We specialize in serving
We Know the Questions You Are Asking

- Should I take the pension or lump sum?
- When should I retire—and will I regret it?
- How do I make my 401(k) last if I leave work early?
- What do I do about health insurance before Medicare?
- Can I afford to retire now, or should I wait?
- What happens if my spouse is still working?
- What’s the smartest way to take distributions—and avoid penalties or taxes?
What Makes Automotive Planning So Different?
Automotive financial planning isn’t just retirement planning — it’s about navigating pensions, buyouts, contracts, healthcare shifts, and industry volatility in a way most other industries never face.
Pensions and Buyouts
- Many auto workers still have defined benefit pensions (rare in other industries).
- Lump-sum pension offers vs. lifetime annuity options can have long-term tax and risk implications.
- Frequent buyout packages (sometimes with short decision windows) make timing critical.
401(k) + Profit-Sharing Nuances
- Auto companies often offer profit-sharing contributions that vary annually with company performance.
- Coordinating 401(k) choices with profit-sharing, bonus structures, and union-negotiated contributions is a planning challenge.
Healthcare + Early Retirement Coverage
- Shifting retiree healthcare coverage and coordination with Medicare/Medigap are recurring complexities.
- Early retirement offers often hinge on whether healthcare is included — this is a massive financial variable.
Stock & Deferred Compensation (Executives & Engineers)
- Many salaried or management employees at Big Three and suppliers receive stock options, RSUs, or deferred comp.
- These require advanced tax planning and coordination with retirement income strategies.
Volatility of the Auto Industry
- Plant closures, relocations, and layoffs are more common than in other industries.
- Economic downturns (2008 recession, COVID shutdowns, supply chain shortages, EV transition) disproportionately impact auto employees.
- Planning has to factor in the “boom-and-bust” cycles of automotive.
Spousal Coordination
- Common that one spouse has rich benefits (pension/healthcare) and the other has different coverage.
- Coordinating benefits is critical to avoid duplication or missing out on better options.
Legacy & Generational Wealth
- Automotive families often have multi-generational ties to Ford, GM, Stellantis, or suppliers.
- Planning isn’t just about the employee — it’s about passing on benefits, pensions, or stock options to children.
