Avior Wealth Management, LLC

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Financial Planning and Investment Management services are provided by Avior Wealth Management, LLC, a SEC registered investment advisor. All investments are subject to risk, including loss of principal. Nothing contained herein should be construed as legal or tax advice. Please consult your attorney regarding legal / estate planning or your CPA regarding tax questions. On April 1st 2011, the Campb

ell Wealth Management Group, Inc combined with Nelson-VanDenburg & Associates to form: Nelson, VanDenburg & Campbell Wealth Management Group, LLC. On September 1, 2021 Nelson, Van Denburg and Campbell rebranded to Avior Wealth Management, LLC ("Avior"). Avior is an SEC-registered investment advisor located in Omaha, NE. Avior and its representatives are in compliance with the current registration and/or notice filing requirements imposed upon SEC-registered advisors by those states in which we maintains clients. Avior may only transact business in those states in which it is notice filed, or qualifies for an exemption or exclusion from notification requirements. Important information describing Avior’s business operations, services, and fees can be viewed on the SEC’s website at www.adviserinfo.sec.gov. Avior will provide its Form ADV disclosure brochure, which serves as the firm’s disclosure document, to all clients. Copies are also available to interested parties upon request. This site is published in the United States for residents of the United States. Avior is not soliciting business in international jurisdictions where it is not registered.

Tax planning, portfolio construction, income sequencing, and estate strategy all converge the moment a liquidity event c...
06/16/2026

Tax planning, portfolio construction, income sequencing, and estate strategy all converge the moment a liquidity event closes. A sale large enough to fund retirement triggers federal capital gains of up to 20%¹ plus the 3.8% NIIT², before state taxes and the decisions made in the first twelve months shape outcomes for decades. These are the mistakes that show up most often.



Sources:

1- https://www.cnbc.com/2025/10/09/capital-gains-tax-2026-federal.html
2- https://www.irs.gov/individuals/net-investment-income-tax

A successful business sale or major equity payout converts decades of effort into a sum of cash that arrives almost over...
06/15/2026

A successful business sale or major equity payout converts decades of effort into a sum of cash that arrives almost overnight. The window between closing day and the following April 15 carries significant weight in determining how much of the proceeds actually fund retirement. A liquidity event typically triggers federal capital gains tax of 0%, 15%, or 20%¹, plus a 3.8% Net Investment Income Tax² for higher earners, plus state tax depending on residency. A sale large enough to fund retirement almost always lands in the 20% federal bracket, pushing the effective federal rate to 23.8% before state taxes enter the calculation. At a 3.5% withdrawal rate, a hypothetical $8.5 million to $9.5 million after-tax proceeds supports roughly $300,000 to $330,000 of pretax annual income, before any Social Security benefits. The sustainable withdrawal calculation, paired with a measured deployment of proceeds over six to eighteen months, tends to be the most important work that gets skipped in the excitement of a closing. The investment problem also changes fundamentally: operating risk is replaced by allocation risk, and the right answer depends on age, spending needs, and tolerance for volatility.

Superfunding is the strategy of front-loading five years' worth of annual exclusion gifts into a 529 in a single tax yea...
06/14/2026

Superfunding is the strategy of front-loading five years' worth of annual exclusion gifts into a 529 in a single tax year. A single donor can contribute $95,000 per beneficiary¹ in 2026, and a married couple using gift-splitting can double that to $190,000 per beneficiary¹. The IRS treats the contribution as if spread evenly across five years for gift tax purposes, with no reduction of the lifetime exemption. Done well, superfunding can move a substantial chunk of net worth out of the estate while compounding tax-free for years. Done without the right planning, it creates constraints worth understanding in advance.

Sources: 1- https://www.fidelity.com/learning-center/personal-finance/529-rollover-to-roth

The standard worry about aggressive 529 funding used to be straightforward: what if the child wins a full scholarship, s...
06/13/2026

The standard worry about aggressive 529 funding used to be straightforward: what if the child wins a full scholarship, skips college, or finishes with money left over? Non-qualified withdrawals face ordinary income tax on the earnings portion plus a 10% federal penalty¹. But several paths now exist for unused funds that avoid that outcome entirely. Under SECURE 2.0¹, beneficiaries can roll up to $35,000 lifetime from a 529 into their own Roth IRA, provided the account has been open at least 15 years and the beneficiary has earned income. Up to $10,000 per beneficiary may go toward student loan repayment. Beneficiaries can be changed to a sibling, cousin, parent, grandparent, or even the account owner, without tax consequences. A 529 opened for one grandchild might, decades later, be redirected to a second grandchild, a daughter-in-law pursuing a graduate degree, or a great-grandchild just starting school. Families who think strategically about beneficiary chains can keep a single 529 productive across multiple generations of education funding.

Grandparent-owned 529 accounts offer distinct estate planning advantages that parent-owned accounts do not. Contribution...
06/12/2026

Grandparent-owned 529 accounts offer distinct estate planning advantages that parent-owned accounts do not. Contributions leave the grandparent's estate, the grandparent retains the ability to change beneficiaries if circumstances shift, and recent FAFSA simplification changes eliminated the prior penalty grandparent-owned accounts imposed on federal financial aid calculations. Combined with superfunding and direct tuition payments, a grandparent-owned 529 can become one of the more efficient wealth transfer tools available to affluent families.

06/11/2026

A 529 performs one of the rarer tricks in the tax code, moving meaningful wealth out of a donor's taxable estate while letting the donor keep control of the account. The 2026 annual exclusion is $19,000 per recipient¹, and married couples can superfund $190,000 per beneficiary in a single year² using the five-year election, with no lifetime exemption reduction. Direct tuition payments made straight to a qualifying school are excluded from gift tax entirely³, separate from the annual exclusion and the lifetime exemption, and combined with annual 529 contributions that can move nearly $100,000 per grandchild per year out of the estate. Under SECURE 2.0⁴, unused 529 assets can roll into the beneficiary's Roth IRA, up to $35,000 lifetime, provided the account has been open at least 15 years. Beneficiary substitution rules allow redirection to siblings, cousins, grandchildren, and other family members without tax consequences, keeping a single account productive across multiple generations. Starting in 2026, K-12 tuition qualifies for tax-free 529 withdrawals up to $20,000 per beneficiary annually⁵. Affluent families who treat the 529 strictly as a college savings vehicle are using a fraction of what the account can do. Schedule a consultation with Avior to review what your current 529 structure could be doing better.



Sources:

1- https://www.irs.gov/newsroom/irs-releases-tax-inflation-adjustments-for-tax-year-2026-including-amendments-from-the-one-big-beautiful-bill
2- https://www.fidelity.com/learning-center/personal-finance/529-rollover-to-roth
3- https://www.irs.gov/businesses/small-businesses-self-employed/frequently-asked-questions-on-gift-taxes
4- https://www.savingforcollege.com/article/roll-over-529-plan-funds-to-a-roth-ira
5- https://www.irs.gov/newsroom/529-plans-questions-and-answers

Direct tuition payments made straight to a qualifying school are excluded from gift tax entirely¹, separate from the ann...
06/10/2026

Direct tuition payments made straight to a qualifying school are excluded from gift tax entirely¹, separate from the annual exclusion and the lifetime exemption. Grandparents paying $60,000 of a grandchild's private school tuition directly to the school, while simultaneously contributing the $38,000 annual exclusion² to that grandchild's 529, move nearly $100,000 per year per grandchild out of their estate without using any lifetime exemption at all. Multiply that across several grandchildren and the numbers add up quickly. The 529 itself adds another layer, with tax-free growth, qualified withdrawals free of federal income tax, and the flexibility to change beneficiaries to other family members without tax consequences. Starting in 2026, K-12 tuition qualifies for tax-free 529 withdrawals up to $20,000 per beneficiary annually³. For affluent families who plan to fund education at any level, the combination of direct tuition payments and 529 contributions offers a particularly efficient path for moving wealth out of the estate while still serving a real family need.

A 529 occupies a rare position in the tax code: contributions move out of the donor's taxable estate, yet the donor reta...
06/09/2026

A 529 occupies a rare position in the tax code: contributions move out of the donor's taxable estate, yet the donor retains legal control of the account, picks the investments, can change the beneficiary, and may recover the funds under certain circumstances. Almost no other vehicle splits estate treatment from control this way. The 2026 annual exclusion is $19,000 per recipient¹, and married couples can move $38,000 per beneficiary¹ annually without reducing the lifetime exemption.



Sources:

1- https://www.irs.gov/newsroom/irs-releases-tax-inflation-adjustments-for-tax-year-2026-including-amendments-from-the-one-big-beautiful-bill

A 529 performs one of the rarer tricks in the tax code, moving meaningful wealth out of a donor's taxable estate while l...
06/08/2026

A 529 performs one of the rarer tricks in the tax code, moving meaningful wealth out of a donor's taxable estate while letting the donor keep control of the money. Tuition turns out to be only the visible function. Substantial estate planning machinery sits underneath. The 2026 annual gift tax exclusion is $19,000 per recipient¹, and married couples can contribute $38,000 per beneficiary¹ through gift-splitting, with no lifetime exemption reduction. Superfunding allows a single donor to contribute $95,000 in a single year² per beneficiary, with married couples doubling that to $190,000. Under SECURE 2.0³, unused 529 assets can roll into the beneficiary's Roth IRA, up to $35,000 lifetime, turning an education account into a retirement seeding vehicle. And direct tuition payments made straight to a qualifying school are excluded from gift tax entirely⁴, separate from the annual exclusion and the lifetime exemption. Affluent families who treat the 529 strictly as a college savings vehicle are using maybe a third of what the account can actually do.

For affluent households, retirement requires coordination across income planning, tax strategy, estate structure, and in...
06/07/2026

For affluent households, retirement requires coordination across income planning, tax strategy, estate structure, and investment policy, all at the same time. High-net-worth Americans estimate they need $2.67 million to retire comfortably¹, per the 2026 Northwestern Mutual Planning and Progress Study, and 60% of retirees report spending more than expected on insurance premiums². These reviews address the areas most likely to create problems if left unexamined before the transition begins.



Sources:

1- https://www.kiplinger.com/retirement/magic-number-to-retire-comfortably
2- https://finance.yahoo.com/news/retirees-spending-more-planned-4-124804052.html

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14301 FNB Pkwy, Ste 110
Omaha, NE
68154

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