
Show overview
Retirement Answer Man has been publishing since 2014, and across the 12 years since has built a catalogue of 649 episodes, alongside 2 trailers or bonus episodes. That works out to roughly 440 hours of audio in total. Releases follow a weekly cadence.
Episodes typically run thirty-five to sixty minutes — most land between 33 min and 46 min — and the run-time is fairly consistent across the catalogue. None of the episodes are flagged explicit by the publisher. It is catalogued as a EN-language Business show.
The show is actively publishing — the most recent episode landed yesterday, with 19 episodes already out so far this year. Published by Roger Whitney.
From the publisher
A top retirement podcast. Roger Whitney, CFP®, CIMA®, CPWA®, RMA, guides you on how to actually do retirement well financially and personally. This retirement podcast isn't afraid to talk about the softer side of retirement. It will teach you how to retire with confidence. Two-time PLUTUS winner for best retirement podcast / blog and the 2019 winner for best financial planner blog. This retirement podcast covers how to create a paycheck, medicare, healthcare, Social Security, tax management in retirement as well as retirement travel and other non-financial issues you'll need to address to rock retirement. Retirement isn’t an age OR a financial number. It’s finding that balance between living well today and feeling confident about your retirement. It’s about gaining more freedom to pursue the life you want. Join the rock retirement community at www.rogerwhitney.com
Latest Episodes
View all 649 episodesDecluttering for Retirement: How a Simpler Life Helps You Rock Retirement
Decluttering for Retirement: It's More Than Cleaning Out Your Closet
How Long Will You Live After Retirement?
Listener Questions: How Do I Create a Diversified Portfolio?
Listener Questions: What Should I Be Doing When I'm Two Years from Retirement?
Listener Questions: Should I Take Social Security Early and Invest It?

Ep 637Listener Questions: Should I Move My 401K into an IRA When I Retire?
Explore how meaningful travel experiences, storytelling, and thoughtful planning can enhance your retirement journey. In this episode, Roger answers listener questions on managing retirement accounts, health insurance, financial literacy, and shares inspiring stories and book recommendations.OUTLINE OF THIS EPISODE OF THE RETIREMENT ANSWER MAN(00:00) Introduction: Rock retirement with community questions and storiesROCKIN’ RETIREMENT IN THE WILD(01:39) A memorable travel story from Doug in Greece and the value of experiential travelRETIREMENT LIFE LAB(03:50) The significance of experiences over souvenirs for meaningful memoriesLISTENER QUESTIONS(06:15) Addressing listener questions on managing retirement accounts and consolidating assets(06:43) Handling required minimum distributions and tax considerations for late retirees (Vern's story)(09:23) Reasons to keep or roll over 401(k) assets, including inertia, access, and creditor protection(12:32) Audio question about health insurance and budgeting(18:10) Correcting misconceptions about MAGI and ACA subsidies (Michael’s feedback)(20:08) Insights on the blind spots of retirement planning software and AI’s role in financial planning(23:00) The emerging role of AI as a thinking partner in retirement planning(25:43) Managing required minimum distributions and tax planning for late retirees (Michelle’s situation)(28:08) Using professional help vs. DIY approaches for RMDs and taxes(31:24) Dan’s pursuit of a meaningful second career in financial literacy and how to prepareON THE BOOKSHELF(35:42) Recommended bookshelf: The Art of Spending Money, Devil in the White City, Inside the Greatest Crash, and Once an EagleSMART SPRINT(41:37) Smart Sprint: Create an experiential gift to cherish memories with loved onesREFERENCESThe Art of Spending Money by Morgan HouselDevil in the White City by Erik LarsonInside the Greatest Crash by Andrew Ross SorkinOnce an Eagle by Anton MyrerAging and Healthcare Planning ResourcesConnect with Roger Whitney:Submit a Question for RogerSign up for The NoodleNote: The opinions expressed are for informational purposes only and should not replace personalized advice from licensed professionals.

Ep 636Why Even the Best Retirement Calculator is Wrong
Roger Whitney explores why retirement planning software—especially Monte Carlo simulations—can give a false sense of confidence if misunderstood. He explains what these tools actually measure, the hidden assumptions behind them, and why retirement is a complex problem that requires judgment, flexibility, and resilience—not just a high “success rate.” Roger shares how to properly interpret results, avoid common traps, and use software as a guide rather than a decision-maker so you can build a retirement plan that supports a great life.OUTLINE OF THIS EPISODE OF THE RETIREMENT ANSWER MAN(00:00) This show is dedicated to helping you not just survive retirement, but have the confidence to lean in and rock it.(00:30) Roger introduces the episode topic—why your retirement calculator’s success rate can be misleading.PRACTICAL PLANNING SEGMENT(02:50) Roger explains his perspective as a long-time practitioner and outlines his experience using Monte Carlo-based retirement tools.(05:05) Complicated vs. complex problems: why retirement can’t be “solved” like a math equation and must instead be managed over time.(09:30) Concerns about overreliance on software—from advisors scaling businesses to individuals misinterpreting results.(11:30) What retirement software actually measures.(13:25) What software does NOT measure.(14:18) Best uses of planning software.(17:40) What software should NOT be used for.(19:40) Key dangers of using retirement software.(23:00) Feasibility vs. resilience: why a plan that “works” on paper may still be fragile in real life.(24:20) The real risk:Overspending early and jeopardizing later yearsUnderspending and missing out on life(26:20) The massive number of assumptions behind every plan—and how small changes can dramatically alter outcomes over time.(38:20) How to interpret results properly.(40:55) Looking beyond the number: evaluating the distribution of outcomes and plan sensitivity.(44:43) Understanding failures:Timing (early vs. late failures)Severity (minor shortfall vs. major gap)(48:27) Best practices:Hold success rates lightlyKeep plans simpleRegularly review assumptionsAvoid over-planning and constant tweakingDefine what success actually means for your lifeSMART SPRINT(56:04) Schedule time to review the assumptions in your retirement planning software—focus on understanding the inputs rather than optimizing the output.CLOSING THOUGHTS(56:50) Roger shares an update on the merger of his firm with Tanya Nichols’ firm and the creation of a new company, Retire Agile.REFERENCESlivewithroger.com — Register for Noodle Live on March 28!Submit a Question for RogerSign up for The Noodle

Ep 635Retirement Talk with Dr. Wade Pfau
💬 Show NotesWade Pfau, author of The Retirement Planning Guidebook and creator of the Retirement Income Style Awareness (RISA®) assessment joins Roger for a wide-ranging conversation on the big questions of retirement income planning. Wade breaks down why the RISA is a better fit for retirement than a traditional risk tolerance questionnaire, how to think about real estate and reverse mortgages as retirement tools, and what the research actually says about annuities — including when to buy, whether to add inflation protection, and how fixed index annuities with living benefits really work. This podcast is a replay of a recent Rock Retirement Club meetup where members were able to join live and ask questions.Outline Of This Episode Of The Retirement Answer Man(00:00) Roger previews the episode and invites listeners to register for Noodle Live — a Saturday morning Zoom on March 28 at livewithroger.comCONVERSATION WITH DR. WADE PFAU(02:00) Roger introduces Wade Pfau, author of The Retirement Planning Guidebook (04:15) RISA vs. risk tolerance questionnaires(10:45) How to use The Retirement Planning Guidebook(12:00) AI in retirement research(14:30) RRC Member Question: How does real estate fit into retirement planning?(17:00) Reverse mortgages as a retirement tool — usage trends, how the HECM line of credit works, upfront cost hurdles, and why adoption remains low(21:30) RRC Member Question: What is an effective marginal tax rate (EMR) and how does it affect Roth conversion strategy? (25:00) Navigating ACA subsidy cliffs before Medicare(28:00) RRC Member Question: Fixed vs. inflation-adjusted annuities(33:00) Annuity timing(37:00) RRC Member Question: Should we explore intentionally breaking the ACA cliff every few years?(48:00) Fixed index annuities with living benefits vs. income annuities(53:00) RRC Member Question: Is there an optimal age window for buying an annuity if it's a "nice to have" rather than a must?(57:00) Interpreting retirement planning softwareSMART SPRINT(59:00) Pick up the latest edition of The Retirement Planning Guidebook. Use it as an approachable reference guide, or read it straight through if you're really into retirement planning.REFERENCESlivewithroger.com — Register for Noodle Live on March 28!The Retirement Planning Guidebook, 3rd Edition — Wade Pfau / retirementresearcher.comTake the RISA® assessment.Submit a Question for Roger.Sign up for The Noodle.

Ep 634Healthcare Before Medicare: Retiree Feedback
Roger Whitney dives into practical strategies for navigating health care before Medicare, sharing insights from retirees, survey results, and listener questions. Together they explore real-world solutions for coverage gaps, timing withdrawals, and managing medical expenses in early retirement.OUTLINE OF THIS EPISODE OF THE RETIREMENT ANSWER MAN(00:00) This show is dedicated to helping you not just survive retirement but have confidence in your financial and life decisions.(00:40) Roger introduces the focus: pre-Medicare health care, survey insights, and practical strategies.LISTENER EXPERIENCES AND STRATEGIES(03:00) Roger shares experiences and questions from listeners navigating pre-Medicare coverage. They discuss timing COBRA versus ACA transitions, evaluating company retiree plans, managing risk when uninsured, and creative strategies like catastrophic insurance, health-sharing plans, and part-time work benefits. Listeners also explore using HSAs and inherited IRAs to manage costs and maximize subsidies, providing a broad view of practical approaches for early retirees.ROCKING RETIREMENT IN THE WILD(32:50) Jennifer retires at 59½, discovers watercolor painting, fitness classes, and increased spending patterns in early retirementSURVEY INSIGHTS(37:08) Roger summarizes key takeaways from over 400 survey respondents.SMART SPRINT(48:19) Action step: identify your “homies” for retirement planning. Notice how your closest relationships influence your retirement experience and take one step this week to strengthen those connections.REFERENCESSubmit a Question for RogerSign up for The NoodleThe Retirement Answer Man

Ep 633How to Feel Loved with Dr. Harry Reis
Roger Whitney shifts from financial planning to the non-financial pillar of relationships, sharing a live conversation with Harry Reis about how to feel more loved and connected in retirement. Together they explore the science behind belonging and loneliness, introduce practical mindsets for deepening relationships, answer listener questions, and close with the team’s latest book recommendations.OUTLINE OF THIS EPISODE OF THE RETIREMENT ANSWER MAN(00:00) This show is dedicated to helping you not just survive retirement but have the confidence and clarity to lean in and rock it.(00:27) Roger outlines the month ahead: a focus on relationships, an upcoming financial deep dive with Wade Pfau, wisdom from retirees navigating health care before Medicare, a candid discussion on retirement calculators, and a live Noodle hangout.CONVERSATION WITH HARRY REISS(02:00) Roger introduces Harry Reis, co-author (with Sonja Lyubomirsky) of How to Feel Loved, for a conversation recorded live in the Rock Retirement Club.(05:17) Roger asks Harry what led him down the path to study relationships and partner with Sonja Lyubomirsky for the book.(15:00) Harry talks about the loneliness epidemic and the effects of not feeling loved.(17:45) Roger and Harry talk about the obstacles and myths of being loved. (23:15) Harry introduces the sea-saw framework for relationships.(27:00) Harry shares practical mindsets for strengthening connection, including listening to learn, radical curiosity, multiplicity, and mutual vulnerability.(43:30) Roger reflects on why this is important.LISTENER QUESTIONS(45:00) Listeners share questions about one-sided conversations, vulnerability, and love languages, leading to practical discussion about compatibility, communication, and choosing people willing to “play seesaw.”WHAT’S ON THE BOOKSHELF?(58:00) The team shares recent reads.SMART SPRINT(1:05:55) Consider one relationship you want to deepen. Practice listening to learn this week. Ask one more follow-up question than you normally would and notice what happens.REFERENCESSubmit a Question for RogerSign up for The NoodleThe Retirement Answer ManHow to Feel Loved by Sonja Lyubomirsky and Harry Reis

Ep 632Healthcare Before Medicare: Creating Your Own Action Plan
Roger Whitney wraps up the four-part series on navigating health care before Medicare by introducing a practical decision-making framework using the OODA Loop—observe, orient, decide, act—to help you avoid unforced errors and make a confident judgment call. He walks through organizing your retirement cash flow, estimating MAGI and ACA subsidy eligibility, evaluating COBRA, ACA, and private coverage options, and weighing tax optimization against simplicity and continuity of care. He’s joined by Taylor Schulte of Define Financial to discuss how professionals navigate Roth conversions, Social Security timing, ACA cliffs, and the trade-offs between optimizing for subsidies versus long-term tax planning.OUTLINE OF THIS EPISODE OF THE RETIREMENT ANSWER MAN(00:00) This show is dedicated to helping you not just survive retirement, but have the confidence to lean in and rock it.(00:30) Roger introduces the final week of the health care before Medicare series and previews upcoming episodes with Harry Reese (co-author of How to Feel Loved) and retirement researcher Wade Pfau.PRACTICAL PLANNING SEGMENT(02:30) Roger reviews the three “heads” that must be managed before Medicare- cost, continuity of care, and complexity.(03:30) Roger talks about avoiding unforced errors that could cost you money, disrupt care, or create unnecessary stress.(05:18) Roger introduces the OODA Loop—observe, orient, decide, act—as a practical way to think step by step about health coverage choices. (05:52) Observe: Build a 5-year retirement income and spending plan, estimate taxes and MAGI, identify where you fall relative to the ACA subsidy cliff, and review withdrawal sources (taxable, pre-tax, Roth) along with future RMD implications.(14:21) Orient: Clarify what matters most to help you make a decision.(20:00) Decide & Act: Choose a direction, document your reasoning, update your plan of record, and implement the distribution strategy that supports your choice.CONVERSATION WITH TAYLOR SCHULTE(22:25) Roger introduces Taylor Schulte from Define Financial(23:15) Why health care before Medicare shouldn’t automatically delay retirement and how assumptions often go untested.(26:50) Evaluating alternatives beyond ACA, including COBRA as a short-term bridge and private plans.(31:50) The tension between Roth conversions and ACA subsidies, and how Social Security timing affects MAGI.(34:20) Avoiding the “optimization trap”: sometimes paying more for simplicity still results in a resilient retirement plan.(36:40) The key takeaway is that there’s no perfect answer—retirees should explore options, make informed decisions without fear, and use healthcare planning as a tool rather than a barrier or excuse to delay retirement.SMART SPRINT(43:35) Set a reminder to review your health care strategy using a structured approach—especially if retirement or Medicare enrollment is approaching. The goal is to be intentional, not reactive.REFERENCESSubmit a Question for RogerSign up for The NoodleThe Retirement Answer ManKaiser Family Foundation (KFF)Healthcare.govDefine Financial- Taylor SchulteStay Wealthy Retirement Show- Taylor Schulte (podcast)

Ep 631Healthcare Before Medicare: How to Lower Your Costs
Roger Whitney continues the four-part series on navigating health care before Medicare, focusing this week on controlling costs—both through everyday decisions and by understanding how the Affordable Care Act (ACA) subsidy system works now that the expanded credits have expired. He explains the return of the 400% federal poverty level “cliff,” walks through how modified adjusted gross income (MAGI) impacts premiums, shares listener experiences with inflation and subsidy loss, and explores the ethical tension around optimizing for government benefits.OUTLINE OF THIS EPISODE OF THE RETIREMENT ANSWER MAN(00:00) This show is dedicated to helping you not just survive retirement, but have the confidence to lean in and rock it.(00:30) Roger introduces week three of the four-part series on health care before Medicare, focusing on controlling health care costs and understanding ACA subsidies. He previews next week’s structured decision framework and conversation with Taylor Schulte of Define Financial.PRACTICAL PLANNING SEGMENT(02:35) Start with the fundamentals: staying or getting healthy through strength, cardio, mobility, screenings, and proactive chronic condition management to potentially reduce long-term costs.(04:58) Compare all available coverage options and use practical strategies like staying in-network, timing procedures, and shopping prescriptions to manage costs.UNDERSTANDING THE ACA SUBSIDY SCHEME (POST-2025 CHANGES)(08:48) Roger breaks down the Affordable Care Act’s premium subsidy scheme, designed to make health care more affordable and protect coverage for preexisting conditions. He explains how subsidies are based on income relative to the federal poverty level (FPL) and how the rules have changed over time, including expansions under the American Rescue Plan and temporary extensions during COVID.(11:55) Roger explains how the premium tax credit works, including that eligibility is based on having income between 100% and 400% of the federal poverty level, and that exceeding the threshold by even $1 eliminates any subsidies(14:00) Roger gives an example of a married couple comparing higher versus lower income, illustrating how managing income can significantly affect subsidies in the years before Medicare.(15:47) What counts toward Modified Adjusted Gross Income (MAGI) and what does not count.(18:00) Reconciliation risk: estimating income during open enrollment and potentially repaying subsidies if actual income exceeds projections.(22:30) Strategic planning opportunities: building tax diversification before retirement (taxable, Roth, HSA) to create flexibility in managing MAGI and avoiding unforced errors like unexpected capital gain distributions, RSU vesting, or inherited IRA withdrawals.(26:40) Common pitfalls that can unexpectedly reduce your health care subsidies, and why keeping a buffer below the income cliff matters.LISTENER QUESTIONS & OBSERVATIONS(30:25) Joe reflects on retiring in his early 50s and how health care costs quickly became a major factor in his retirement planning.(35:35) Clarification on ACA navigators and where to find assistance through HealthCare.gov and research from Kaiser Family Foundation.(37:00) David shares his experience navigating insurance before Medicare, highlighting how exploring different options helped manage costs.(38:36) Gene asks about handling a gap in coverage before Medicare, and Roger shares strategies to manage costs and explore available options.(45:20) Philosophical discussion on whether it is appropriate to intentionally manage income to qualify for subsidies, and how each person must reconcile financial optimization with personal values.SMART SPRINT(51:30) Choose one area of spending this week—health care or otherwise—and apply intentional cost awareness to build the habit of conscious cost control.REFERENCESSubmit a Question for RogerSign up for The NoodleThe Retirement Answer ManKaiser Family Foundation (KFF)Healthcare.gov

Ep 630Healthcare Before Medicare: Your Options
OUTLINE OF THIS EPISODE OF THE RETIREMENT ANSWER MAN(00:00) This show is dedicated to helping you not just survive retirement, but have the clarity, confidence, and comfort to lean in and rock it.(00:30) Roger introduces week two of the four-part series on health care before Medicare and explains why assumptions about health care costs can shut down curiosity, create false tradeoffs, and delay retirement decisions.PRACTICAL PLANNING SEGMENT(05:05) After last week’s sticker shock, Roger shifts the focus to observing health care options before tackling cost mitigation next week.(05:28) Option #1 — COBRA: how continuation coverage works, who qualifies, how long it lasts, and why it can serve as a temporary bridge despite higher costs.(12:35) Option #2 — Affordable Care Act (ACA): marketplace coverage, guaranteed issue for preexisting conditions, plan tiers, and why the system is complex but flexible.(19:46) Option #3 — Part-time employer coverage: using part-time work to access group insurance, earn income, and maintain purpose and social connection.(25:20) Other alternatives, including private non-marketplace plans and health share plans, and why they require caution.LISTENER QUESTIONS(28:19) Joni asks about creating a trust will instead of a straight will, naming her son as beneficiary, and how traditional and Roth IRAs would be distributed under SECURE Act rules.(34:42) Christine asks whether it’s possible to anticipate capital gains distributions in open-end mutual funds before year-end.(38:45) Andy shares an observation about Monte Carlo simulations.SMART SPRINT(42:20) Roger encourages listeners to identify and challenge their assumptions about health care and retirement timing.REFERENCESSubmit a Question for RogerSign up for The NoodleThe Retirement Answer ManKaiser Family Foundation (KFF)Healthcare.gov

Ep 629Healthcare Before Medicare: What Happens When You Retire Before 65?
Roger Whitney kicks off a month-long series on navigating health care before Medicare, introducing Cerberus—the three-headed dog of Greek mythology—as a framework for understanding the biggest challenges retirees face when leaving employer-sponsored coverage. He breaks down the three heads of Cerberus, answers listener questions about retirement planning, and shares recent book recommendations from himself and the team.OUTLINE OF THIS EPISODE OF THE RETIREMENT ANSWER MAN(00:00) This show is dedicated to helping you not just survive retirement, but have the confidence to lean in and rock it.(00:30) Roger introduces the Cerberus framework and outlines the four-week series on health care before Medicare.HEALTH CARE BEFORE MEDICARE: THE THREE HEADS OF CERBERUS(02:20) Roger explains why retiring before Medicare requires a strategy and introduces the three “heads” of the health care Cerberus.(03:11) “Head” #1: The true cost of health care without an employer subsidy and why it creates sticker shock in retirement, especially when paid from pre-tax accounts.(10:50) “Head” #2: Coverage challenges, including narrower networks, fewer plan options, and the potential loss of trusted doctors and specialists.(15:13) “Head” #3: Increased complexity in choosing plans, managing care, and navigating ACA subsidies based on modified adjusted gross income.LISTENER QUESTIONS & OBSERVATIONS(19:20) Roger responds to listener questions about saving discipline, the 4% rule, geographic cost differences, values-based planning, and how taxes are modeled in retirement case studies.SMART SPRINT(33:00) Roger encourages listeners to review the health care assumptions in their retirement plan, especially for those retiring before Medicare age.WHAT’S ON THE BOOKSHELF(34:14) Roger and the team share recent book recommendations, including history, personal finance, purpose, habits, and wealth.REFERENCESSubmit a Question for RogerSign up for The NoodleThe Retirement Answer ManKaiser Family Foundation (KFF)Healthcare.gov

Ep 628Retire on FIRE: Rocking an Early Retirement- The Challenges of Retiring Early
As the Retirement Plan Live series wraps up, Roger Whitney shares wisdom from retirees further along the path to help Henry and Lucy think beyond the numbers. Listeners in their 50s, 60s, and 70s reflect on purpose, work, health, money, and joy—offering perspective on what really matters when retiring early. Roger closes with his own observations from decades of coaching, a Smart Sprint focused on learning from others, and listener-submitted words for the year.OUTLINE OF THIS EPISODE OF THE RETIREMENT ANSWER MAN(00:00) This show is dedicated to helping you not just survive retirement, but to have the confidence to lean in and rock it.(01:33) Two announcements: next month starts a healthcare-before-Medicare series and the listener survey in The Noodle is coming soon.WISDOM FROM RETIREES FURTHER ALONG(03:41) Roger reads listener reflections from retirees further along, sharing lessons on purpose, work, health, flexibility, and building a meaningful retirement.ROGER’S OBSERVATIONS (12:54) Roger shares his observations from decades of coaching on what leads to a fulfilling retirement, including permission, projects, community, service, and avoiding distraction or scarcity thinking.SMART SPRINT(22:12) Identify one challenge you’re facing and talk with someone who has already walked that path—before turning to books or the internet.LISTENER WORDS FOR THE YEAR(25:10) Roger shares listener words for the year and the personal meaning behind them.RESOURCESSign up for our next webinar!Submit a Question for RogerSign up for The NoodleThe Retirement Answer Man

Ep 627Retire on FIRE: Rocking an Early Retirement- Henry and Lucy's Resources
As the Retirement Plan Live case study continues, Roger Whitney helps Henry and Lucy move from dreaming to feasibility, organizing the real financial resources available to support an early retirement in their 40s. This episode centers on trade-offs, confidence, and the reality of giving up earned income decades early. Roger and the couple walk through income assumptions, assets, and risk tolerance before closing with listener advice, a Smart Sprint, and words for the year.OUTLINE OF THIS EPISODE OF THE RETIREMENT ANSWER MAN(00:00) This show is dedicated to helping you not just survive retirement, but to have the confidence and comfort to lean in and rock retirement.(00:27) Roger introduces Week 3 of the Retirement Plan Live case study with Henry and Lucy.(02:15) What are Henry and Lucy giving up to retire early?RETIREMENT PLAN LIVE(05:00) Roger asks Henry and Lucy if they pick a word of the year.(06:05) Henry and Lucy reflect on why retiring even one year earlier feels uncomfortable without proof.(10:50) Review of Social Security assumptions and why it’s excluded from their base plan.(14:13) Confirmation that the plan assumes no earned income after retirement.(20:40) Overview of after-tax assets, cash buckets, and sinking funds.(26:20) Review of retirement accounts, savings rates, and long-term strategy.(31:30) Home equity, college savings, and inheritance assumptions.(33:40) Clarifying the goal for the after-tax bridge bucket.ADVICE FROM A RETIREE(38:39) Listener Bonnie shares an alternative approach using sabbaticals and flexible work.(41:10) Roger reflects on optionality, skill relevance, and maintaining professional networks.SMART SPRINT(42:30) Roger encourages listeners to organize or update their net worth statement.WORD FOR THE YEAR(43:40) Listener Alex shares his word for the year: Healing.(45:10) Listener Valerie shares her word for the year: Minimize.REFERENCESSign up for our next webinar!Submit a Question for RogerSign up for The NoodleThe Retirement Answer Man

Ep 626Retire on Fire- Rocking an Early Retirement: Henry and Lucy's FIRE Goals
As the Retirement Plan Live case study continues, Roger Whitney helps Henry and Lucy articulate what they want their FIRE retirement to actually look like—starting with values, dreaming without constraint, and then translating that vision into concrete goals. Along the way, Roger shares wisdom from older retirees about purpose, productivity, and flexibility, invites listeners to reflect on their own “magic,” and closes with a Smart Sprint and listener-submitted words for the year.OUTLINE OF THIS EPISODE OF THE RETIREMENT ANSWER MAN(00:00) This show is dedicated to helping you not just survive retirement, but to have the confidence and clarity to lean in and rock it.(00:23) Roger previews today’s focus: Henry and Lucy’s retirement goals, advice from seasoned retirees, a Smart Sprint, and listener words for the year.(01:00) Roger explains why retirement planning should begin with dreaming big—starting with “everything” before testing feasibility.RETIREMENT PLAN LIVE(03:25) Henry and Lucy walk through their core values and how those values shape their vision for retirement.(05:55) Roger reviews and discusses Lucy’s top ten values.(09:29) Henry talks about his top values.(11:40) Roger reflects on whether retiring early means “burying” one’s gifts, and considers how purpose and contribution can take many forms beyond traditional work.(13:44) Roger talks through Henry and Lucy’s goals for retirement and their budget for a great base life.(19:47) Lucy breaks down her thought process on her great base life budget.(23:00) Henry weighs in with his thoughts on their great base life.(24:05) They review discretionary goals such as travel, a camper van, hobbies, and future family commitments.(27:55) Lucy and Henry talk about aspirational wishes.(35:00) Lucy talks about how they react during uncertain times.WISDOM FROM RETIREES FURTHER ALONG(41:41) Listener Mike shares why he chose “FILE” (Financially Independent, Living Early) instead of full FIRE, emphasizing purpose and reduced stress.(45:10) Listener Renee offers perspective on flexibility, one spouse stepping away from work, and how lower stress improved family life.SMART SPRINT(48:08) Roger encourages listeners to separately write down their own “magic” retirement goals—without self-editing—then share and discuss them with their partner.WORD FOR THE YEAR(50:07) Roger shares listener words for the year.CLOSING THOUGHTS(53:17) Roger previews next week’s episode, where Henry and Lucy’s assets and resources will be evaluated to see what is feasible.REFERENCESSign up for our next webinar!Submit a Question for RogerSign up for The NoodleThe Retirement Answer Man

Ep 625Retire on FIRE- Rocking an Early Retirement: Meet Henry and Lucy
As the new year begins, Roger Whitney launches a new Retirement Plan Live case study, introducing Henry and Lucy, a couple in their mid-40s pursuing Financial Independence and Retire Early (FIRE). Roger revisits the 4% rule as a planning heuristic, explains when it can be helpful, and sets the stage for a live community analysis later this month. The episode closes with a Smart Sprint focused on updating your net worth statement and a listener’s word for 2026.OUTLINE OF THIS EPISODE OF THE RETIREMENT ANSWER MAN(00:00) This show is dedicated to helping you not just survive retirement, but to have the confidence to lean in and rock it.(00:30) Roger introduces a new Retirement Plan Live case study series and previews the upcoming live community meetup on January 29.RETIREMENT TOOLKIT(01:58) Roger revisits the 4% rule, explaining what it is, where it came from, and why it is often misunderstood.(04:55) Roger talks about the 25x rule commonly used in the FIRE community.(06:38) He discusses the drawbacks of using these heuristics and who they are best used for.(11:05) Roger shares how the 4% rule can help overfunded retirees move beyond scarcity and spend more intentionally.(13:55) A breakdown of FIRE- Financial Independence, Retire Early.RETIREMENT PLAN LIVE(17:41) Roger introduces Henry and Lucy.(20:01) They share how they discovered FIRE and what it means to them.(23:10) Lucy reflects on spending habits, saving, and budgeting(25:30) Henry talks about the start of their relationship.(28:12) Henry and Lucy discuss how saving impacted their lifestyle.(31:20) They discuss what drives their desire to retire early.(32:55) Roger reflects on his first impression of the FIRE Movement.(34:15) What are the obstacles of retiring so early?(38:45) Roger talks about the difference between a complicated problem and a complex problem.(40:35) Roger asks if they think about landmines that could pop up with such a long retirement.(43:57) Roger invites listeners further along the retirement path to share perspective and advice for their 40-something selves.SMART SPRINT(45:20) Roger encourages listeners to update their end-of-year net worth statement and identify trends for the year ahead.WORD OF THE YEAR(47:31) Listener Lindsay shares her word for 2026: Listen, and Roger reflects on the value of deep listening.REFERENCESSubmit a Question for RogerSign up for The NoodleThe Retirement Answer ManLivewithroger.comThe Millionaire Next Door: The Surprising Secrets of America's Wealthy- Thomas J Stanley, Ph.D.

Ep 624Year-End Planning: Estimated Tax Payments
As the year comes to a close, Roger Whitney reflects on the power of words, walks through an important year-end tax planning reminder for retirees, shares listener stories and perspectives, and invites listeners to choose a guiding word for 2026 as a way to approach retirement with greater intention and clarity.OUTLINE OF THIS EPISODE OF THE RETIREMENT ANSWER MAN(00:00) This show is dedicated to helping you not just survive retirement, but have the confidence and clarity to lean in and rock it.(00:45) Roger reflects on slowing down, reclaiming meaning in familiar words, and recommitting to clearing the battlefield as we head into a new year.RETIREMENT TOOLKIT(03:22) Roger explains why estimated quarterly tax payments matter in retirement and how they can help prevent unwelcome tax surprises.(05:44) He outlines safe harbor rules and practical best practices for withholding taxes from Social Security, IRA distributions, and pensions.RETIREMENT LIFE LAB(13:33) Roger shares listener responses about corporate words and phrases people are eager to retire when they leave the workforce.ROCKING RETIREMENT IN THE WILD(19:33) Mick and Patty share reflections on fitness, travel, and meaning in retirement, including experiences shaped by history and family.FOCUSING FORWARD: A WORD FOR 2026(21:10) Roger discusses the practice of choosing a single word to define the coming year and reads listener-submitted words for 2026.(28:40) Roger reveals his own word for 2026.SMART SPRINT(34:07) Roger encourages listeners to reflect on the season they are entering and consider choosing a word to help guide decisions in 2026.CLOSING THOUGHTS(34:55) Roger responds to listener feedback on charitable giving and enjoying retirement, emphasizing balance, generosity, and intentional living as the year ends.REFERENCESSubmit a Question for RogerSign up for The NoodleThe Retirement Answer ManFinancial Calculators from Dinkytown.net