
When to Consult a Professional
While you can manage basic budgeting independently, the interaction between Social Security, Medicare, and the IRS creates a highly complex web. You should seek guidance from a fee-only fiduciary financial planner or a certified public accountant (CPA) when you encounter specific trigger events.
Consult a professional if you are nearing age 63 and plan to transition into Medicare soon. Because of the two-year IRMAA lookback, the income you earn at age 63 dictates your Medicare premiums at age 65. A professional can help you structure your income to avoid unnecessary surcharges.
You also need expert guidance when you face Required Minimum Distributions (RMDs). Once you reach your early 70s, the IRS forces you to withdraw money from your tax-deferred accounts. These mandatory withdrawals can drastically alter your tax bracket and subject a maximum 85 percent of your Social Security to taxation. A tax professional can help you execute strategic charitable distributions or Roth conversions to mitigate this impact before the RMDs begin.
Finally, consult a professional if you experience a major life transition, such as divorce or the death of a spouse. The “widow’s penalty” forces the surviving spouse to file taxes as an individual, drastically lowering the threshold for Social Security taxation and Medicare surcharges, even though the household only lost one Social Security check.