About Walter Storholt

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So far Walter Storholt has created 34 blog entries.

The 4% Rule vs. the 8% Rule: What’s the Right Withdrawal Rate for You?

By |2026-07-08T21:17:56+00:00July 9th, 2026|Podcast|

Dave Ramsey has built one of the most recognized brands in personal finance. Millions of people have followed his advice out of debt and into savings. But when it comes to how much you should pull from your retirement accounts each year, Ramsey takes a position that some financial professionals find hard to get behind. Today we're breaking it down: what he says, what the research says, and what your advisor actually thinks.

What Your 4th of July Traditions Can Teach You About Money

By |2026-06-23T15:18:26+00:00June 25th, 2026|Podcast|

This year's Fourth of July carries a little extra weight as we celebrate 250 years of American independence, and that's worth a moment. But between the hot dogs, the parades, and the fireworks, we started thinking about how many of our favorite holiday traditions have a pretty natural financial parallel.

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Maverick, Goose, and the Financial Danger Zone

By |2026-06-09T19:57:39+00:00June 11th, 2026|Podcast|

It's summer — and nothing says summer quite like Tom Cruise as Maverick soaring across the sky in Top Gun. This year marks the 40th anniversary of the original film, and with Tom Cruise's birthday on July 3rd, we figured it was the perfect excuse to revisit some of the most iconic quotes from the franchise and see what they have to say about your financial life.

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Bigger Pension Now… or Security Later?

By |2026-05-26T21:42:00+00:00May 28th, 2026|Podcast|

When retirement is around the corner, some of the biggest decisions aren’t about when to retire; they’re about how income continues if one spouse is gone. Pension options can look straightforward on paper, but the tradeoffs behind them are anything but. Today, we’re walking through a listener question that highlights a common decision couples face.

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Three Questions From People Thinking About Retiring In 2026

By |2026-05-14T14:37:53+00:00May 14th, 2026|Podcast|

We're doing something a little different today. Three listeners wrote in with variations of the same question- am I ready to retire in 2026? Same question, three very different situations, three very different answers.  

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You’ve Managed Your Own Money Successfully – Why Would You Need an Advisor Now?

By |2026-04-08T21:49:15+00:00April 23rd, 2026|Podcast|

We heard from a listener who has managed their own money for years and done well. So why would they need an advisor now that retirement is around the corner?

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A New Proposal Might Cap Your Social Security Payments

By |2026-04-08T21:03:52+00:00April 9th, 2026|Podcast|

A new proposal out of Washington is adding a fresh angle to the Social Security solvency debate. Today, we're breaking down what's proposed, if it might cost you money in the future, and what questions it raises for anyone planning around Social Security right now.

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Mailbag: Extra Cash, Early Retirement Health Insurance & Retirement Taxes

By |2026-03-17T12:37:15+00:00March 19th, 2026|Podcast|

This week on Strategic Planning, the team answers listener questions about smart financial decisions as retirement approaches. They discuss what to do with extra cash flow after paying off your mortgage, options for covering health insurance if you retire before Medicare eligibility, and how taxes work when withdrawing money from retirement accounts. Tune in for practical insights to help you think through these common retirement planning challenges.

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Tax Mistakes New Retirees Make

By |2026-03-04T23:03:23+00:00March 5th, 2026|Podcast|

Nobody likes tax season. But for new retirees, it can come with a few unwelcome surprises. The rules have changed, the income sources have shifted, and strategies that made sense during your working years may no longer apply. Today we're looking at some of the biggest tax mistakes retirees make as discussed in a recent Kiplinger article and whether these match what we see in the real world. 

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Inherited a House — Are the Taxes Really That Bad?

By |2026-02-18T13:50:06+00:00February 19th, 2026|Podcast|

When a parent passes away, emotions and finances tend to collide, especially when real estate is involved. One of the most common things that stalls families is fear of taxes, even when that fear isn’t fully understood. Today’s listener question is about an inherited home and hesitant siblings.

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