Yearfold journal
Field notes on planning a real retirement
The Yearfold journal is honest, sourced writing about retirement planning under 2026 federal rules — the post-OBBBA tax brackets, the post-SECURE 2.0 RMD ages, the Social Security taxability thresholds that haven’t moved since 1993, and the Medicare IRMAA tiers that move every year. Every post is written by Yearfold’s founder, every load-bearing number traces to a primary source (IRS, SSA, CMS, Congressional Research Service, FRED), and every page carries the date it was last reviewed against those primary sources.
What you won’t find here: pump-and-dump stock picks, advisor-affiliate funnels, or generic “invest in low-cost index funds” restated for the thousandth time. What you will find: the math behind the 4% rule’s actual claim and its limits, when a Roth conversion ladder pays and when it costs more than it saves, what 2026 brackets really look like after the One Big Beautiful Bill Act, how the Social Security “tax torpedo” reshapes a middle-income retiree’s real marginal rate, and what Monte Carlo simulation actually means when a calculator claims to use it.
May 27, 2026 · Mindaugas Laucius
The IRMAA cliff: how one extra dollar of retirement income can cost you thousands in Medicare premiums
IRMAA isn't a tax — it's a cliff. Cross a Medicare income threshold by a single dollar and your annual premium can jump $1,148 to $1,736 per person, in full, with no phase-in. Here are the official 2026 brackets, the 2-year lookback that makes it stealthy, and the legal ways retirees stay under each tier.
news · public-policy · medicare · irmaa · retirement-tax
May 18, 2026 · Mindaugas Laucius
The TCJA cliff was averted: what 2026 tax brackets actually look like
TCJA was made permanent by the One Big Beautiful Bill Act in July 2025. Here's what 2026 tax brackets actually look like, how the standard deduction changed, and what a typical retiree saves vs. the doomsday scenario most blogs still warn about.
news · public-policy · taxes · tcja · retirement-tax
