I had the impression your ACH transfer was taking too long which caused you to make the original post and so I almost laughed when I saw you hadn’t yet put in the request. The transfer is on “hold” until you make it happen!

I had the impression your ACH transfer was taking too long which caused you to make the original post and so I almost laughed when I saw you hadn’t yet put in the request. The transfer is on “hold” until you make it happen!
+1quantAndHold wrote: ↑Sun Mar 19, 2023 2:20 pm I like doing it myself because it forces me to learn our tax laws and how they relate to our situation, which helps me make better financial decisions. One thing that has helped is that my financial life changes slowly enough that in any given year, there might only be one or two things that are new and have to be researched.
Your broker doesn’t hold your records, the brokerage company (Vanguard, Fidelity, etc) does and all transactions are backed up as soon as they are made.
In all fairness, you appeared to have a high income 10 years ago when you started such that you had to do a Backdoor Roth. Not everyone can grow the rest of their portfolio so fast since they don’t have the “extra” income that you have.
Even if you don’t have kids, you probably want your community to have decent schools. I cringe when I see graffiti and the swear words are misspelled!KyleAAA wrote: ↑Thu Mar 16, 2023 11:52 amBut OP doesn't necessarily have to be the one to pay for those things.celia wrote: No money to re-pave the road? OK, you get dirt paths. Not much spent on schools? OK, you’ll have mediocre schools with no enrichment and large class sizes. No fire department? Hopefully there is a volunteer fire department!
I’m in my 70s now and have seen all kinds of financial situations, even with trusts. I find that those who don’t act “fairly” also end up being the loser when life is “unfair” to them. And I find that the more I give to charity, the more money I end up with. Part of that is from not needing to pay taxes on QCDs, but unexpected money also comes my way.Capricorn212 wrote: ↑Wed Mar 15, 2023 2:48 pm Thank you very much for your thoughtful words. Three of the siblings are and have been united/agreement/harmony on this. But this is maybe time to just bite the bullet and move on. And, not have a victory that costs us even more money.
I’m not aware of problems with any particular mutual fund.
But if the RMDs work like they do in IRAs, the percentage to withdraw increases each year. I’ll bet the RMD is over 50k a year by the time you get to the 20th year of withdrawing. And do you keep getting the same annuity benefits until you both die?
OP, I suggest you ignore this tool since it doesn’t take Roth conversions into account. The higher wage earner should just start SS at 70 because the space that earlier SS would take up in your tax brackets is needed for doing Roth conversions instead.Jack FFR1846 wrote: ↑Mon Mar 13, 2023 5:14 pm You may want to at a minimum, focus on a few things. I'm retiring in June and DW has stopped working. Opensocialsecurity says for her to take it at 62 (this May) and me at 70. Those are numbers you will want to find and write down.
If you have a bank CD held in your brokerage account, that part would be insured by FDIC instead. So split your CDs into multiple banks if you have over $250k in CDs.tibbitts wrote: ↑Mon Mar 13, 2023 1:05 pmWhy would the decision be related to what the brokerage account was invested in?aristotelian wrote: ↑Mon Mar 13, 2023 1:00 pm Possibly if you hold that much in cash. That would be an unusual use case.