

The Retirement and IRA Show
Jim Saulnier, CFP® & Chris Stein, CFP®
What do you get when you combine two knowledgeable CFP® PROFESSIONALS (one also a well-informed COLLEGE FINANCE INSTRUCTOR)? If you mix in relevant financial information and a healthy dose of humor you get the Retirement and IRA Radio Show! JIM SAULNIER, a CERTIFIED FINANCIAL PLANNER™ Professional with Jim Saulnier and Associates who specializes in retirement planning for clients across the country, CHRIS STEIN, a Finance Instructor at Colorado State University who is also a CERTIFIED FINANCIAL PLANNER™ Professional, offer real-world knowledge on a diverse range of topics including Social Security planning, investing for your retirement, the fundamentals of 401(k) and IRA accounts. Jim and Chris make learning about your retirement both educational and entertaining!
Episodes
Mentioned books

Mar 8, 2026 • 1h 6min
IRMAA, RMDs, Conduit Trust: Q&A #2610
Jim and Chris discuss listener emails on PSAs regarding IRMAA reimbursements, RMD in-kind transfers, and naming a conduit trust as a retirement account beneficiary.
(8:15) A listener shares a PSA that an IRMAA reimbursement was applied as a credit balance drawn down over several months rather than a lump sum.
(17:00) The guys discuss a listener PSA on SSA-44 filing: when income is underestimated and IRMAA is owed, Medicare reconciles the difference the following November or December with no penalties or interest assessed.
(33:45) George asks whether an RMD can be satisfied through an in-kind transfer of mutual funds to a brokerage account, and whether only a portion needs to be sold to cover the tax bill.
(46:00) Jim and Chris take up a listener question about naming a conduit trust as a contingent beneficiary for retirement accounts, kicking off Part 1 of a broader discussion on see-through and conduit trusts — what each structure is, how they differ, and what happens when an IRA names a trust as its beneficiary. They begin exploring the tax implications and planning considerations involved, noting that these arrangements can create both benefits and unintended complications depending on how they’re set up. The conversation will continue on the next week’s Q&A episode, where they’ll complete this listener’s question and address additional questions received on the topic.
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Mar 4, 2026 • 1h 16min
Fisher’s 99 Retirement Tips, Part 2: EDU #2609
Chris’s Summary
Jim and I continue our discussion on 99 Retirement Tips from Fisher Investments, picking up where we left off last week. We cover involving children in financial decisions, the liquidity trade-off of paying off a mortgage early, renting before buying in a new retirement location, lifetime gifts as part of the fun budget, and watching for financial predators including a disputed suggestion that low advisor fees may be a warning sign.
Jim’s “Pithy” Summary
Chris and I are back where we left off, working through Fisher Investments’ 99 Retirement Tips, and there’s still plenty to dig into. Tip 23 makes the case for involving your children in your financial decisions — and the reasons go deeper than most people think about. Tip 26 gets into mortgage payoff, and while we partially agree with what Fisher says about it — paying it down doesn’t change your net worth. But it does change your liquidity, and that distinction is worth considering.
Tip 32 is one I feel personally right now: if you’re relocating in retirement, rent first. Never move anywhere with a vacation mindset. I’m doing it in Ohio as we speak, and I’d tell anyone thinking about a move to do the same. Tip 74 recommends lifetime gifting — and the way we handle it, that spending belongs in your Fun Number budget. There’s no written rule you have to wait until you’re gone to help the people you care about.
And tip 86 covers financial predators, which is largely solid — but there’s one line in there that made my blood boil when I read it. The implication is that an advisor charging lower fees might be a warning sign. I have never seen any consumer advocate say that. The 99 retirement tips review of this particular point raises a question worth sitting with: who exactly benefits from that framing?
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Feb 28, 2026 • 49min
Social Security, IRMAA, Disclaiming Inheritances, Roth Conversions: Q&A #2609
Jim and Chris discuss listener emails on Social Security survivor benefits, IRMAA relief and the SSA-44 process, the Social Security earnings test, disclaiming inheritances that are brokerage accounts, and Roth conversion rules for retirees.
(6:00) A listener asks whether his wife’s early Social Security claim at 62 would reduce the survivor benefit she’d receive upon his death.
(14:00) George asks several questions stemming from a successful SSA-44 IRMAA relief request, including whether a retroactive refund is due, whether Step 3 covers the following year, and whether a separate filing is needed for his own income reduction.
(27:30) Jim and Chris respond to a listener who clarifies that benefits withheld under the Social Security earnings test are deferred, not lost, and are returned as a higher benefit at full retirement age.
(31:00) Georgette asks when it makes sense to disclaim an inherited brokerage account and whether passing the assets directly to their children is the right move.
(40:45) The guys are asked about the rules and tax implications of converting brokerage account funds to a Roth IRA, including whether having no earned income in retirement disqualifies someone from doing
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Feb 25, 2026 • 1h 39min
Fisher’s 99 Retirement Tips: EDU # 2608
They dig into estate planning basics like wills, living wills, incapacity planning, and revocable trusts. They tackle longevity statistics and why using age‑65 cohort numbers matters for retirement income. They debate annuities versus self‑funding longevity strategies and unpack annuity complexity, fees, and surrender penalties.

Feb 21, 2026 • 1h 21min
Tax Special – Conversions, Contributions, HSAs, Tax Returns, Tax Software PSA: Q&A #2608
Jake Turner, an enrolled agent who represents clients before the IRS, joins to tackle practical tax Q&A. They cover Roth conversions after RMDs, when conversions still help heirs, and how younger savers might split Roth vs Traditional. They debate HSA versus Roth tradeoffs, walk through IRA reporting and backdoor Roth paperwork, and explain handling a deceased taxpayer’s refund and a tax-planning tool PSA.

Feb 18, 2026 • 1h 19min
Using Buffered ETFs: EDU #2607
Jacob Vonloh, an investment due-diligence pro who implements buffered and defined outcome ETFs, joins to explain how these products work. The conversation covers why buffers limit upside, when principal protection makes sense for retirement distribution, and how to position dollars into time- and purpose-segmented portfolios. They also discuss suitable horizons and alternatives to buffered ETFs.

Feb 14, 2026 • 1h 26min
Medicare, Social Security, Inherited Roth, Annuities: Q&A #2607
Jim and Chris discuss listener emails on Medicare Part B decisions for retirees abroad, Social Security survivor benefit surprises, inherited Roth IRA distribution rules, and balancing Treasuries versus annuities when “safety” is more emotional than mathematical.
(6:45) A listener asks about situations where it might make sense to skip Medicare Part B, including retirees living abroad with strong foreign coverage and people who move to the U.S. later in life and must pay for Parts A and B.
(33:30) George asks why some widows and widowers don’t end up receiving the full benefit their spouse was receiving, even when the surviving spouse’s payment increases after the death.
(52:30) The guys respond to a question about whether an inherited Roth IRA requires annual distributions when the original owner was old enough to have RMDs, or whether the beneficiary can wait until year 10.
(1:11:00) Jim and Chris revisit the annuities versus Treasuries discussion through the lens of fear and peace of mind, including why someone might emotionally trust Treasuries more than insurer guarantees even if the math favors SPIAs.
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Feb 11, 2026 • 1h 27min
Cash Balance Plans Part 2: EDU #2606
Steve Sansone, a retirement plan specialist in cash balance and defined benefit design, joins to tackle listener questions. Conversations cover using cash balance plans for business owners with lumpy income, handling two related companies with different profit cycles, and the real-world costs, administration, and risks of running these plans. Short, practical scenarios and tradeoffs are highlighted.

Feb 7, 2026 • 1h 27min
IRMAA, Early Withdrawal Penalty, 403b Distributions: Q&A #2606
Jim and Chris discuss listener emails on IRMAA appeals using Form SSA-44, avoiding the 10% early withdrawal penalty, and whether a 403(b) distribution can be rolled into an IRA. Jim also manages to turn a discussion on Superbowl food to a conversation on retirement planning for the Go-Go phase of life (with a few other stops in between). So, if you typically skip the banter you may want to tune in around (10:10) for that discussion.
(16:30) George shares his experience repeatedly filing Form SSA-44 to correct IRMAA determinations and explains how Social Security processed and applied his updated income information.
(35:00) A listener asks whether a qualified annuity can be used instead of a 72(t) series of substantially equal periodic payments to avoid the 10% early withdrawal penalty.
(1:04:45) The guys discuss whether 403(b) distributions can be completed as 60-day rollovers into Traditional and Roth IRAs, and whether a custodian could refuse to accept the rollover.
The post IRMAA, Early Withdrawal Penalty, 403b Distributions: Q&A #2606 appeared first on The Retirement and IRA Show.

Feb 4, 2026 • 1h 14min
Retirement Spending Anxiety: EDU #2605
They tackle the shock of shifting from saving to spending and why it feels destabilizing even with pensions and Social Security. They explore the emotional weight of drawing down savings versus receiving guaranteed income. They discuss strategies like isolating discretionary funds, using lifetime income sources, and protecting early retirement spending to ease anxiety.


