At Heritage Financial Services, financial planning is never one-size-fits-all. Many of the most impactful planning opportunities are tied to specific ages—sometimes because of tax law, sometimes because of benefit eligibility, and sometimes because a planning window briefly opens and then closes.
Understanding age-based milestones can help you make informed decisions and avoid missed opportunities. Below is an age-based overview of key financial planning moments to keep on your radar.
Children – Laying the Foundation Early
Trump Accounts (New under OBBBA)
For children under age 18, the One Big Beautiful Bill Act (OBBBA) introduced a new tax-advantaged savings vehicle commonly referred to as a “Trump Account.” Eligible children may receive a one-time $1,000 federal contribution. These accounts are designed for long-term saving and investing, with rules around contributions, investments, and future withdrawals that differ meaningfully from 529 plans or custodial accounts. Because of these differences, early guidance is important. Additional details to support decision-making are expected later in 2026.
529 Education Planning
529 plans remain a cornerstone of education planning. In addition to tax-free growth for qualified education expenses, newer rules allow certain unused 529 balances to be rolled into a beneficiary’s Roth IRA over time. This added flexibility makes early planning even more valuable for families.
Ages 18–21: When Child Accounts Become Adult Assets
UTMA/UGMA Accounts
When a child reaches the age of termination—often age 21, depending on state law—assets held in a custodial UTMA or UGMA account legally become theirs. This transition can have meaningful implications for taxes, spending behavior, and long-term planning.
College Aid and Cash-Flow Considerations
Assets owned outright by a young adult may impact financial aid eligibility and family cash flow. Planning ahead of this milestone can help avoid unintended consequences and preserve flexibility.
Age 50: Retirement Catch-Up Contributions Begin
Workplace Plans and IRAs
Turning 50 unlocks the ability to make catch-up contributions to employer-sponsored retirement plans and IRAs. These additional contributions can materially improve retirement readiness and, in many cases, reduce current income taxes.
Age 55: Health Savings Account (HSA) Catch-Ups
Enhanced Healthcare Planning
At age 55, individuals eligible for an HSA can make additional catch-up contributions. HSAs offer a rare triple tax advantage: deductible contributions, tax-deferred growth, and tax-free withdrawals for qualified medical expenses. This makes them a powerful tool for both current healthcare costs and future retirement planning.
Ages 60–63: A Short Window for Larger Retirement Contributions
Enhanced Catch-Up Opportunities
Recent law changes allow higher retirement plan catch-up contributions during this narrow age range. For late-career earners, this can be a valuable opportunity to accelerate savings in the final working years.
Ages 62–70: Social Security Timing Decisions
Claim Early or Delay
Social Security benefits can begin as early as age 62, but claiming early results in permanently reduced benefits. Delaying benefits beyond full retirement age increases monthly payments—by roughly 8% per year—up to age 70.
Why Timing Matters
For some households, the timing decision has a modest impact. For others, it can amount to a six-figure difference over a lifetime. Marital status, longevity expectations, taxes, and cash-flow needs all play an important role in determining the optimal strategy.
Age 65: Medicare and New Senior Tax Benefits
Medicare Enrollment
Turning 65 triggers Medicare eligibility and a series of important enrollment decisions. Income levels can affect Medicare premiums, making coordinated tax and income planning especially important.
New Senior Deduction (OBBBA)
OBBBA also introduced a new federal senior deduction for individuals age 65 and older. Understanding how this deduction interacts with other deductions, charitable giving, and income timing can help improve after-tax outcomes.
Age 70½: Charitable Giving from IRAs
Qualified Charitable Distributions (QCDs)
Even though required minimum distributions now begin later, individuals age 70½ and older can make Qualified Charitable Distributions directly from an IRA to a qualified charity. These gifts can support charitable goals while reducing taxable income.
Age 73 and Beyond: Required Minimum Distributions
RMD Planning
Most traditional retirement accounts require minimum distributions beginning at age 73, with future increases to age 75 for younger retirees. The first RMD has special timing rules, and thoughtful coordination with taxes, charitable giving, and other income sources is essential.
The Bigger Picture
Each of these age-based milestones represents an opportunity—not a requirement. The most effective financial planning happens when these moments are anticipated and coordinated as part of a broader, long-term strategy.
Your wealth management team can help you understand which of these planning opportunities apply to you and how to integrate them into a cohesive, evolving financial plan.
