In the IRMAA Trenches with IRMAA Certified Planner, Paul Morrison
Release Date: 01/12/2026
Retirement Starts Today
Why is it so hard to spend the money you spent a lifetime saving? This is a question from Janet Bodnar in a Kiplinger article. She admits that one of her guilty pleasures in retirement is treating herself to a casual lunch while she's out running errands. Why does she feel so guilty? Christine Benz from Morningstar is quoted in the article, which we discuss at length in this episode. Then a listener asks a question I think a lot of you are wondering: "How am I supposed to figure out what I want to do in retirement when I can barely find time to do laundry while I'm still working?" Great...
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Your beneficiary designations are probably outdated. Not because you made bad decisions, but because you made them once and never looked again. We're going to walk through five areas where these forms commonly go wrong, and what you can do about it. For our Listener Questions segment: "What's the best way to position any assets I have for when my wife and I pass — to most easily and efficiently pass on to our kids?" And this week's "Retire to Something" listener talks about her definition of retirement, which might be the simplest and best one yet. Resource: Article by Daniel P....
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How do higher oil prices impact stock market returns? Ben Carlson at A Wealth of Common Sense challenges the assumption most people have, but with some genuinely surprising and con historical data. For those who retired right around 2022, our Listener Questions segment might interest you. A listener is comparing bonds to guaranteed products like MYGAs and annuities with income riders. They're seeing five and a half to six percent guaranteed payouts and wondering: are these actually better than bonds for generating retirement income? Then we wrap it up with our Retire “To” Something...
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What if you paid all your taxes - and still got hit with a penalty from the IRS? Our retirement headline this week comes from Laura Saunders in the Wall Street Journal. Estimated tax penalties are skyrocketing, and retirees and investors are some of the most likely to get caught in the trap. We will cover that, then hop into our Listen Question: "What happens when you lose faith in fixed income as the foundation for your retirement plan?" Then stick around to hear what our happiest retired listeners are up to in our newest listener-sourced segment “Retire to Something”...
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Some desirable investment income - like interest and dividends - might actually hurt high-net-worth investors’ bottom line. This comes from an article by Larry Swedroe in Financial Advisor Magazine. He outlines four hidden costs that can quietly erode over 1% of after-tax returns each year: Cash Drag Tax Deferral Step-up and Charitable Giving Advantage Financial Planning Flexibility For our Listener Question: "Are brokerage account gains taxed before the money is withdrawn?" If you've ever wondered how your taxable investment account stacks up next to your IRA or Roth, this one's for you....
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You might have received a Social Security cost-of-living increase this year — but did your net check actually go up? A recent Wall Street Journal article highlights how rising Medicare premiums and IRMAA surcharges are offsetting those increases for millions of retirees - and "takes a bigger bite out of Social Security checks". Then, a listener writes in "How to convince my husband’s parents to spend their money. We don’t need it." Tune in to hear that one! And we wrap it up with our "Retire to Something" segment from Dave in Massachusetts. Resource: Wall Street Journal...
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Sheryl Rowling positions income tax returns as diagnostic tools — not merely a compliance document — and outlines four common red flags that suggest a client failed to take advantage of proactive tax strategies. Here are "4 Tax Return Red Flags That Signal Poor Tax Planning": Very Low or Zero Taxable Income Charitable Giving After Age 70½ Without Using QCDs Donating Cash Instead of Appreciated Securities Holding Municipal Bonds in Low Tax Brackets For our listener question: "I'm in a job I hate and would love to scale back to something that could pay less but be more enjoyable -- how...
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Retirees obsess over the exact safe withdrawal rate they think they'll need while simultaneously building layer after layer of backup plans. Dividends, buckets, multiple years of cash, constant Monte Carlo recalculations are all done in the name of safety. Jordan Grumet's argument to this problem is simple and provocative: If you believe in the safe withdrawal rate, then act like it. Stop stacking contingencies on top of contingencies and chasing 100% certainty in a world where it doesn’t exist. We go over Jordan's article "Stop Chickening Out" in our headline segment. Then we answer...
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Sheryl Rowling from Morningstar argues that the greatest danger in retirement isn’t the stock market — it’s the constant fear of running out of money. We will walk through her eight "anchors" from the article posted on Morningstar. Anchor 1: Confirm Your Sustainable Spending Level Anchor 2: Embrace Flexibility in Down Markets Anchor 3: Recognize That Spending Often Declines With Age Anchor 4: Create a Recession Buffer Anchor 5: Reduce Future Tax Uncertainty Anchor 6: Maximize Guaranteed Income Anchor 7: Protect Against Long-Term Care Costs Anchor 8: View Home Equity as a Backstop For our...
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What does research say about retirement withdrawal strategies that are specifically designed to leave more money behind? We’ll walk through what the research says works best, the trade-offs involved, and why the “right” strategy depends on what you’re really trying to optimize in retirement. Quote: "Smaller gifts sooner can be more impactful than larger gifts later." - Benjamin Brandt We’ve also got a great listener question from Tom about the three big company retirement plans — 401(k)s, 403(b)s, and 457s. On the surface they all look the same, but the rules under the hood...
info_outlinePaul Morrison details how Medicare premiums, including the IRMAA surcharge, are inflating at a rate higher than Social Security COLAs. This disparity is causing concern, as premiums can potentially consume a retiree’s entire Social Security benefit over time, especially for those in higher IRMAA brackets for an extended period.
Paul provides concrete examples of how extended periods in higher IRMAA brackets could lead to Medicare premiums exceeding Social Security benefits, forcing retirees to pay out-of-pocket.
Resources:
Contact Paul Morrison: paul@irmaacertifiedplanner.com
Website: irmaacertifiedplanner.com
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