NEWSLETTER
Xerxes Nabong, CFP®, CDFA®
Philip M. Maliniak, CRPC®
Nicole Brown-Griffin, CFP®, CDFA®, EA
Aaron Petty, Client Associate
Hampton Roads: (757) 394-3486
Greater Phoenix: (480) 687-9339
Orange County: (949) 660-8869
Wealth Avenue February 2026 Newsletter: Planning for Retirement Is More Than Just Saving
One of our specialties at Wealth Avenue isn’t just helping people save enough for retirement, it’s helping them use their money wisely once they get there. Most people spend decades focused on accumulation by contributing to 401(k)s, 403(b)s, TSPs, Roth IRAs, and IRAs, building investment portfolios, and growing balances as efficiently as possible.
But retirement is not just about how much money you have. It’s about where your money is located, whether in pre-tax, Roth, or taxable brokerage accounts, how and when you take distributions, how withdrawals interact with taxes, Medicare premiums, and Social Security, and how your investment strategy aligns with your spending needs.
In other words, retirement success is less about reaching a number and more about creating a coordinated distribution plan that supports your lifestyle while minimizing avoidable taxes and unexpected surprises. Over the years, we’ve seen a few common missteps that can quietly undermine otherwise well-funded retirements.
The 5 Most Common Retirement Mistakes We See
1. Overweighting Pre-Tax Accounts
Many retirees have done an excellent job saving, but most of that money lives in pre-tax accounts like traditional IRAs and 401(k)s.
The challenge? Every dollar withdrawn is taxed as ordinary income.
This can:
- Push you into higher tax brackets
- Increase taxation on Social Security
- Trigger higher Medicare premiums
A lack of tax diversification often limits flexibility in retirement. Having a mix of Roth IRAs, Roth 401(k)s, strategic Roth conversions, and even Mega Backdoor Roth contributions (where applicable with your employer plans) can provide tax-free income in retirement and greater control over taxable income each year. Additionally, for those planning to retire before age 59½, maintaining access to a taxable brokerage account can be especially helpful, as it allows for penalty-free income before reitrement accounts become fully accessible.
2. Ignoring Medicare Timing and IRMAA
IRMAA (Income-Related Monthly Adjustment Amount) is a Medicare surcharge that increases Part B and Part D premiums when your income exceeds certain thresholds, based on your tax return from two years prior. Because Medicare premiums are income-based, not asset-based, even a single year of higher income from large IRA withdrawals, Roth conversions, or capital gains can trigger higher premiums, making IRMAA something that is often manageable with proactive, multi-year distribution planning.
Many retirees don’t realize:
- Medicare looks back at income from prior years
- One “good” tax year can create years of higher premiums
- Planning ahead can often reduce or smooth these costs
With thoughtful, multi-year planning, IRMAA doesn’t have to be a surprise or a penalty, it can often be anticipated, managed, and smoothed out as part of a coordinated retirement income strategy.
3. Not Planning for Survivor Income
Retirement planning isn’t just about today, it’s also about preparing for what happens if one spouse passes first. While couples often focus on their current income picture, the financial landscape can change quickly and dramatically after a loss.
Common oversights include:
- Loss of one Social Security benefit
- Reduction or loss of pension income
- Higher tax brackets for the surviving spouse
Without intentional survivor planning, income can drop while taxes rise, right when stability, clarity, and financial confidence matter most.
4. Waiting Too Long to Address Estate Planning
Estate planning is often postponed because it feels uncomfortable or “not urgent,” even though the consequences of waiting can be significant.
In reality:
- Beneficiary designations override wills
- Outdated documents can create family conflict
- Lack of clarity increases stress during already difficult times
A well-organized estate plan isn’t just about documents, it’s about reducing confusion, protecting relationships, and giving your family clarity and peace of mind when they need it most.
5. Assuming Markets Alone Will Solve Retirement
Markets play an important role, but they are only one piece of a successful retirement strategy.
Retirement requires:
- Coordinated withdrawal sequencing
- Income planning across multiple accounts
- Risk management aligned with spending needs
- A plan that works through both good markets and bad
Markets may drive returns but planning drives outcomes. True retirement confidence comes from knowing how your income holds up across changing markets, tax laws, and life events, not from performance alone.
Thinking Beyond Savings
Avoiding these mistakes starts with having a proactive plan. At Wealth Avenue, we’re always thinking beyond just saving, helping you move from accumulation to intention by designing withdrawal and distribution strategies that coordinate your investments, taxes, Medicare, and long-term goals. This is something we keep in mind during every conversation we have with you.
Your Team at Wealth Avenue,
P.S. We’re grateful that our practice continues to grow through long-term relationships built on trust and intentional planning, and we are currently accepting new clients. We enjoy working with people like you, those who value thoughtful, strategic guidance and ongoing collaboration. If someone you care about could benefit from that same approach, we’d be happy to connect when the time feels right.
One final read… a recent Forbes article that takes a fresh look at the well-known 4% Rule of Retirement Withdrawals and explores several thoughtful alternatives. While the 4% Rule can be a helpful starting point, the article highlights why retirement income planning is rarely one-size-fits-all, especially when you factor in market volatility, longevity, and lifestyle goals. It also introduces flexible strategies like spending guardrails and bucket approaches that can better adapt to real life. We see this as a great complement to our belief that retirement success isn’t about following a rule, but about designing a plan that evolves with you. As always, the right approach is the one that fits your goals, timeline, and priorities.

