grandfather came in the 1850's and my German maternal great-grandfather came from Germany in the early 1860s. Like you, Nick, my grateful heart knows no bounds."
- Mike Lynch
Read more »

Haunted Head

"Edmund, I think we're all circling the same tension around retirement. Two hundred and fifty years of Western work ethic doesn't loosen its grip easily—I felt that pull too. I'm sixteen months into retirement now. Before I stopped working, I told myself a story: take a full year off, extend it through the following summer, then ease into a part-time, low-pressure job by my second fall. Looking back, it wasn't really a plan. I think it was more a concession to my own anxiety about productivity, a way of promising my future self I wouldn't drift too far from being useful. But somewhere along the way, I fell in love with having full agency over my time. I can say with certainty now: there will be no job waiting for me this fall. What's interesting is that I didn't stop being productive—I just started doing it differently. Without really planning to, I built my own structure: mentoring in sports, then founding and running a new racket sports club. My need for purpose didn't disappear with retirement; it simply went looking for a new form to take. Maybe that's the real trick to a contented post-career life—not the absence of productivity, but trading forced productivity for chosen productivity. Doing the work because it's yours, not because it's required. But most importantly of all: still leaving enough empty space in the week to sit on a cliffside and watch the sharks."
- Mark Crothers
Read more »

Should I Lock in CD Rates Now or Stay in Money Market?

"Yesterday's post on Can I Retire Yet? titled What to do with a Windfall and a current baker's dozen comments addresses many of the same concerns you ask about in this HD forum post. You may find David Champion's post interesting. The what for and when funds will be used seem to be key and would be particular to the specific decisions each of us each of us makes with a windfall of cash. I expect liability matching and liquidity will be key to my decisions along with having a sufficient cash cushion for when my planning turns out wrong."
- William Perry
Read more »

Reminded of Jonathan’s Grace

"It’s always interesting when a book keeps pulling you back in for “just one more chapter.” That usually says a lot about how engaging and thought-provoking the writing is. Thanks for sharing your experience, it’s helpful to hear how a book can leave such a strong impression on a reader."
- Paul Welch
Read more »

Tempted by the Shiny and New: Another HD Car Post

"Ha Ha Dunn, Usually I would not even consider a first model year vehicle, HOWEVER: 1) this is a Toyota, and 2) we watched a review of the vehicle by The Care Care Nut, and that convinced us it was OK to purchase it. Main selling points were: 1) most of the components, chassis, hybrid engine, and dash layout are the same as several other Toyota models, and 2) it is assembled in their Lexus plant in Japan. PS, we love it!"
- DavidHLancaster
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Mr Market visits Art Basel

"My mother was a professional artist, and my daughter is highly talented in that area. I have a number of pieces done by each of them. No cost. They are priceless, and give me great pleasure. They get preferential placement. I also now collect fine art. I follow auction notices I receive through the site called Invaluable, and have favorite artists and favorite forms of art. I research what I like. I bid at auctions and have built quite a good collection. While I can tell you what pieces I paid too much for and what pieces I got at a bargain, the totals I've spent are not especially high. And I don't really care about whether my collection appreciates. What really drives me is a work that I know I will love to look at every day, and that I will never grow tired of. I am patient. I know every art owner's preferences are different. So I often see bidding on things I don't care for at all, and sometimes am surprised that there is little competition for things I really want. I tend to appreciate highly real artistic skills that are evident. Not everyone can accurately reproduce a specific human's face. Not everyone can throw a tall wide pot with a very thin wall. Not everyone can carve realistically in three dimensions. All of these things and more make art collection a special form of ownership. It may be worth a dip in the art auction market - it is far more fun than gambling or speculation."
- Martin McCue
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Frittering away Frugality 

"Where do I start... Rotisserie chicken, toilet paper, bottled water, coffee, $1.50 hot dog and a soda,$1.99 massive slice of pizza, the optical department, clothes, and using Costco Travel,gas. Other than these, we may buy one other item per trip to Costco. Our eye glasses alone save us much more than the cost of our membership. We go because we actually do enjoy the journey And I didn't even mention all of the samples"
- L H
Read more »

Thinking of a possible reason to tap Roth earlier then planned

"I'm assuming you're retired, and income verification for a loan may be challenging with some lenders for a HELOC or bridge loan. A thought might be to see if the institution where you hold your retirement accounts may offer securities lending. I would only leverage up to or around 50% of the assets you may secure the loan with (assuming you are paying the loan back in the near future when selling the property you are in?). It's my understanding the institution could liquidate assets should there be a market correction of some sort. I've been meaning to look into a LOC from my institution since my HELOC recently expired. I'd be hesitant to liquidate the Roth IRA given it's tax benefits, but life is short, and if it's the only option to get you to your goal of spending more time with your family, might be worth considering. Question- what % of your Roth are you liquidating? Some folks hold large Roths, and maybe your thought isn't so bad..."
- Bill C
Read more »

Every Writer Has a Beginning: Jonathan’s First Essay

"Thank you Dana! I had to smile at your fourth-grade opening line, and especially the giant Hershey bar! One thing I’ve discovered during this journey is that every writer really does have a beginning. I’m also glad Jonathan’s title suggestions helped you. He certainly had a gift for them."
- Andrew Clements
Read more »

Reluctantly Saving Money

"With good reason, Dan. I know a story of a do-it-yourselfer that’s too sad to share here."
- Linda Grady
Read more »

A $30,000 Mistake

IF YOU’RE IN YOUR early 60s and retired, you probably have a lot of financial questions on your mind. The next few years may be among your lowest-income and lowest-tax-paying years. Your salary and bonus years are behind you. Social Security and required minimum distributions from your IRAs and 401(k)s have not started yet. You are hearing advice about doing Roth conversions during this low-tax window, and the arguments are compelling. You may also be thinking about consulting or part-time work to stay active and bring in some income. This article is about the hidden cost of those decisions: how income choices you make now can affect both your health insurance costs today and your Medicare premiums later. If you don’t understand the interaction, the surprise can cost thousands of dollars. The ACA cliff is back… and it’s steep The enhanced ACA subsidies that softened premium costs from 2021 through 2025 expired at the end of last year. Congress didn’t extend them. That means the hard cliff is back in full effect for 2026. The cliff sits at 400% of the federal poverty level. Cross it by even $1 and you lose your entire premium tax credit. It’s not a partial reduction; it’s all of it. If you aren’t prepared, that can create real cashflow problems. For 2026 coverage, based on the 2025 federal poverty guidelines, those thresholds are:
  • Single filer: $62,600 
  • Married couple: $84,600
  • Family of three: $106,600
Per KFF’s analysis, a 60-year-old earning $62,000 pays roughly $515 a month in health premiums, about 10% of income. The same person earning $64,000, or just $2,000 more, pays around $1,244 a month, roughly 23% of income. That’s not a typo. Two thousand dollars of extra income triggers roughly $8,750 in extra annual premiums.  The income figure that determines your eligibility is your MAGI. It includes everything you might be doing in retirement to manage your finances: Roth conversions, capital gain realizations, dividends, interest, part-time income and Social Security if you’re already drawing it.  The IRMAA clock starts when you’re 63, not 65 The ACA cliff is only part of the issue. Medicare uses a two-year lookback to set your premiums. Your 2028 Medicare Part B and Part D costs will be determined by your 2026 income, the same year you’re managing your ACA cliff right now. The 2026 IRMAA thresholds reflect 2024 income for those already on Medicare. They give us a reasonable proxy for what 2028 will likely look like, as the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services won’t publish the actual 2028 brackets until late 2027. The first IRMAA tier kicks in at $109,000 for single filers and $218,000 for couples. Cross that threshold in 2026, and when you turn 65 in 2028, you’ll be looking at roughly an extra $81.20 per month per person in Part B premiums or $974 per person per year, on top of the standard $202.90/month premium. That’s the first tier. The surcharges climb from there. And both Part B and Part D carry their own IRMAA surcharges, so couples can easily see $2,000 to $4,000 in added annual Medicare costs from a single income year that was too high. It is ironic but the income year most likely to push you over an IRMAA threshold is often one of your last years before Medicare when you might be selling an asset, doing a large Roth conversion, or drawing down a pre-tax account to fund living expenses. Why do these two cliffs need to be planned together? Put these two together and you can see the problem clearly. Take a 63-year-old couple with $80,000 of MAGI: they’re under the $84,600 cliff, subsidies intact. Now add a $20,000 Roth conversion. That one decision pushes them to $100,000 and it wipes out the entire ACA subsidy this year. The same conversion, sized larger or stacked with a capital gain that crosses $218,000, would also raise their Medicare premiums starting in 2028. That is why the two cliffs need to be modeled together, not checked separately after the fact. Where the $30,000 comes from:
ScenarioEstimated Cost
Couple crosses the ACA cliff in 2026, full subsidy lost≈ +$21,500/yr
Same 2026 MAGI over the first IRMAA tier triggers the 2028 Medicare surcharge (Part B + D, couple)+$2,297
If 2027 income also stays over the ACA cliff≈ +$21,500 more
Combined two-year exposure from the same income patternPotentially $45,000+
The chart below plots 2026 MAGI against both costs at once: the bars are your annual ACA premium (indigo while subsidized, red past the cliff), and the line is the annual Medicare surcharge that same income locks in for 2028. If you’re 63 in 2026: Too much income this year and you lose ACA subsidies, costing potentially $10,000 to $25,000 more in health premiums in 2026 and 2027. Too much income this year and you trigger IRMAA, paying $2,000 to $8,000+ more in Medicare premiums annually starting in 2028. Both cliffs draw from the same income year at once, not in sequence. Your 2026 MAGI sets your ACA subsidy right now, and that same 2026 return sets your 2028 Medicare premium through the two-year lookback. Because the two systems are run separately (one by the IRS and the Department of Health and Human Services, the other by Social Security and the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services) most people never see the combined exposure until it’s already locked in. What you can do about it The goal is to keep your 2026 MAGI below both cliffs where possible, or at least to be deliberate about which cliff you’re willing to cross and why.
  • Traditional IRA contributions: reduce MAGI dollar-for-dollar, if you have earned income
  • HSA contributions: a pre-tax reduction, but watch the Medicare timeline
  • Capital gain timing: deferring a sale past Medicare can bypass the pincer entirely
  • Roth conversions: the opposite, since they add directly to MAGI
For people with earned income, deductible Traditional IRA contributions can be one of the most direct MAGI reducers. If you or your spouse has earned income, you can contribute to a Traditional IRA and deduct it, reducing MAGI dollar-for-dollar. The 2026 limit is $7,500 per person, or $8,600 if you’re 50 or older. For a couple where one spouse is still working, that’s potentially $17,200 off your MAGI. One catch: if you’re covered by a workplace retirement plan, the deduction phases out at higher incomes. For 2026, between $81,000 and $91,000 of MAGI for single filers, or $129,000 and $149,000 for joint filers when the contributing spouse is covered. The counterintuitive part: you’re putting money into a pre-tax account when your tax rate is relatively low, with the understanding that you’ll pay taxes on it later and possibly at higher rates. For some people, that trade doesn’t pencil out. For others, protecting a $10,000 ACA subsidy this year is worth the future tax cost. The math depends on your specific situation, and it’s worth modeling rather than assuming. Health savings account contributions work similarly. Pre-tax contributions reduce MAGI directly. The catch is that you must be on an HSA-eligible high-deductible health plan to contribute. If your ACA marketplace plan qualifies, and you’re not yet on Medicare, this can be a meaningful lever. The 2026 limits are $4,400 for self-only coverage and $8,750 for family coverage, plus an extra $1,000 catch-up if you’re 55 or older. Plan to stop contributions before Medicare begins. Medicare’s Part A coverage can backdate up to six months, which can turn recent contributions into excess contributions, so watch that timeline carefully. Capital gain timing is often the biggest swing. If you’re planning to sell appreciated assets, a taxable brokerage position, a rental property, anything with embedded gain, the year you do it matters enormously. Deferring a large realization from 2026 to 2029, after Medicare begins, sidesteps both the ACA cliff and the IRMAA lookback simultaneously. That’s not always possible, but it’s worth asking whether the transaction needs to happen this year. Roth conversions don’t reduce MAGI, they add to it. If you’re in the pincer zone, aggressive Roth conversion in 2026 can push you over the ACA cliff and set your 2028 IRMAA tier at the same time. That’s not an argument against Roth conversions generally. It’s an argument for sizing them carefully relative to where you are on both cliff structures. If you’re already below both thresholds with room to spare, a modest conversion can make sense. If you’re hovering near either line, the math changes quickly. One longer-horizon point, separate from the two-year window this article is about: if you’re in the pre-pincer years, your late 50s or early 60s, modest Roth conversions now can reduce the size of your future RMDs. Smaller RMDs mean less forced taxable income in your late 60s and beyond, which means less pressure on the IRMAA tiers you’ll face once you’re on Medicare. That is a multi-decade trade, not a fix for the immediate cliff, and it works best when you have a decade or more of runway before Medicare enrollment. Plan this out The two-year lookback means you lose the ability to affect your 2028 Medicare premiums after December 31, 2026. You can’t file an amended return and get a different IRMAA. There is an appeal process through Social Security, but it’s designed for genuine life-changing events like retirement or divorce, not for voluntary income decisions that turned out to be more expensive than expected. For ACA purposes, 2026 is the year in question. January 1, 2027 starts a new calculation. That means the window for planning is now. Not 2027, when you’re closer to Medicare. ________________________________________________________________________________ John Urban is the founder of RetireSmartIRA, a retirement tax-planning app. Earlier, he founded GT Nexus, a supply-chain software company acquired by Infor in 2015. He lives in Northern California with his wife, Kathy, and enjoys time with family, travel, reading, Bay Area sports, and the occasional deep dive into the fine print of the tax code.
Read more »

Happy 250th Birthday America

"My Irish paternal great-grandfather came in the 1850's and my German maternal great-grandfather came from Germany in the early 1860s. Like you, Nick, my grateful heart knows no bounds."
- Mike Lynch
Read more »

Haunted Head

"Edmund, I think we're all circling the same tension around retirement. Two hundred and fifty years of Western work ethic doesn't loosen its grip easily—I felt that pull too. I'm sixteen months into retirement now. Before I stopped working, I told myself a story: take a full year off, extend it through the following summer, then ease into a part-time, low-pressure job by my second fall. Looking back, it wasn't really a plan. I think it was more a concession to my own anxiety about productivity, a way of promising my future self I wouldn't drift too far from being useful. But somewhere along the way, I fell in love with having full agency over my time. I can say with certainty now: there will be no job waiting for me this fall. What's interesting is that I didn't stop being productive—I just started doing it differently. Without really planning to, I built my own structure: mentoring in sports, then founding and running a new racket sports club. My need for purpose didn't disappear with retirement; it simply went looking for a new form to take. Maybe that's the real trick to a contented post-career life—not the absence of productivity, but trading forced productivity for chosen productivity. Doing the work because it's yours, not because it's required. But most importantly of all: still leaving enough empty space in the week to sit on a cliffside and watch the sharks."
- Mark Crothers
Read more »

Should I Lock in CD Rates Now or Stay in Money Market?

"Yesterday's post on Can I Retire Yet? titled What to do with a Windfall and a current baker's dozen comments addresses many of the same concerns you ask about in this HD forum post. You may find David Champion's post interesting. The what for and when funds will be used seem to be key and would be particular to the specific decisions each of us each of us makes with a windfall of cash. I expect liability matching and liquidity will be key to my decisions along with having a sufficient cash cushion for when my planning turns out wrong."
- William Perry
Read more »

Reminded of Jonathan’s Grace

"It’s always interesting when a book keeps pulling you back in for “just one more chapter.” That usually says a lot about how engaging and thought-provoking the writing is. Thanks for sharing your experience, it’s helpful to hear how a book can leave such a strong impression on a reader."
- Paul Welch
Read more »

Free Newsletter

Get Educated

Manifesto

NO. 31: WE SHOULD plan for returns below the historical averages. Today’s rich stock valuations and modest bond yields don’t guarantee low returns—but it’s prudent to assume that’s what we’ll get.

act

IMAGINE STOCKS plunged 20%, which happens every four years, on average. That isn't a prediction, but it's always a possibility. Think about your portfolio’s loss in dollar terms, so it seems more real. Ponder whether the financial hit would unnerve you—and whether it would imperil any upcoming goals. If the answer is “yes,” you might want to lighten up on stocks.

Truths

NO. 109: RETIREMENT isn’t a hard deadline, like buying a home or paying for college. Instead, we might spend down our portfolios over 30 years. The upshot: While it’s prudent to move 100% of your house down payment and kid’s college fund into bonds and cash as you approach those goals, you might start retirement with, say, 60% invested in stocks.

act

OPEN A DONOR-advised fund. You can deduct contributions to the fund this year, and then disburse the money to your favorite charities over time. A popular strategy: Donate, say, three years’ worth of charitable gifts in a single year, so your total itemized deductions are well above the standard deduction—and thus you get a large tax break for your generosity.

Manage that tax bill

Manifesto

NO. 31: WE SHOULD plan for returns below the historical averages. Today’s rich stock valuations and modest bond yields don’t guarantee low returns—but it’s prudent to assume that’s what we’ll get.

Spotlight: Saving

In Love With Bonds

WHEN I WAS GROWING up, I’d receive Series E savings bonds as birthday gifts from my parents. It was the start of many to come. My parents had great respect for savings bonds and, as I got older, I came to hold them in high regard as well.
Savings bonds never offered the highest interest rate. At a defense plant where I worked, a guy in the accounting department questioned my bond buying. He noted that savings bonds paid less interest than the certificates of deposit then available.

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He Spent, I Saved

I HAVE MY MOTHER to thank for my good savings habits. She opened a savings account in my name when I was a kid. She also made sure I had a Christmas Club savings account every year. I was required to make deposits regularly.
I didn’t mow my neighbor’s lawn, have a newspaper route or sell lemonade on my front lawn. Instead, the money I saved came from the allowance my mother paid me.

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IRS 2026 Updates

SECTION 415(D) OF the IRC requires the Secretary of the Treasury (IRS) to annually adjust limitations for cost-of-living increases. So, let’s dive into some of the changes:
 
401(k), 403(b), and Most 457 Plans:

For 2026, the 401(k)/403(b)/457(b) amount you can contribute is increasing from $23,500 to $24,500. If you are in a 24% marginal tax rate, that’s an additional $240 of federal taxes you can defer. If you are over age 50, the catch-up contributions are also increasing by $500,

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Tax Gain Harvesting

MANY PEOPLE ARE familiar with tax loss harvesting, where you sell a losing security/ETF and rebuy a similar, not identical, security/ETF.
But often we don’t really think about the opposite side of the coin: sell a winning security/ETF and rebuy the exact same, or a different, security/ETF.
That strategy is called tax gain harvesting, and because it’s a gain, the wash sale rule doesn’t apply.
 
Execution
Long-term capital gains can be taxed at 0% depending on your income.

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Living My Beliefs

I’VE ALWAYS BEEN a saver, and perhaps even pathologically frugal. Growing up, it pained me to spend money, even on food when I was hungry. Today, I have more than enough money, but I still resist paying full price for food.
Perhaps I’m just genetically frugal, or perhaps my feelings about money reflect my parents and my upbringing. My mom once shared that her aunt predicted that she’d make lots of money, but it would be like grains of rice and slip through her fingers. Meanwhile,

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Frugal but Foolish

JEFF WAS A NEW engineer who began his nuclear power career a couple of decades ago as part of my group. He’d graduated from a middling engineering school with a stellar grade point average. Quiet, though not shy, he had a serious demeanor.
Jeff had a goal of purchasing a house as soon as possible. Needless to say, this was a tall order for someone just starting his career. He lived a spartan lifestyle,

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Spotlight: Cutler

Worth a Read

DURING THE 1990s, I subscribed for several years to Worth, a financial magazine that targets high-net-worth individuals. I enjoyed reading articles that were, for the most part, geared toward folks in a far loftier tax bracket. One article, in particular, stayed with me: “The Rise and Fall of Retirement” by Stephen M. Pollan and Mark Levine, which appeared in the December-January 1995 edition. Pollan died in 2018. His daughter is Tracy Pollan, the wife of actor Michael J. Fox. But I digress. I’ve read the article probably a dozen times over the years. I actually tore it out of the magazine and have it filed away. Its premises and arguments became part of the fabric of my financial thinking. The summary blurb under the headline reads: “Scared you won’t be able to retire? Give thanks instead. Retirement is a weird social experiment, a historical blip. Its collapse will be a triumph of common sense.” After an interesting review of the history of retirement—a quite recent development in the course of human history—the article goes on to argue that retirement is not only obsolete, but also unaffordable. It examined the future of five income streams that the average retiree lives on: government assistance, personal wealth, pension income, wage earnings, and other sources such as inheritances. The first three sources of retirement income are headed downward, the article contended. We all know about the funding challenges facing Social Security and Medicare. The article’s argument regarding personal wealth is a bit dated, but it was based on the premise that the outsized investment and real estate gains that the Greatest Generation enjoyed would not continue for the baby boomers. Meanwhile, as the authors predicted, pensions—at least in the private sector—have become significantly less common than they were at the time the article was…
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Three Things

As one saying goes, there are three things that should not be talked about in polite company: money, politics, and religion.  Here at HumbleDollar, we are given license to discuss (politely) the first topic. And have we ever discussed money here! Pretty much any aspect of personal finance you can think of has been addressed thoroughly and intelligently somewhere on this website. When the conversation has veered into the second topic, politics, the discourse can get a bit chippy. That’s understandable, given the well-known political polarization in this country. Since this isn’t a partisan website, there are many differing views among the readership. I’m happy the editor has emphasized that HumbleDollar is not the place for heated political arguments. Still, there are political aspects to personal finance, so the topic can’t be entirely avoided. That brings us to religion. Some people cringe whenever God or the Bible is mentioned. They certainly don’t care to see these words on a financial website. If you’re one of them, you may not want to read further. I’ve enjoyed writing about my financial life on HumbleDollar. In many articles, I’ve shared specific financial experiences or discussed my approach to a particular aspect of financial life. But the truth is, how I think about money is intimately related to my faith. There’s a tension I struggle with as I attempt to seriously consider the words of my master: “Watch out! Be on your guard against all kinds of greed; a man’s life does not consist in the abundance of his possessions.” “For where your treasure is, there your heart will be also.” “Again, the kingdom of heaven is like a merchant looking for fine pearls. When he found one of great value, he went away and sold everything he had and bought it.” The flip…
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A Crisis of Competence?

Do you think we are moving toward a competency crisis in this country? I told this story in a comment on an article a few months back: “Seven years ago, I bought a 2005 Outback. Despite the pink slip being clearly written by the dealer, the title came back with ‘Culter’ as my last name. I went to AAA for advice and they filled out a correction form for me. The title was revised to read ‘Renneth Culter’. I couldn’t believe it. Sent another correction form with very explicit instructions to correct both names included. It came back ‘Kenneth Culter’ again. I ended up having to drive to DMV headquarters an hour away to resolve the issue in person.” That experience with a faceless bureaucracy concerned me—was it the canary in the coal mine? If I can’t trust Department of Motor Vehicles employees to fix a simple typo, what else could go wrong in future encounters with government entities? Currently, there’s something like a two-month delay to redeem U.S. savings bonds by mail. What will the wait be in a few years when my bonds mature? And will the bonds even make it to their destination? Recently, in my neighborhood, a lot of mail is being mis-delivered…something that rarely happened even a few years ago. The post office is having a hard time finding anyone to cover certain routes. I’m told drug testing is out the window. I read news stories about “quiet quitting” and how slacking off is the new workplace norm. While I am a proponent of work-life balance, I’m concerned about the aggregate effect of work being increasingly less valued in our culture. This isn’t meant to be a shot at younger generations. I’ve worked with many engineers in their 20s who are diligent and competent. My…
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Random Thoughts on the Passing Scene (With Apologies to Thomas Sowell)

-During a dinner a year or so ago with some of my recently-retired but still working friends, talk turned to what toys the fellas were buying with their “bonus” income. Most of the guys had big-ticket items to report: expensive new trucks, recreational vehicles, motorcycles…things like that. I didn’t have a lot to add to that conversation, but when I was pointedly asked what I’d bought for fun, the most extravagant item I could come up with was a new Trek bicycle that cost me a little under a thousand dollars—far more than I’d ever paid for a bike previously. Still, several other purchases in retirement have brought me significant satisfaction. I bought a standing desk, which almost miraculously cured the chronic neck pain I’d been experiencing. I purchased a Weber charcoal grill, which has taken our cookouts to the next level. I replaced three clunky older cordless drills that I had inherited with a brand new DeWalt drill. This exchange allowed me to complete some much-needed repairs on my mailbox without it becoming an all-day ordeal.  Finally, I bought several dozen interlocking, brightly-colored anti-fatigue foam pads and created a path around my concrete basement floor’s most trafficked areas. My back has thanked me ever since.  The total cost of these four purchases was around $500, hardly requiring me to continue working. Yet they really are the most significant lifestyle-enhancing purchases I’ve made since retiring. -I’m less fascinated by my financial spreadsheets these days. Before I retired, they helped give me a sense of progress toward our retirement readiness. Today, the numbers seem increasingly meaningless. I’m convinced our combination of cash flow and assets is likely “enough” for our relatively modest lifestyle. Constantly sorting data to check our income or net worth now seems like a somewhat empty exercise, although…
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The Good and the Bad

LIKE EVERYBODY ELSE, I’ve made both bad and good decisions during my financial journey, and those have affected the financial well-being of my now-older self. Here’s what I consider my five worst financial decisions, followed by my five best: 1. Contributing too little to my 401(k) early on. I’ve confessed to this in a prior article. I missed out on a lot of potential growth by making only token contributions to my 401(k) during my 20s. If I’d saved an extra $2,000 in each of my first five years of 401(k) eligibility and invested that money in an S&P 500-index fund, my balance would have been more than $250,000 higher when I retired in September. 2. Playing it safe with my asset allocation. Throughout almost my entire investing life, stocks have appeared to be priced too high. Remember Greenspan’s "irrational exuberance" proclamation in 1996? My younger self took this kind of statement to heart, and I was far too conservative for decades. Stocks were rarely more than 50% of my portfolio, even in my 20s and 30s. 3. Timing the market. Here’s just one example: I was convinced that, regardless of whether Clinton or Trump won the 2016 election, stocks were headed lower in 2017. I sold some stock holdings in October 2016, and moved the money into cash investments and short-term bonds. Result: Less of my capital benefited from the subsequent high-growth years. After that humbling mistake, I adopted a practice of benign neglect with my 401(k), and that’s turned out far better. 4. Managing my Roth IRA poorly. I opened my Roth in 2004 and invested it aggressively from the outset. In 2008, my portfolio lost almost half its value. Rather than waiting out the decline, as I should have, I sold low and moved all my money…
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Planting Bad Seeds

WHEN I WAS A YOUNG engineer, I supervised a charismatic worker named Neil, who was a sort of pied piper to the younger engineers and technicians in our group. He was about 20 years older than us and loved to dispense advice like a guru. His quirky advice usually had a financial component. For example, he recommended that we single guys marry women with curly hair, as that would save tens of thousands of dollars over the course of the marriage, thanks to fewer trips to the beauty parlor. He even had a calculation he’d use to support his theory. He also told us about his scheme to help expand his wife’s cleaning business, which in turn would allow him to ramp down the time he spent working, an activity he seemed to have an aversion to. “Just planting seeds,” he liked to say after sharing his latest idea. Another idea he regularly tried to plant: The 401(k) was one of the biggest scams ever foisted on the public by the government. The basis for his argument seemed to be looming legislation that would somehow means-test Social Security, thereby reducing or eliminating payments to those who had their own means, such as money in 401(k)s. “You’re just funding your own Social Security,” he would tell us young guys. This was well before the internet was available as a fact-checking resource, and Neil spoke confidently, indicating he had really looked into these things. Unlike his chauvinistic views on marriage, which we discounted, some of us had an uneasy feeling he might be on to something with his 401(k) argument. The company made new employees wait two years before they could participate in the 401(k) plan, and it didn’t provide any matching contribution. Needless to say, many of us young employees weren’t…
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