DrStrange
4 of a Kind
Good luck!
Dude. Music to my ears. Always fun to run into another Boglehead, and I echo everything Burke said. Low-cost, broad-based index funds FTW.Definitely speak to a fee-only financial planner - I think you would get good advice.
This White Coat Investor article from 2019 is a good start (probably). The article describes different payment models for financial planners, but at the end of this article is a link to an updated (2023) list of vetted financial planners for the site. They are paid advertisers on his site, but I doubt he is trying to point folks in the wrong direction given the mission of the website. This dude markets his advice towards physicians, butI think it is applicable to any high-networth individual.
Additionally, if you must rely on the internet for important, specific financial advice IMO you would be better off using Bogleheads. People ask portfolio questions all the time...
Something along these lines. How long does someone in their late 70s want to maintain a $1.5MM property for? Find a 55+ community, preferably with tiered assisted living capabilities.Sell the house. Pocket the $1.47M. Rent an apartment. Invest $1M of it conservatively. It will throw off a good $50-60K per year, which easily covers their added income needs with $30-40K on top for rent and more. Have fun in old age with the other $470,000. Will a million to you, their heir.
If you're not well versed on the topic, poking around financial forums can be a bit like searching for a needle in a haystack.Lol I'm trying, I'm in the top 00.11% supposedly of members regarding total posts, yet have averaged under 1.5 non classified posts for the past couple of months.
So I'm definitely no longer here like I used to be, and generally pop in for a reprieve when I get a second in between calls and decompress by brainlessly surfing somewhere online.
Prob should've made better use of my time than doing that maff. Good to know though, thanks for the help Mod!
Typo in my post. 36k is the after-$170/M-subsidy, premium-only, low-level Bronze plan estimate (i.e., $0 primary visit copay, 0% generic drugs copay, $8k yearly deductible, $8k OOP annual max), for the entire 55-65YO range (i.e., $300/M for a decade), not per year. I've been funding HSA and investing HSA funds for a long time, so that account can essentially cover the annual deductible maximum for a decade.@inca911 …the healthcare cost. $36k…
Following and I really appreciate these posts. I was poking around on the ACA marketplace and $300 per month seems cheap to me but I'm no expert. I will also have to provide health insurance for my wife so I guess that is an additional hurdle for me.Update for those who may be interested in my exploits and ramblings:
Arrangements have been made in 2H2025 to decrease to ~30 hours/wk, which is my company's minimum for benefits. I am doing a lot of traveling in 1H2025 to consume my PTO and empty that tank before comp is prorated down. Making less money in exchange for less work frees up cap space for many years of lower-tax-rate Roth conversions, so starting now makes sense as I think the math looks good. I'm selling several assets to shore up the reserve and show little income in CY2026 and beyond.
Roth conversions are planned in upcoming years to convert 401(k) by filling lowest tax brackets each year (i.e.., 10% + 12%). Ballpark estimate is convert ~$55k/year and pay taxes from non-Roth/non-401(k) buckets. That's based on the top of the current 12% bracket ($47k) + $14.6k single deduction. As a single guy, I will get healthcare via the Affordable Care Act (ACA) marketplace, so having a low on-paper income qualifies for ACA subsidies until Medicare kicks in at 65. That's one reason for the smaller annual conversion total. I need to bridge a decade of healthcare costs from now to 65YO. My post-subsidy healthcare premium cost estimate is ~$3k/yr, so $36k for the -10Y bridge. If something actually happens, I have a decent HSA balance to offset non-premium costs. Reminder that HSA dollars can't be used for healthcare premiums outside of COBRA (i.e., you can't use an HSA to pay ACA premiums). I'll run the math on ACA vs. COBRA insurance in CY2026 but suspect ACA will win. Doing less work to focus on health is a priority.
The plan is to convert the majority of 401(k) to Roth before SS kicks in (i.e., keeping taxation of SS benefits at 0% and avoiding the SS tax torpedo). The current thinking is to wait until 70Y to claim SS. The 401(k) buckets will be near empty prior to Required Minimum Distributions starting at 73. I'm not trying to convert it all, as keeping the 0% bracket open for incidentals seems smart, as is keeping the 0% bracket open for Capital Gains. Maintaining an income <$25k/year when taking SS means nothing will be taxed. The Roth will have grown nicely by then and both dividends and capital gains in the Roth are invisible and have zero tax implications. I have no house payment, so it seems feasible with some planning (provided I keep my wits). For highly appreciated investments, I'll hold on to those and use the step-up in cost basis for heirs to pass them on such that nobody pays tax.
I'm very interested in other's perspectives, especially those either already on the path, those who see a pitfall I'm missing, or are planning something similar. If you really like an investment, drop me a line. Several PCFers recommendations have done quite well! I'm discussing an arrangement with my current employer to consult a little each week in exchange for benefits (or comp that covers benefit costs). HSA contributions + 401(k) contributions are invisible as income, so some comp isn't bad. HSA + 401(k) comes to ~$35k/Y, so I think I can offer something useful. We shall see. Else, hopefully you'll find me at a poker table near you....