Executive Case Study: Repositioning Qualified Assets for Tax Control

Life is full of exits.

For high-net-worth retirees, the most significant risk is often the forced exit from large tax-deferred retirement accounts. Required Minimum Distributions, Medicare IRMAA surcharges, and uncertain future tax rates can quickly erode control over income and capital.

This case illustrates how intentional planning converted a concentrated qualified-asset exposure into a more flexible, tax-aware outcome.

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CLIENT PROFILE

“Michael,” age 62, retired with substantial balances in traditional IRAs and 401(k)s accumulated over a successful career. While financially secure, his retirement balance sheet was heavily concentrated in tax-deferred accounts, creating future income and tax risk.

His objectives were to reduce projected RMDs, manage IRMAA exposure, improve control over taxable income timing, and preserve capital for income and legacy planning.

STRATEGY

Michael and his advisory team implemented a multi-year partial Roth conversion strategy supported by a coordinated combination of insurance contracts.

Rather than converting assets in a single high-tax year, conversions were executed gradually within targeted tax brackets.

To preserve capital and manage earnings during the conversion period, the strategy incorporated:

A cash value life insurance policy designed to build tax-deferred cash value, provide tax-diversified liquidity, and support long-term legacy objectives

A conservatively structured annuity designed to preserve earnings and reduce volatility during tax-sensitive conversion years

Michael and his advisory team implemented a multi-year partial Roth conversion strategy supported by a coordinated combination of insurance contracts.

Rather than converting assets in a single high-tax year, conversions were executed gradually within targeted tax brackets.

OUTCOME

By the time Michael reached RMD age, a meaningful portion of his qualified assets had been repositioned into Roth accounts. Projected RMDs were lower, taxable income became more predictable, and IRMAA exposure was easier to manage. He entered retirement with improved tax diversification, greater income flexibility, and enhanced control over future exits.

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KEY TAKEAWAY

Life is full of exits. For affluent retirees, partial Roth conversions supported by insurance-based planning can help manage tax risk, preserve capital during conversion years, and create long-term flexibility across income and legacy goals.

DISCLOSURE

This case study is for educational purposes only and does not constitute tax, legal, or investment advice. Results vary based on policy design, funding, insurer strength, tax law, and individual circumstances.