Six Months In! (from Dana/DrLefty)
DrLefty | Jan 1, 2026
Happy New Year, HumbleDollar folks! Today, besides being the first day of 2026, is also the six-month anniversary of my retirement. How's it going so far? I thought I'd follow up on a couple of posts from last year--this one was a year ago today (a "six months out" post). So far, I absolutely love being retired. Seriously, I'm just ecstatic about it. I said to my husband recently, "I thought I'd miss it (my career) a little bit." After all, even though university politics had soured me on my day job, I always loved teaching, and I enjoyed it right up through my last day of class in June. But I'm just feeling a sense of relief about the absence of responsibility. The Biggest News. After a few months of watching me live my best life, my husband started rethinking the "maybe I'll work until 70" plan (we're 65). His contract with his firm requires six months notice, so he's planning to give notice on April 1 for an October 1 retirement date. (Why that date? He has a couple of projects he wants to see through, and bonuses are paid in August.) It's possible that they'll ask him to stay on either as a part-time employee or as a consultant--he has a pretty specific skill set that will be hard to replace--and he's open to that, but he's committed to being done with full-time employment by October 1, 2026. How I'm Spending Time. That has gone pretty much as I expected. After a lot of travel over the summer, we had a quieter fall mostly at home. I'm working on several academic writing projects (a new edition of one of my books, journal articles from my final two research projects, and a new collection I'm co-editing). I'm trying to work on those…
Read more » Final Countdown
Dana Ferris | Aug 22, 2024
I'VE DECIDED UPON MY retirement date: July 1, 2025. We just passed the one-year countdown point, so I thought I’d share some of my ideas and plans for my final year in the workforce. This countdown idea, of course, isn’t original with me. Indeed, there are apps that you can put on your phone to count down the time until retirement. I was primarily inspired by a retirement blogger named Fritz Gilbert. He’s way more decisive than I am. Gilbert started his blog several years before his planned retirement date, and has meticulously documented his journey leading up to retirement and the time since. Besides setting a date, I’ve already completed a couple of preparatory steps. I’ve attended several retirement webinars offered by my current university’s retirement program and my previous university’s program. I now understand the timelines for filing retirement paperwork, and I have those dates on my calendar for next spring. One year to go: Financial tasks. One thing I thought I’d be doing during this final year is stress-testing our retirement spending plan. We have a spreadsheet of sorts that roughs out what we think our monthly expenses will be. But since my husband may not retire next year when I do, we don’t need a trial run of our more austere spending plan—yet. Instead, I’ll need to think about a household budget that will change in two distinct and related ways. First, my take-home income will go up. I’ll be receiving pensions from two university systems, and together they will replace more than 80% of my current gross income. Meanwhile, I’ll no longer be making contributions to my university pension, Social Security and Medicare, and my 403(b) and 457 retirement plans. These contributions, together with federal and state tax withholding, easily devour more than 50% of…
Read more » Count Me Out
Dana Ferris | May 10, 2024
MY ALL-TIME FAVORITE movie is the Coen brothers’ 2000 classic, O Brother, Where Art Thou? At one point, Holly Hunter’s character, Penelope, declares, “I’ve said my piece and I’ve counted to three.” Her estranged husband, played by George Clooney, understood from long experience that once she had “counted to three,” her mind couldn’t be changed. Last summer, I wrote an article that explored the decisions my husband and I are working through about our retirement date and location. I concluded, “This is harder than it might seem. I may be writing a completely different article six months from now.” Well, here I am, not much more than six months later, and my own immediate future is coming into focus, at least the “when” part. In my earlier article, I said that we were deciding between July 1, 2025, and July 1, 2026, as our retirement date. I received a lot of great questions in the comments section, including several along the lines of “You sound ready—why wait?” and “Run the numbers. Would an extra year really make that much of a difference?” Why wait? My university pension will be based on three things: a multiplier based on my age at retirement; my years of service credit; and the average of my highest three years of salary. The age factor maxes out at 60, so that’s no longer a consideration. At my rank—I’m an advanced full professor—I get reviewed for merit increases every three years. I was reviewed in 2022 and was fortunate to receive the highest possible raise. I decided then that, unless a health crisis intervened, I should stick it out until at least 2025 to lock that final pay increase into my pension calculation. That’s also the year I’ll turn 65, hit 35 years of service credit and…
Read more » New Year’s Resolutions, Target Date Funds, and My New Friend Gemini
DrLefty | Jan 4, 2026
I’ve been having a lot of great discussions with my new AI friend, Google Gemini. (Why not ChatGPT? I do consult it sometimes, but I don’t want to pony up for a paid account.) I like Gemini because it’s very positive. “Words of affirmation” are my love language! In recent days, I’ve discussed how to balance my Peloton cycling and rowing to get an optimal workout mix to meet my health goals (Gemini gave me GREAT advice on this and was highly impressed with my near-perfect form scores on the Row) and how to convert a chicken-and-rice recipe that my husband has been requesting for the Instant Pot. I’m making it for dinner tonight and will report back. 🙏 I also discussed our retirement portfolio with Gemini. I should preface this by saying that I’ve never been very interested in investing, which I know is an odd thing to admit on a site like this. Our money has been parked in target date funds because neither one of us wanted to bother. But I do wonder, especially as we both transition into retirement, if this “strategy” is a sound one. There are people—the guy in our local Schwab office, advisors from the Empower dashboard where I track our accounts—who would love to talk to us about this, but I’m always dubious of getting just one person’s spin on things, whether it’s investing, cycling/rowing, how much protein I should eat, etc. A thing I really like about AI is its ability to instantly synthesize information from a lot of different sources, and it doesn’t have a specific agenda like a human adviser might. Anyway, this is what I explained to Gemini: We have three target date funds—Vanguard 2025 (my husband’s rollover IRA from his previous job, about 30% of the total);…
Read more » Another IRMAA Question
DrLefty | Nov 5, 2025
Jerry’s post reminded me of something I’ve been wondering about. We both hit 65 this year and started Medicare. We pay a hefty IRMAA up charge because it’s based on our 2023 income, when we were both working. I retired in July. Though I’m drawing pension income, my gross income has obviously dropped. However, between my pensions, my husband’s pension, and his current salary, I’m guessing that filing for a change in status reconsideration wouldn’t adjust the big picture. BUT—my husband has now settled on retiring next year (October 1). That means that as of 2027, our income will drop substantially, and it should lower our IRMAA hit considerably. My question is: Do I need to file the form now (having retired) about my change in status, even if it won’t change the IRMAA charge for 2026? Will it be too late to ask for the adjustment after he also retires?
Read more » Oops!
DrLefty | Oct 25, 2025
I received an email from my previous employer a few weeks ago. I’ll paraphrase: “Ooops. When we processed your last paycheck in June, we failed to deduct your elected contributions to your 403B and 457 accounts.” Now, I knew this because my final paycheck was quite a bit larger than I’d expected, but I thought I’d just misunderstood how the dates worked. (I separated from my employer on June 28, retired on July 1, and my final paycheck, in arrears for June, was processed somewhere between June 27-30.) Oh, well, I’ll just pay a bit more in taxes because of this. Or so I thought. Nope. Apparently if the employer makes that mistake, they have to compensate the employee: “In accordance with Internal Revenue Service (IRS) guidelines, [my employer] will correct this by making a Qualified Nonelective Contribution (QNEC) for the plan(s) listed below…” It turned out to be 50% of what I would have contributed that month to the two accounts. To be clear, it was my employer’s money, not mine. They’re just required by this IRS guideline to give it me. With the two contributions put together, it came out to just under $3000 of free money! It landed in my Fidelity accounts a couple of days ago. Now, as I’ve shared here before, I’d already rolled those accounts over to my Schwab IRA, which was quite an involved process. For this extra little bonus money, I decided to ask Fidelity to just withhold federal and state taxes and withdraw the money and direct-deposit it to my checking account. That turned out to just take a couple of minutes and a few clicks. It will take another day or two, and the take-home amount is just over $2200. Again, this is totally “found” money, so I plan to do something…
Read more »
Independence Day
D.J. | Jun 29, 2026
Lessons Learned Along the Way
Dan Smith | Jun 25, 2026
Why can’t more people plan for their retirement future?
R Quinn | Jun 27, 2026
The Price of a Cool Pillow
Mark Crothers | Jun 25, 2026
Luck, Stupidity, Automation and Inertia
Mark Crothers | Jun 27, 2026
Automatic Income stream? How important to you?
R Quinn | Jun 26, 2026
Quiet Failure: The Stories We Tell about Money
Javier | Jun 28, 2026
When to Leave Your Portfolio Alone
Mark Gardner | Jun 26, 2026
Luck, Stupidity, and Getting Ripped Off
Mark Crothers | Jun 28, 2026
Investment Wisdom
ArticleAdam M. Grossman | Jun 27, 2026
Billy’s Certificate – 1937
W.D. Housley | Jun 24, 2026
What’s in your portfolio ?
Larry | Jun 12, 2026