RSKY
Veteran Member
- Joined
- Oct 5, 2003
- Messages
- 2,492
- Tractor
- Kioti CK20S
I have learned a lot today.
Just got back from talking to a tax/financial advisor. I have never used one before preferring to figure my own taxes. He is the one that my in-laws use and has the reputation for being one of the best advisors in our area. We showed him our spreadsheets calculating our retirement and without touching a calculator he told me I was probably working for less than minimum wage. What he meant was compared to what I make and what I could draw.
One of the main things he said, and people have stated this wrong in my two earlier posts, is that you don't have to be 59 1/2 to start drawing out your 401K.
If you are 55 years of age and separate from your employer you can draw from the 401K that you had with that employer with no penalties. They will hold 20% for taxes but no penalty.
I worked for CGT for 33 years and separated at age 52. Since I am 56 I can draw from my CGT 401K without penalty. My GY 401K is unavailable without penalty since I am still working for them. My wife is 56 and retired last year so she can draw from her 401K.
If you are under 55 there will be a 10% penalty. If you are still employed by the company providing the 401K there will be a 10% penalty. I am assuming that if you are under 55 and still employed you will pay a 20% penalty but we didn't really discuss that one.
He said one of the mistakes people make is to roll a 401K into an IRA. If I were to do this then I could NOT touch it until age 59 1/2 without a big penalty.
Some of the guys who left CGT when it closed rolled their money to IRAs. None that I have talked to have been happy with the results. Some gave their money to various "financial advisors" who invest in the same funds the 401Ks do but take a percentage cut for managing the account. Nobody who did that has done as well as I have.
Maybe I was just too lazy to go to the trouble of moving my money.
The advisor was not a fan of annuities.
He was impressed with our spreadsheets. Not so much that we were computer gurus or anything but with the fact that we had taken the time to do them. He said a lot of people were simply too lazy to take the time to figure things out. Many would not keep up with their tax information or failed to bring him all the information they had. Some would come in asking about retirement and not know how much was in their 401k or other accounts.
He calmed my nerves quite a bit.
He also talked about some expenses we have now that will go away when I retire. There won't be any 401K contributions coming out of my checks. I won't have $240 a month for gas to drive to and from work. He mentioned some other things we hadn't thought about.
I am not rich by any means but I am better off than I thought I was.
Just got back from talking to a tax/financial advisor. I have never used one before preferring to figure my own taxes. He is the one that my in-laws use and has the reputation for being one of the best advisors in our area. We showed him our spreadsheets calculating our retirement and without touching a calculator he told me I was probably working for less than minimum wage. What he meant was compared to what I make and what I could draw.
One of the main things he said, and people have stated this wrong in my two earlier posts, is that you don't have to be 59 1/2 to start drawing out your 401K.
If you are 55 years of age and separate from your employer you can draw from the 401K that you had with that employer with no penalties. They will hold 20% for taxes but no penalty.
I worked for CGT for 33 years and separated at age 52. Since I am 56 I can draw from my CGT 401K without penalty. My GY 401K is unavailable without penalty since I am still working for them. My wife is 56 and retired last year so she can draw from her 401K.
If you are under 55 there will be a 10% penalty. If you are still employed by the company providing the 401K there will be a 10% penalty. I am assuming that if you are under 55 and still employed you will pay a 20% penalty but we didn't really discuss that one.
He said one of the mistakes people make is to roll a 401K into an IRA. If I were to do this then I could NOT touch it until age 59 1/2 without a big penalty.
Some of the guys who left CGT when it closed rolled their money to IRAs. None that I have talked to have been happy with the results. Some gave their money to various "financial advisors" who invest in the same funds the 401Ks do but take a percentage cut for managing the account. Nobody who did that has done as well as I have.
Maybe I was just too lazy to go to the trouble of moving my money.
The advisor was not a fan of annuities.
He was impressed with our spreadsheets. Not so much that we were computer gurus or anything but with the fact that we had taken the time to do them. He said a lot of people were simply too lazy to take the time to figure things out. Many would not keep up with their tax information or failed to bring him all the information they had. Some would come in asking about retirement and not know how much was in their 401k or other accounts.
He calmed my nerves quite a bit.
He also talked about some expenses we have now that will go away when I retire. There won't be any 401K contributions coming out of my checks. I won't have $240 a month for gas to drive to and from work. He mentioned some other things we hadn't thought about.
I am not rich by any means but I am better off than I thought I was.