Afleveringen
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David and Carol had done everything rightâstrong savings, a disciplined plan, and full control over when to draw income in retirement. But like many retirees, their strategy defaulted to doing nothingâletting tax-deferred accounts grow while keeping spending conservative.
What they hadnât considered was how that inaction would shape their future. With no earned income and years before Social Security, they were sitting in a rare window where income was unusually lowâand unusually controllable.
In this episode, we walk through how identifying the Tax Valley⢠reframed the entire plan. Instead of starting with Roth conversions, the strategy shifted to sequencing income across accountsâusing a high-basis brokerage account to fund spending, preserving tax bracket capacity, and coordinating conversions deliberately rather than forcing them.
The result wasnât a new product or tacticâbut a change in structure. One that reduced future RMD pressure, improved tax efficiency over time, and created a more flexible retirement income plan.In this episode:
Why the Tax Valley⢠is a windowânot a strategyHow brokerage assets can preserve tax bracket capacityWhy Roth conversions are often misused as a starting pointHow sequencing income across accounts changes long-term outcomesResources
Learn about the Advice-Only MethodologyThe formal definition of Advice-Only⢠-
In this episode, Quincy Hall, CFPÂŽ, shares the story of a couple in their early 50s who wanted true retirement adviceânot a sales pipeline. After meeting with several advisors whose planning processes ultimately led back to implementation, they discovered the Advice-Only Methodologyâ˘: a system built on structural separation between advice and product discussions.
Youâll learn how the Fee Structure Firewall and the Prohibition on Co-Mingled Meetings create an objective planning environment, eliminating downstream incentives like asset-based compensation, cross-selling, and asset-transfer expectations.
Through a structured, conflict-reduced process, Frank and Lisa received a clear, actionable retirement blueprint, including their income timeline, Roth-conversion window, Social Security strategy, and optimized withdrawal orderâwithout any pressure to move accounts or commit to management.
This case study shows how advice becomes more reliable when structureânot salesâdefines the planning relationship.
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Zijn er afleveringen die ontbreken?
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In this episode, Quincy Hall, CFPÂŽ, explains how a single IRS form can protect your generosity from becoming a tax trap.
When Tonya and Brad helped their son with a $40,000 down payment, they learned that wiring the full amount from one account could accidentally eat into their lifetime gift and estate tax exemption. Their solution? A simple filing: IRS Form 709, which allows married couples to split gifts and double their annual exclusion (estimated $20,000 each in 2026).
Youâll learn:
When Form 709 must be filed â even if no tax is owed. How Gift Splitting works for couples. Why proper paperwork protects long-term wealth transfers. A simple system to track annual gifts for audit and estate clarity.Resources Mentioned:
Download the Free Annual Gift Tracker Template View IRS Form 709 Instructions Connect with Quincy Hall, CFPÂŽ on LinkedInđ§ Advice Only: Financial Planning Case Studies turns complex financial rules into short, relatable stories.
â ď¸ Disclaimer: This episode is for educational purposes only and not personalized financial or tax advice. Consult your own fiduciary advisor or tax professional before acting on any strategy.
Keywords: Gift Tax, Form 709, Gift Splitting, Annual Exclusion, Estate Planning, Wealth Transfer, Tax-Free Gifting, Financial Planning, CFP Podcast.