Skip Navigation

Financial Planning & Wealth Management

Our goal is to help individuals and families make the most of their time and money through customized financial planning utilizing key retirement, estate, and tax strategies.
Building a Plan That Aligns With Your Life Goals
You deserve a financial plan that reflects your values, dreams, and responsibilities. We work with you to create a customized financial plan that is designed to help you make confident decisions - whether you're preparing for retirement, savings for your child's future, or managing sudden wealth. Reducing your financial stress and helping you focus on what matters most are our priorities.
Investing With Purpose and Discipline
We utilize an evidence-based strategy that seeks to grow and protect your wealth. Our investment management approach is rooted in decades of academic research. We help you build a globally diversified portfolio of investments, stay invested during volatile markets, and align your investments with your long-term goals.
Minimizing Taxes, Maximizing What You Keep
You can keep more of what you earn with proactive tax strategies. From tax-efficient investing, to Roth conversions and charitable giving, we introduce opportunities for you to reduce your tax burden now and in the future.
Planning for Retirement On Your Terms
You want to retire with clarity and confidence. We can illustrate how to maximize your Social Security benefits, and help you understand the cost structure of retiree medical care. We work with you to model and evaluate how much money you will need, how long your money will last, and how to structure your retirement distributions, so your retirement is both sustainable and fulfilling.
Protecting Your Legacy and Your Loved ones
Your wealth should benefit the people you love and the causes you support. We help you integrate estate planning, beneficiary designations, and charitable giving, to maximize what you can pass on to others. 
Supporting Families with Unique Planning Needs
We are passionate about supporting families with children and adults with disabilities. If someone you love has special needs, your financial planning must be tailored to protect their benefits, provide for their care, and maximize their opportunities. Our decades of experience living and working in the disability community can help you optimize the future for your loved one.
Learn More
Pre-Mortem Financial and Estate Planning
Pre-Mortem Financial and Estate Planning
Transcript

Hi, I’m Mike Walther from Oak Wealth Advisors with a different approach to planning.

I want everyone to think about what’s most important in their planning and whether or not the financial planning they’ve been doing actually addresses those things. What we’re talking about today is not the administrative planning that’s probably already been done for you, which would include estate planning. Medical directives, end of life planning, funeral and burial wishes, things you’ve probably already communicated to your family that you’ve completed with your attorney or financial planner. What I’m talking about is the things that are truly most important to you and to your family. We’d call that pre-mortem planning.

What would happen if you were gone tomorrow? What would you regret not doing? What relationships should have been repaired that wasn’t? So if you gave yourself a month or a year. And had to get the most important things done. What would those priorities be? Let’s focus on those together and see how we can help you get them done. Let’s wipe out the top of the bucket list. Maybe we can’t complete everything, but let’s do the things that are the very most important to you and your family.
In addition, when you’re gone, how do you want to be remembered? Is there something you can do to make sure that that legacy that you have in mind actually gets carried out when you’re gone?

And then maybe most importantly, if you’re in charge of someone else’s care. Be it a parent or a child with a disability, what are those challenges they have? Is it something related to mobility? Is it decision-making or communication? Well, if you’re not here to assist with those vital elements of their life, what’s going to happen? Think about what’s happening if you’re gone for just a day and can’t be involved in those processes. What if you’re gone for a week? What kinds of supports would be needed? What if you looked at it for an entire month? And said if I wasn’t there, all these things would fall apart in my absence.

Let’s get those things documented, whether it’s a routine, medicine or medications, likes and dislikes. What are their abilities and their challenges? And also what’s important to the family? What are those religious or family traditions that should be carried on if you’re not around? Now, I know that’s a lot to try to take in, but it’s probably the most important focus you can have for your planning and to assist you with getting all that organized and documented and shared.

There are several online support tools from Danny Plan to Vest Life to Ellie Plan, all of which assist families in organizing and sharing their most important information. So we hope today’s information will be helpful to you and your family to really focus on what’s most important to you. There are no right or wrong answers, but getting laser focus on what’s most important and working with a firm like Oak Wealth Advisors to help you execute and get that planning done. It can be absolutely beneficial to everyone in your entire family.

With that, we’ll leave you with our contact information and we’ll hope to hear from you soon. Best wishes.

Top 10 Special Needs Planning Tip #6: Review Beneficiary Designations & Account Titles
Top 10 Special Needs Planning Tip #6: Review Beneficiary Designations & Account Titles
Transcript

Hi, I’m Aaron Osterberg, Associate Consultant at Oak Wealth Advisors and I’m excited to share tip #6 in our Top 10 Special Needs Financial Planning series.

Tip number 6 is to review beneficiary designations and account titles.

This includes IRAs, retirement accounts, and life insurance policies. It’s crucial to name a special needs trust as the beneficiary rather than listing your loved one with special needs directly. Doing so helps preserve their eligibility for means-tested benefits they may be receiving. Remember, beneficiary designations take precedence over your will, so reviewing and updating these regularly is an essential step to ensure your wishes are reflected.

Thank you for listening and look out for tip #7 coming in December.