Bingham & Hensley is a financial planning organization established in 1966 by two individuals, Norman Hensley and Robert Bingham.
 
Today, Robert Bingham’s son, Jeff Bingham, serves as President of Bingham & Hensley. 
 
As a firm, it is our goal to serve the greater Tri-City area advising retirees and potential retirees through long-term relationships. 
 
Bingham & Hensley specializes in all of the critical areas of financial planning such as income and distribution planning, investments management, estate planning, retirement planning, risk management, tax reduction planning, life insurance and long-term care planning. 
 
Bingham & Hensley takes pride in being your hometown financial planning firm while also bringing endless investment opportunities through our professional affiliations. 
 
We strive to listen, ask questions, and evaluate through the use of analytical tools before making recommendations.  Investment decisions are made through educated analysis and personal risk tolerance. 
 
We never push an in-house product but constantly search for best-fit options for our clients.  Bingham & Hensley professionals believe that financial planning is a process, not a product or a cookie cutter solution. 
 
It involves discovery and developing of a plan to obtain the goals of each individual client. 

 

Loan Payoff

How much will it cost to pay off a loan over its lifetime?

Mortgage Acceleration

This calculator can help you determine how soon you can pay off your mortgage.

Capital Gains Taxes

Estimate short-term and long-term federal capital gains taxes

Lifetime Earnings

This calculator is designed to help you attach a dollar figure to your life’s work.

More Calculators →

Exchange-Traded Funds: In a Class by Themselves

In 2010, the combined assets of the nation's ETFs topped more than $800 billion. ETFs are unique investments that share some similarities with mutual funds but trade like stocks. ETFs have some appealing characteristics, including trading flexibility, potentially lower expense ratios, tax efficiency, and diversification.

Protecting What May Be Your Most Valuable Asset

Statistics indicate 43% of 40-year-olds will suffer at least one long-term disability (lasting 90 days or longer) before age 65. Disability income insurance could help protect your most valuable asset: your ability to earn an income.

The Difference Between the Debt and the Deficit

The terms "debt" and "deficit" are often used interchangeably to describe the federal government's financial situation, yet they have significantly different meanings. This explanation of the budget deficit and the national debt may help readers understand the conversation.

Fixed for Life

More than 40% of Americans ages 36 and older are at risk of running out of money in retirement, according to a retirement readiness study. In fact, almost one-third of people with upper-middle incomes and 13% with high incomes may not be able to pay for basic retirement expenses and uninsured health-care costs after two decades in retirement.

More Newsletters →