'Surgery Partners employees should treat the first spouse’s death as a bracket stress test—model RMDs early, pace Roth conversions, engage both partners, and coordinate with tax and legal professionals before surprises hit.' — Brent Wolf, a representative of The Retirement Group, a division of Wealth Enhancement.
'For Surgery Partners employees, charting how assets shift to a surviving spouse can reduce unexpected surprises. Talking to qualified tax and estate advisors can help.' — Brent Wolf, a representative of The Retirement Group, a division of Wealth Enhancement.
In this article, we will discuss:
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The horizontal transfer of wealth between spouses and its growing impact on estate planning for Surgery Partners families.
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The tax implications of Required Minimum Distributions (RMDs) and strategic Roth conversions to manage income brackets and help preserve assets.
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The evolving role of charitable giving and spousal financial engagement in shaping effective multi-generational legacy plans.
Major wealth transfers are anticipated over the coming decades. By 2045, more than $84 trillion is expected to change hands—$11.9 trillion to charities and $72.6 trillion to heirs and family members 1 —and many of those dollars will first move “across” to surviving spouses rather than straight “down” to children.
Because women often live longer than men, a sizable share of assets may shift laterally to widows before any vertical bequests occur, a point stressed by Wealth Enhancement senior wealth advisor Mike Corgiat. This is important for Surgery Partners retirees with sizable IRAs to note.
Pre-boomer generations are projected to pass $15.8 trillion in the next decade, while baby boomers may transfer nearly $53 trillion 1 —frequently after the first spouse dies—illustrating how wealth rarely travels in a clean vertical line.
This horizontal detour has real implications for required minimum distributions (RMDs), retirement savings, and estate tax exposure that can affect Surgery Partners employees late in retirement.
Current rules require RMDs to begin at age 73 for those born 1951–1959 and at 75 for those born in 1960 or later, and a surviving spouse can often roll an inherited IRA into their own to delay distributions—sometimes compressing taxable income into fewer years.
Brent Wolf, a retirement income planner with Wealth Enhancement, notes that once RMDs start and the survivor files as single, identical withdrawals can land in higher brackets—an issue that can surprise a survivor when income sources are already shifting.
Strategic Roth conversions while both spouses are alive—often in the 60s or early 70s—may help trim future RMDs and give the survivor more control, a tactic many Surgery Partners retirees may want to evaluate while they still benefit from joint tax brackets.
Corgiat emphasizes that conversions executed at comparatively lower rates can lessen the tax hit on both the survivor and heirs, while Wolf adds that thoughtful timing lowers the odds of large, forced taxable withdrawals later—key considerations for Surgery Partners employees eyeing estate efficiency.
Philanthropy is shifting too, as more affluent families embrace “living legacy” giving so they can witness impact, but a sudden asset windfall can delay or confuse charitable intent if the less-involved spouse isn’t already engaged in the broader plan.
Wolf recommends that spouses who haven’t driven the finances start participating early, since many women may ultimately steer multimillion-dollar portfolios and will benefit from hands-on experience before the transfer moment arrives.
Coordinated planning across tax, investment, and estate disciplines can answer pivotal questions for Surgery Partners retirees: How large might RMDs become with only one personal exemption? Would spreading Roth conversions over several years keep income in more favorable brackets? Are beneficiary designations current on retirement plans and insurance? Do charitable goals call for donor-advised funds, qualified charitable distributions (QCDs) from IRAs, or a family foundation? Has the estate been reviewed for credit shelter or portability strategies and potential federal or state estate taxes?
The death of the first spouse often triggers the most dramatic ownership and tax changes, so acting earlier—stress-testing single-life cash flows, harvesting gains or losses, accelerating withdrawals in low-income years, and reviewing insurance and titling—can materially influence outcomes for Surgery Partners retirees.
Those headline numbers—$84.4 trillion overall, $72.6 trillion to heirs, $11.9 trillion to charities—signal the size of what’s coming, but the net amount that actually arrives depends on how transfers occur and which tax rules apply, especially for families with layered benefits and investments.
As this horizontal phase of wealth transfer approaches, Surgery Partners employees may benefit by preparing actively to pass the baton to a suriving spouse.
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Analogy: Picture a family’s wealth as a relay baton on an L-shaped track headed toward a $84.4 trillion finish line—$72.6 trillion earmarked for heirs and $11.9 trillion for charity—and the baton must first take a sideways turn between spouses, a reality many Surgery Partners couples will face before assets sprint down the straightaway to children and philanthropy.
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Sources:
1. Cerulli Associates. “ Cerulli Anticipates $84 Trillion in Wealth Transfers Through 2045 .' 20 Jan. 2022.
2. MassMutual. “ The horizontal wealth transfer: Redefining women’s wealth ,” by Shelley Gigante, 10 Mar. 2025.
3. MarketWatch. “ When a spouse dies, there can be a ‘tax explosion’ for the one left behind ,” by Beth Pinsker, 18 Jan. 2025.
What type of retirement savings plan does Surgery Partners offer to its employees?
Surgery Partners offers a 401(k) retirement savings plan to its employees.
Does Surgery Partners match employee contributions to the 401(k) plan?
Yes, Surgery Partners provides a matching contribution to employee contributions made to the 401(k) plan, subject to certain limits.
What is the eligibility requirement to participate in the Surgery Partners 401(k) plan?
Employees of Surgery Partners are generally eligible to participate in the 401(k) plan after completing a specified period of service, typically 30 days.
Can employees of Surgery Partners choose how their 401(k) contributions are invested?
Yes, employees at Surgery Partners can choose from a variety of investment options for their 401(k) contributions.
How much can employees contribute to the Surgery Partners 401(k) plan each year?
Employees can contribute up to the IRS annual limit for 401(k) contributions, which is adjusted periodically. For 2023, the limit is $22,500, with an additional catch-up contribution for those aged 50 and older.
When can employees of Surgery Partners start withdrawing from their 401(k) accounts?
Employees can typically begin withdrawing from their Surgery Partners 401(k) accounts at age 59½ without penalties, subject to plan rules.
Does Surgery Partners allow for loans against the 401(k) plan?
Yes, Surgery Partners allows employees to take loans against their 401(k) balance, subject to specific terms and conditions outlined in the plan.
What happens to my 401(k) balance if I leave Surgery Partners?
If you leave Surgery Partners, you can choose to roll over your 401(k) balance to another retirement account, leave it in the Surgery Partners plan, or cash it out, though cashing out may incur taxes and penalties.
Is there a vesting schedule for the Surgery Partners 401(k) matching contributions?
Yes, Surgery Partners has a vesting schedule for matching contributions, meaning employees must work for a certain period before they fully own the matched funds.
How can employees at Surgery Partners access their 401(k) account information?
Employees can access their Surgery Partners 401(k) account information through the plan’s online portal or by contacting the plan administrator.