Finance in Texas

Texas Finance Intel

Sunday, May 24, 2026
2 min read
4 stories

Welcome to your daily briefing on finance developments in Texas. Today we're covering 4 key stories including updates on texas finance headlines, background & context. Let's dive in.

1

Texas Finance Headlines

1 story

1.1

Texas First Bank SBA Loans position TX growth financing with lower down payments.

Texas First Bank highlights SBA Loans for small businesses, emphasizing lower down payments and competitive terms as a way to help businesses grow.

Why It Matters

For finance professionals in TX, this signals a practical SBA-based funding option to offer clients seeking expansion financing with potentially reduced upfront capital requirements.

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2

Background & Context

3 stories

2.1

Medicare IRMAA: the 2-year lookback that catches retirees mid-conversion.

Medicare Part B and D premiums above the standard amount apply when modified AGI exceeds thresholds — but the lookback is two years (so 2026 IRMAA uses 2024 income). Roth conversions or retirement-account distributions that bump MAGI in the lookback year can produce surcharges that hit two years later, often unexpectedly.

Why It Matters

The IRMAA premium increases can run thousands per year per spouse and continue for the entire surcharge year. Planning conversions around the lookback is a meaningful retirement-tax variable.

2.2

Mega-backdoor Roth eligibility hinges on plan provisions, not income.

The mega-backdoor Roth strategy requires a 401(k) plan that allows after-tax contributions AND in-service distributions or in-plan Roth conversions. Without both features, the strategy is unavailable regardless of income. Many plans permit one but not the other.

Why It Matters

Highly compensated participants who plan around mega-backdoor savings need to confirm both plan features at the start of the year, not when contributions are due. The planning window is the calendar year.

2.3

Grantor and non-grantor trust status: a tax structure choice.

A grantor trust is taxed to the grantor on income; the trust itself is invisible for income-tax purposes. A non-grantor trust pays its own tax at compressed brackets that hit top rate at relatively low income (~$15K). The choice between structures depends on the grantor's tax rate, the trust's expected income, and distribution patterns.

Why It Matters

Default drafting often produces grantor trusts when non-grantor would have been preferable, or vice versa. Restructuring after the fact requires complex amendments and may have unintended tax consequences.

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Issue Summary

DateMay 24, 2026
Stories4
Sections2
Read Time2 min
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