10 Critical Financial Upgrades to Make BEFORE Announcing Retirement

Source: James Brennan, Brennan Bay Financial
Video: 10 Things to Upgrade Before Announcing Retirement
Key Insight: Handle these upgrades quietly in your first 12-24 months before social pressure kicks in

Why Do These First?

The moment you announce retirement, your calendar fills up with trips, dinners, family requests, and spending decisions. This narrow window before announcing gives you space for clear thinking about structural decisions that will impact the next 25-30 years.

The 10 Critical Upgrades

1. Upgrade Your Withdrawal Strategy

Problem: Most people default to traditional IRA withdrawals, creating unnecessary taxable income that stacks with Social Security and affects Medicare premiums.

Solution: - Plan which accounts to tap in year 1 - Identify best windows for Roth conversions - Keep taxable income controlled while in lower brackets - Plan BEFORE required minimum distributions kick in at 73-75

2. Upgrade Your Health Insurance

For pre-65 retirees: Your employer coverage ends, need to bridge to Medicare.

Strategy: - Research ACA marketplace options BEFORE your last day - Income-based premium subsidies can save tens of thousands - Your withdrawal strategy (upgrade #1) determines subsidy eligibility - Model marketplace vs. COBRA before retiring

3. Upgrade Your Tax Plan

Shift: From annual tax planning to 25-30 year tax strategy.

Year 1 Sets the Baseline for: - Bracket filling - Roth conversions - Capital gains harvesting
- IRMA management (Medicare surcharges)

Don’t wait until April to realize you could have done things differently.

4. Update Beneficiary Designations

Critical: Beneficiary forms override your will and trust.

Common Problems: - Forms from years ago pointing to ex-spouses - Outdated designations skipping intended heirs - Forms creating unintended tax consequences

Action: Takes 30 minutes, costs nothing, highest impact item on the list.

5. Update Estate Documents

Your 15-year-old will and power of attorney don’t reflect your current financial picture.

Update: - Will or trust - Healthcare directive - Power of attorney - Any remaining trust documents

Reality: Without current documents, courts and “whoever has the largest voice” make decisions for you.

6. Right-Size Your Insurance Coverage

Drop What You Don’t Need: - Disability insurance (no earned income to protect) - Life insurance (if spouse is financially secure)

Increase What Matters More Now: - Umbrella liability coverage - Long-term care planning

Your assets need protection from lawsuits and extended care events more than ever.

7. Upgrade Your Cash Reserves

Working Years: 3-6 months emergency fund was enough (paycheck coming).

Retirement Structure: - Emergency Reserve: 6-12 months living expenses (stable/accessible) - Known Major Purchases: Separate cash for cars, home projects, trips in first 2-3 years - Goal: Keep investment portfolio working without forced sales at wrong times

8. Track Your ACTUAL Spending

Problem: Most enter retirement with rough spending estimates, not real numbers.

Solution: Track actual spending for first 3-6 months (or practice before retiring). - Every dollar comes from somewhere specific - Where it comes from determines your tax bill - Real number beats calculator estimate for 25-30 year plan

Pattern: People who get specific make better decisions all year. Those who guess tend to overspend from wrong accounts.

9. Optimize Your Social Security Strategy

Wrong Question: Which age gives the biggest monthly check?

Right Question: Which claiming age creates least tax damage and most long-term flexibility?

Consider Interactions With: - Your withdrawal plan - Roth conversion windows - IRMA exposure - Social Security provisional income taxation

Most people optimize for the wrong thing and never realize their mistake.

10. Model Your Survivor Plan

The Problem: When one spouse dies, the survivor faces: - Single filer tax brackets (compressed) - Same RMDs on full traditional balance - Lower Social Security survivor benefits - Higher effective tax rates than the couple ever paid together

The Math: Surviving spouse can pay more taxes on same money with one fewer person in household.

Solution: Model this scenario early. Often the clearest argument for accelerating Roth conversions while both spouses are alive and brackets are wider.

Key Takeaway

These aren’t luxury upgrades—they’re financial, legal, and structural changes that protect your money, health coverage, tax picture, and peace of mind for the next 25-30 years. Handle them quietly before the celebrations and announcements, when you have space for clear thinking.

Quote: “I’ve got so many things going on now that I don’t know how I ever had time for work.” —Every retiree

Do these upgrades in the narrow window before retirement gets busy.


Want to see how professionals implement these strategies? James Brennan offers free training at Brennan Bay Financial showing their complete client process.