We help diligent savers 50+ create a clear retirement plan for tax-smart income they won't outlive.
Confident spending. Predictable outcomes. TWEETS NOT ADVICE
I'm Kurt Supe, CPA and Retirement Planner.
Co-founder of Creative Financial Group, headquartered in Indianapolis. We serve retirees and pre-retirees across the country.
For nearly 30 years I've focused on one thing. Helping people turn what they've built into retirement income that lasts, with the smallest tax bill the law allows.
Every week I share what we see inside our practice. Tax planning. Social Security timing. Roth conversions. Withdrawal sequencing. Estate planning. Inherited account decisions.
The choices that quietly determine whether your money outlasts you, or you outlast your money.
If you're 50+ with $500K+ saved, follow and
ready for a real conversation?
Our team runs complimentary planning sessions for people serious about getting retirement right. No pressure. No product pitches. Just clarity.
Start here: https://t.co/Q2ZSO5Jhx9
Kurt Supe is a Registered Representative of cfd Investments, Inc., Member FINRA/SIPC, 2704 S. Goyer Rd., Kokomo, IN 46902. Advisory services through Creative Financial Designs, Inc., a Registered Investment Adviser. Educational content only. Stories are hypothetical. Not personalized investment advice.
One of the strangest things about retirement planning is the rule everyone follows was never meant to be a rule.
You meet retirees in their 60s afraid to take the trip, convinced they have to live on 4% of their savings forever.
Then you meet the man who wrote the 4% rule.
He calls it a worst case backtest. He's spent 30 years saying the real safe rate is closer to 7% (which can be wrong as well). He just wrote a book asking retirees to spend more.
The author isn't using his own rule. Neither should you.
Real retirement planning is a year by year cash flow plan. It starts with the variables a percentage will never see.
How long the money has to last.
When Social Security turns on, and at what amount for each spouse.
Whether there's a pension. What other income shows up, and when.
The mix of taxable, tax deferred, and Roth dollars you've built.
The age gap between spouses.
The state you live in.
The healthcare costs sitting between retirement and Medicare.
The IRMAA brackets after you get there.
What the surviving spouse faces when they start filing single.
Then it lays out the year by year decisions.
Which accounts to pull from, in what order, in what year.
Where the Roth conversions fit.
How to fill the low bracket years before Social Security and RMDs hit.
When to harvest gains. When to take losses.
And it has an answer for a market correction or crash in the first 3 years of retirement. A static withdrawal turns that drop into permanent damage, selling more shares at lower prices from a portfolio that should have recovered.
A real plan knows what to scale back on, and for how long. It doesn't sell at the bottom because it doesn't have to.
A percentage doesn't know any of that.
There's a window between the day you retire and your mid 70's where you can quietly keep an extra six figures that would otherwise be gone for good.
Most people don't even know it exists.
One missed move here costs you for the rest of your life.
Even if you saved perfectly.
Here's why it's so easy to miss.
A $2 Million retirement account isn't really $2 Million.
After the government takes its share, it might be $1.4 Million. And how big that share is depends entirely on planning most people never do.
At 73 those withdrawals become mandatory, or 75 if you were born in 1960 or later. They come whether you need the money or not, and they grow as a percentage every year.
Stack them on top of Social Security and any pension, and many people land in a higher bracket than they ever hit while working.
Shrinking that bill means projecting those forced withdrawals out 20 or 30 years, then working backward.
How much do you move in your low-income years. How does it interact with Medicare.
What does it do to what your spouse pays after you're gone, filing single on the same income.
What does it do to what your kids inherit along with the account.
Every lever you pull moves three others.
The only way to see the right path is to model the whole arc, year by year, before that first forced withdrawal locks you in.
On a large balance, the gap between a planned drawdown and an unplanned one reaches six figures, sometimes seven, over a full retirement.
This is the kind of problem that rewards starting early and modeling deeply.
Not financial, tax, or legal advice. Results are not guaranteed and individual circumstances vary. All scenarios are hypothetical composites for educational purposes only and do not represent any specific client or outcome.
Retirees, stop paying cash for cars. It's costing you thousands, and it's only the first mistake on this list.
Walk into the dealership with cash and you feel like you hold all the cards. You've actually just become the easiest person in the building to overcharge.
The second you say cash, you kill the dealer's biggest profit center, and they make it back in the price.
The move. Negotiate like a normal buyer, take the dealer financing, then pay the loan off a week later. Same money, thousands saved. Or stretch the payoff across a couple of tax years so you pull less from taxable accounts in any single one.
That's one. Here are 5 more the people who profit from you are counting on you to never figure out. 👇
Funding a grandkid's college
You want to help with school, so you hand the grandkids a check.
That generosity can quietly shrink their financial aid, because money in the student's name gets counted the hardest.
The move. Pay the school directly. Tuition sent straight to the institution doesn't count against gift limits and stays out of the aid formula. Same help, none of the damage.
The refund you love
That big tax refund every spring feels like a win.
It's the one win where you were the bank, and you lent the money out for free.
The move. A refund means too much was withheld all year. Adjust it so the money stays in your account earning something, instead of sitting with the government interest-free until April.
How to give money to adult kids without ruining the relationship.
Decide the number before they ask.
If you decide in the moment, you decide with emotion. That's how $25,000 becomes $80,000.
Make it a gift, not a loan.
Loans between parents and adult kids destroy more families than gifts ever have. If you can't afford to give it, don't give it.
Tell them what would have to change before there's a next one.
Saying "this is the last time" is a promise. Saying "here's what would have to change" is a plan.
Document the gift for estate purposes.
The IRS doesn't care about feelings. Your other kids will. Paperwork prevents arguments after you're gone.
Don't compare across kids in the moment.
Each kid's number can be different. The reason needs to be honest.
A 62 year old retiree came in.
Hands folded. Shoulders down. Coffee gone cold.
His 44-year-old son had asked for $80,000.
He could afford it with no problem.
This wasn't a retirement question.
This was the fourth ask in seven years.
$25,000 for a business opportunity that never opened.
$40,000 to "get caught up."
$55,000 when the car got repossessed and the landlord was filing.
Now $80,000.
"He says it'll be the last time."
It won't be.
The son isn't a villain. He's exactly what seven years of yes creates.
He came in hoping we'd give him the easy answer. That the money wasn't there. That he had no choice.
We couldn't. The money was there. He just didn't have the answer he wanted.
He went home and had the conversation he'd been avoiding for seven years.
Not a fight. Not a lecture. A real conversation.
That things had to change. That a 44-year-old man needed a steady job. That a steady job needed a financial plan. That dad would keep showing up. But not like this.
He gave his son $15,000. Enough to get current. Not enough to coast.
The next check, if there was one, would come with a plan. A real one.
He hasn't called his son a deadbeat. He hasn't cut him off. He still answers the phone.
He just stopped writing checks that fixed nothing.
Dad's money bought a lot of things over seven years. A son who could run his own life wasn't one of them.
A retiree called us during the Iran war selloff. He'd followed us on social media for over a year.
His account was down $240,000.
He wanted our thoughts on going 100% cash
We asked one question.
"How much of your account is meant to pay your bills in the next two years?"
He didn't know.
To him, the portfolio was one big number going up and down. Drops felt like ruin.
Retirees shouldn't have one number. They should have three buckets.
Short term. Two to three years of withdrawals. Conservative. High-yield savings and Money markets.
This pays the bills when the market drops.
Moderate. Bridges to the long term.
Long term. The decade you don't need to touch. Aggressive depending on risk tolerance but more growth oriented than the other 2.
Most retirement plans guess at the downside. We measure it. Every plan we build runs against historical worst cases.
When you know your worst case, you know what belongs in each bucket.
When you know what's in each bucket, a Friday afternoon drop doesn't feel like the end of retirement.
A balance can scare you. A plan can't.
A 62-year-old just read about Social Security Cuts. He was rightfully very upset.
Trust fund.
2032.
23 percent cut.
He'd be 68 when the cut hit. His scheduled benefit was $3,400 a month. The cut would be $782 a month. For life.
"I planned for everything. I didn't plan for this."
Most retirement plans built before 2025 assumed full Social Security benefits to age 95.
Those plans are now wrong by 23 percent.
If this is keeping you up at night, stick the cut into your retirement plan. Then adjust from there.
Yes, Congress will probably act. Too many voters won't tolerate cuts of that size. But "probably" is not a retirement plan.
The cheapest year to fix a plan is always the current one.
A new way to make your kids and grandkids tax-free millionaires just went live.
But it doesn't happen automatically. You have to make the right moves at the right time.
Skip it and they get nothing. Fund it right and they become wealthy.
Here's how it works. 👇👇👇
Now the part nobody talks about.
A Trump Account is a traditional IRA with special rules.
The money grows tax-deferred.
But withdrawals get taxed as ordinary income.
That's a tax trap sitting quietly for 18 years.
Here's the move.
The year the child turns 18, the account becomes a regular IRA.
At that age most kids have little to no income. Near-zero tax bracket.
That's the window.
You convert to a Roth while they're in that bracket.
You pay almost nothing on the conversion.
Every dollar after that grows tax-free for the next 40 plus years.
The math.
If it earns 10% a year, $1,000 left untouched grows to roughly $490,000 by age 65.
But the seed isn't the engine. The yearly contributions are.
Put in $5,000 a year for 18 years. At 10% that's about $230,000 by the time the child turns 18.
Leave it alone until 59.5 and it can grow into the millions all TAX FREE.
The account opening is easy. Anyone can do it.
The conversion timing is where families either build a fortune or hand it to the IRS.
That's the part worth planning for.
If you've got kids or grandkids under 18, this is a conversation worth having now.
NOT TAX ADVICE
More money doesn't protect you from a bad financial decision in your 50s and 60s.
It just makes that decision more expensive in your 80s.
The Roth conversion you skipped becomes a six-figure tax bill on your RMDs.
The long-term care plan you didn't build becomes your daughter quitting her job.
The beneficiary form you never updated becomes an ex-spouse cashing your check.
You don't get to redo your 50s and 60s.
The bill comes due when you have the least energy to fight it.
Linda is a 58 year old Nurse.
Her mother had just passed. Left her a Roth IRA worth $720,000.
She had the same understanding most beneficiaries have. Roth money is tax-free. Take it whenever.
That's half right.
Inherited Roth IRAs for non-eligible designated beneficiaries fall under the SECURE Act 10-year rule.
The account has to be empty by the end of the tenth year after the original owner's death.
Most beneficiaries see "inherited" and pull the money immediately.
They reinvest in a taxable brokerage account where every dollar of growth gets taxed from that day forward.
The Roth's most valuable feature, gone in year one.
Inherited Roths flip the script on inherited traditional IRAs.
A traditional IRA needs systematic distributions across 10 years for annual tax rate management.
A Roth has no tax bill on the way out. So the math reverses. Let it compound. Empty it at the end.
Our recommendation for Linda: leave the account untouched for 9 years. Distribute the full balance in year 10.
At 7% growth, $720,000 turns into roughly $1.32 million, all tax-free.
Now here's where things get really interesting.
Researchers at Stanford found that humans tend to experience two major acceleration points in aging.
One around the mid-40s.
The other in the early 60s.
Now that doesn't mean everyone suddenly becomes old overnight.
But it does mean something important.
The version of you at 60 may not be the same version of you at 66.
The energy can change.
The mobility can change.
The desire to travel can change.
The ability to do certain activities can change.
And that's where retirement planning gets dangerous.
Because most people assume they'll feel tomorrow exactly like they feel today.
And that's often not how life works.
Your estate plan probably has 3 holes you don't know about.
They don't show up until you die. By then it's too late.
Here are the 3:
Pre-2020 trusts named as IRA beneficiaries often don't work the way they used to. The SECURE Act changed the math. Some are still fine. Many aren't. The only way to know is to have it reviewed.
Your beneficiary forms override your will. People update the will every 10 years. They never look at the beneficiary designations on the IRA, the 401k, the life insurance.
If those forms still name an ex-spouse, a deceased parent, or "my estate," the will doesn't matter.
Your trust may not be funded. A trust with no assets in it is paperwork. Most trusts I review have the house, the brokerage, and the bank accounts still titled in the individual's name.
If they die, those assets go through probate anyway.
Estate plans aren't a one-time job. They're a maintenance job.
Frank, 66, did everything "right." 3 articles. 1 YouTube video.
A $400K Roth conversion. He calculated a $128K tax bill and paid it straight from the IRA.
What Frank didn’t realize is that the tax payment was itself a taxable distribution.
To cover the bill, he had to pull out even more, creating a compounding tax spiral that chased him across three brackets in one afternoon.
Two years later, the secondary blast hit:
IRMAA. Because his "on-paper" income spiked, Frank was locked into Medicare’s second-highest premium tier.
The dominoes kept falling 85% of his Social Security became taxable, his state taxes climbed, and his long-held 0% capital gains rate vanished.
He saved taxes in the future, but he decimated his "now."
The lesson: Discount brokerages and robo-advisors will execute a conversion in 30 seconds without accounting for the collateral damage.
A Roth conversion is a powerful tool, but without a multi-year projection, it’s a weapon used against yourself.
Most retirement mistakes don’t look like mistakes when you make them. They. look like progress
Five things wealthy retirees were told that turned out to be wrong.
You'll be in a lower tax bracket in retirement. Many aren't. RMDs at 73, Social Security, pension, brokerage dividends.
Stack high enough and you're right back where you started.
Your advisor handles the tax stuff. Usually they don't. Most advisors aren't CPAs. Most CPAs aren't advisors.
The seam between the two is where money disappears.
Leave it all to your spouse and the kids will be fine. In a second marriage, often they're not. Beneficiary designations override wills.
Index funds will get you there. They get you to retirement. They don't get you through it.
Your estate plan is set. If it was drafted before 2020, the SECURE Act probably broke parts of it you don't know about.
The day you working is the day the rules change. If your plan didn't change with them, neither did your protection.
8 out of 10 medical bills are wrong.
Hospitals, surgery centers, nursing homes, all of them. The whole system is betting the bill's too confusing for you to ever check it.
Here's how to use AI to catch every overcharge, free. Plus the one charge that's now illegal but still shows up.👇👇👇