The Retirement and IRA Show

Jim Saulnier, CFP® & Chris Stein, CFP®
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Jan 10, 2026 • 1h 2min

IRMAA, Inherited IRA, LTC, ACA Tax Credits: Q&A #2602

Listeners dive into the complexities of IRMAA surcharges and discover if they can retroactively file SSA-44 for refunds. There's a fascinating discussion on inherited IRAs, specifically how a surviving spouse can access funds without penalty. The conversation shifts to long-term care insurance, highlighting the common issue of lifetime benefit caps. Finally, the hosts clarify how long-term capital gains impact eligibility for ACA tax credits, shedding light on important tax nuances.
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Jan 7, 2026 • 1h 12min

Roth IRA Mistakes: EDU #2601

Explore common Roth IRA mistakes that could trip you up. Learn why earned income is crucial for contributions and how certain types of income don’t qualify. Discover the implications of MAGI limits and how late bonuses can complicate your contributions. Understand the risks of excess contributions across multiple accounts and the penalties involved. Delve into the two-prong test for tax-free earnings withdrawals, including the five-year rule and various exceptions. Unlock the secrets behind correcting mistakes before the October 15 deadline to avoid unnecessary fees!
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Jan 3, 2026 • 1h 44min

Social Security, Deemed Military Wages, Estate Planning, QLACs: Q&A #2601

Jim and Chris discuss listener emails on Social Security claiming strategies, deemed military wages, and survivor benefits timing, a PSA from Jim and Chris on their New Year’s resolution, and QLAC use for inherited IRAs. (11:00) A listener asks whether a spouse who will be collecting spousal benefits should ever delay claiming past full retirement age and also asks for retirement drawdown calculator recommendations. (24:30) George asks how veterans can verify that deemed military wages were credited correctly to their Social Security earnings record. (36:00) The guys address whether a surviving spouse can keep both Social Security checks after a spouse dies after being given conflicting answers from the Social Security Administration. (45:00) Jim and Chris share a PSA on their New Year’s resolution relating to estate planning. (1:02:45) A listener asks whether an inherited IRA can be used to purchase a QLAC with payments starting at age 84. The post Social Security, Deemed Military Wages, Estate Planning, QLACs: Q&A #2601 appeared first on The Retirement and IRA Show.
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Dec 31, 2025 • 58min

New MYGA Variations: EDU #2553

Chris’s SummaryJim and I review new MYGA variations and examine how insurers and product developers are marketing hybrid annuity designs using MYGA language. We walk through four examples from an April 2025 article—“Lockdown,” “Minimum Accumulation Guarantee,” “Extra Extra,” and the “End-of-Term Equity Kicker”—and explain why these products, despite being labeled as MYGAs, rely on index-linked features and do not behave like traditional MYGAs. Jim’s “Pithy” SummaryChris and I spend this episode talking through an article from earlier this year that highlights where the annuity industry seems to be headed. While not all good or all bad it centers on something I don’t think needed fixing in the first place. A MYGA is simple. It’s predictable. It’s easy for people to understand. It looks a lot like a CD (minus the FDIC protection, of course) issued by an insurance company, with a guaranteed rate for a defined period of time. That simplicity is exactly why we use MYGAs in our retirement plans for principal protection to cover near-term spending, including the delay period Minimum Dignity Floor and early Go-Go spending. What the article describes are four designs that are being positioned under the MYGA label, even though they introduce index-linked elements that change how the product behaves. The names alone tell you this is marketing at work. “Lockdown,” “Minimum Accumulation Guarantee,” “Extra Extra,” and the “End-of-Term Equity Kicker” are all attempts to add features that sound appealing while keeping the comfort of the MYGA name. In reality, these designs are borrowing from the fixed indexed annuity world and layering those ideas onto something that was not originally intended to work that way. But I’m not at all surprised that the insurance industry couldn’t leave well enough alone and took something simple and practical and complicated it with these new MYGA variations. The post New MYGA Variations: EDU #2553 appeared first on The Retirement and IRA Show.
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7 snips
Dec 27, 2025 • 1h 12min

Social Security, IRMAA, ACA Planning, IRA to HSA Transfer, Annuities: Q&A #2552

This discussion covers essential tips for filing Social Security online to ensure timely payments. A listener shares insights on navigating IRMAA and filing SSA-44. They tackle the strategy of managing income for affordable health insurance until Medicare kicks in. The one-time IRA-to-HSA transfer is explored, emphasizing its potential tax benefits. Lastly, they debate the relevance of annuities for wealthier individuals and how guaranteed income can meet specific financial goals.
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11 snips
Dec 24, 2025 • 1h 14min

Cash Balance Plans Explained: EDU #2552

Steve Sansone, a retirement plan specialist, dives into the intricacies of cash balance plans—hybrid defined benefit arrangements that appeal to high-income business owners. He explains how these plans allow for significant tax-optimized contributions and discusses who they’re designed for, emphasizing the importance of demographics. The conversation also tackles the trade-offs, potential pitfalls, and the essential commitment requirements, making it clear these plans aren't one-size-fits-all solutions but can offer substantial benefits when implemented correctly.
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Dec 20, 2025 • 1h 27min

Social Security, RMDs, Money Market Earnings, QLACs: Q&A #2551

Jim and Chris discuss listener emails on Social Security spousal eligibility and claiming coordination, a listener PSA on Social Security proof of marriage requirements, RMD planning while still working, money market earnings in brokerage accounts, and using QLACs for long-term care planning.(16:15) Georgette asks whether the repeal of WEP and GPO affects her eligibility for a spousal benefit if her ex-husband worked for the federal government and she did not pay into Social Security. (26:45) A listener asks how Social Security works when one spouse lacks enough work credits for their own benefit and only qualifies for a spousal benefit, including whether both spouses must claim at full retirement age to access that benefit.(42:00) The guys address a PSA on why Social Security may already have proof of marriage on file for one spouse due to a name change but still requires documentation from the other spouse when benefits are claimed.(49:30) Jim and Chris discuss whether maximizing pre-tax retirement contributions and rolling a SEP IRA into a 403(b) can reduce or eliminate RMDs under the still-working exception.(1:06:45) A listener questions the statement that Money Market earnings are minimal, pointing to current yields in a fund they hold.(1:12:00) The guys respond to feedback on whether a QLAC could be an effective way to address long-term care planning when self-funding alone does not feel sufficient. The post Social Security, RMDs, Money Market Earnings, QLACs: Q&A #2551 appeared first on The Retirement and IRA Show.
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Dec 17, 2025 • 1h 4min

Math Act and Automatic IRA Act: EDU #2551

Chris’s SummaryJim and I are joined by Jake Turner as we cover the Math Act and a set of shorter EDU topics Jim has been collecting. We start with an SSA-44 update, including listener and client feedback on submitting the IRMAA redetermination form online through an SSA.gov account. Jake explains how IRS “math error” notices work today, why they’re often vague, and what the new law requires for clearer explanations and response deadlines. Jim then walks through the Automatic IRA Act’s proposals, including an annuity-style “protected lifetime income solution” requirement over certain balances, and we close with a quick way to sanity-check MYGA rates using AnnuityRateWatch’s yield curve. Jim’s “Pithy” SummaryChris and I are joined by Jake Turner as we bounce from Social Security admin housekeeping to Washington trying, yet again, to make the IRS act like it’s talking to actual humans—starting with the Math Act. If you’ve ever opened one of those IRS letters that basically says “you owe us money” without showing you how they got there, you already know why this matters. Jake lays out what those notices are really doing behind the scenes, why clients forward them to preparers in a panic, and what the new requirements are supposed to force the IRS to include so you can actually understand what they’re alleging and what happens if you don’t respond. Then we pivot into the Automatic IRA Act, and I’ll be honest: I’m less interested in the political theater than I am in what it signals. There’s the small-business auto-enrollment concept—opt-out, no match requirement, and all that—and then there’s the part that made me laugh out loud when I saw who was cheering it on. Once you cross a certain 401(k) balance, the proposal would require employers to offer a “protected lifetime income solution,” which is just a polite way of saying “annuities are trying to get a bigger seat at the 401(k) table.” That opens up all the practical questions: what counts, who defines it, and how this intersects with the slow drift of defined contribution plans trying to behave a little more like pensions. The post Math Act and Automatic IRA Act: EDU #2551 appeared first on The Retirement and IRA Show.
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Dec 13, 2025 • 1h 32min

IRMAA, Social Security, QLACs, Roth Conversions: Q&A #2550

Jim and Chris discuss listener emails starting with PSAs about IRMAA and Social Security spousal benefit applications, then questions on IRMAA, QLAC-related RMD rules, and a Roth conversion involving a fixed indexed annuity (FIA). (9:30) Georgette shares a PSA explaining that she successfully filed Form SSA-44 preemptively—before receiving an IRMAA determination letter. (21:15) A listener offers a PSA describing issues with an online Social Security spousal benefit application that was denied after being submitted separately from the working spouse’s application. (29:45) The guys discuss how the Social Security Administration determines IRMAA when a tax return is delayed due to combat-zone service and whether a significant drop in income qualifies for Form SSA-44 relief. (38:45) Jim and Chris address whether overestimating income on Form SSA-44 results in a refund, how survivor benefits are affected if claimed early, and whether post-retirement employer coverage is treated as active employee benefits for Medicare Part B and IRMAA purposes. (50:45) George asks whether payments in excess of the RMD from a QLAC can be applied toward RMDs for other IRAs, or only toward the non-annuitized portion of the same IRA. (1:00:20) A listener asks how the pro rata rule applies to a Roth conversion when assets include a fixed indexed annuity (FIA) with a guaranteed lifetime withdrawal benefit. The post IRMAA, Social Security, QLACs, Roth Conversions: Q&A #2550 appeared first on The Retirement and IRA Show.
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13 snips
Dec 10, 2025 • 1h 20min

The Importance of Secure Income for Retirement: EDU #2550

Secure income is essential for many middle-class retirees, especially as longevity risks rise. The hosts critique a Yahoo Finance article for neglecting critical aspects like annuities and the Minimum Dignity Floor. They discuss the pitfalls of traditional withdrawal strategies, emphasizing that expenses don’t always decrease, especially in tough times. Delaying Social Security and exploring long-term care solutions are also highlighted, along with strategies for managing health care costs. Overall, it’s a deep dive into planning for a sustainable and dignified retirement.

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