We Are 60 and 58, When Can We Retire? A Married Couple Retirement Case Study
Can a married couple retire at ages 60 and 58? In this retirement case study, we visually compare four different paths: retiring now, retiring now with possible Roth IRA conversions, working two more years, and working four more years. The goal is not to find one perfect answer, but to help couples see how time, taxes, income, healthcare, home equity, and lifestyle tradeoffs may shape their retirement future.
What is a Flat Fee Financial Advisor?
Many people have heard the term flat-fee financial advisor, but are not exactly sure what it means. Learn how flat-fee financial planning works, how it differs from AUM fees, and why some individuals and couples are exploring alternative ways to pay for financial advice.
How Taxes, Income Sources & Home Equity Changed 4 Retirement Plans for the Same $2.75M Couple (Part 2)
What happens when the same married couple follows four different retirement strategies?
In Part 2 of this retirement case study, we compare lifetime taxes, retirement income sources, Medicare IRMAA costs, home equity decisions, widow tax considerations, and legacy outcomes for a hypothetical couple with $2.75 million. The results reveal why retirement planning is often less about finding a perfect answer and more about understanding the tradeoffs.
Should Married Couples Do Roth IRA Conversions? A $2.75 Million Dollar Retirement Case Study.
Many retired couples ask whether they should do a Roth IRA conversion. The better question may be: what outcome are you trying to create? In this retirement case study, we modeled four different plans for a hypothetical $2.75 million couple and compared spending, taxes, legacy, and surviving spouse outcomes.
Can We Retire at 53, 56, or 60? What the Numbers Actually Show for Married Couples
You have spent decades building careers, saving money, and trying to do the right things financially. But can married couples actually retire early at 53, 56, or 60? In this in-depth case study, we explore how taxes, healthcare, Roth IRA conversions, Social Security, and coordinated planning may change what is possible.
Time, Energy, and Freedom: The True Currency of Early Retirement
Most people believe retirement and early retirement is about money alone. This article explores why time, energy, and freedom are the true currencies of early retirement. How a human-centered, holistic approach helps families live more fully while still planning wisely for the future.

