Purpose Driven Finances
Air Date: April 25, 2026 Most people choose a Traditional IRA or Roth IRA based on a tax deduction, a headline, or a quick internet search. But retirement planning is not about collecting accounts. It is about coordination. In this episode of Purpose Driven Finances, Allan Malina explains how Traditional and Roth IRAs should function together inside a disciplined retirement system focused on tax efficiency, retirement flexibility, and long-term income coordination. The episode explores: * Roth contribution vs. Roth conversion — and why they are completely different decisions * Required Minimum Distribution (RMD) concentration risk * Survivor tax bracket compression for spouses * Social Security and Medicare coordination * Retirement income sequencing * Investment positioning across taxable, tax-deferred, and tax-free accounts * Why static retirement planning often creates expensive future limitations The decision you made at 35 may not serve you at 65. Many investors spend decades accumulating retirement accounts without coordinating how taxes, withdrawals, Medicare premiums, Social Security, and future Required Minimum Distributions interact later in life. This episode introduces three levels of retirement planning: Accumulation Building retirement savings with limited tax coordination. Coordination Using Traditional and Roth structures together to improve tax flexibility and retirement income options. Discipline Creating a fully integrated retirement income architecture where Roth conversions, tax planning, investment positioning, and withdrawal sequencing work together as a system. The episode also discusses: * Why large pre-tax balances can quietly create future tax concentration risk * Why Roth conversions require strategic analysis rather than emotional reactions to markets * Why many retirees lose flexibility after Required Minimum Distributions begin * How inherited Roth IRAs differ from inherited pre-tax retirement accounts * Why retirement positioning should adapt as markets and economic conditions change FAQs Is a Roth IRA always better than a Traditional IRA? No. A Roth IRA is a tool, not a universal answer. The right structure depends on your tax bracket, retirement timeline, future income expectations, and Required Minimum Distribution exposure. What is the difference between a Roth contribution and a Roth conversion? A Roth contribution is an annual funding decision. A Roth conversion moves pre-tax retirement assets into a Roth structure, typically creating taxes today in exchange for future tax-free growth and withdrawals. Why do Required Minimum Distributions matter? Required Minimum Distributions can create taxable income later in retirement whether you need the income or not. Large pre-tax balances may eventually increase Medicare premiums, Social Security taxation, and overall retirement tax exposure. Should retirement investment positioning change over time? Yes. Markets, economic conditions, volatility, and retirement needs change over time. Static retirement positioning often creates limitations when conditions shift. Retirement planning should function as architecture — not a random collection of accounts opened over decades. Allan Malina is a fiduciary financial advisor and the founder of Servus Capital Management. He specializes in helping small business owners, retirees, and professionals across Central Virginia move from financial uncertainty to disciplined, purpose-driven financial systems. As the host of Purpose Driven Finances on WLNI 105.9 (lynchburg, VA), Allan translates complex economic conditions into clear, actionable strategies for long-term stewardship.
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