Being in my mid-50s and having read some of Suze Orman's columns and books, I came across The Ultimate Retirement Guide for 50+.
There are a lot of good tips which I wish I would have known at a much younger age. She has excellent advice that I can learn from now and that I can share with Sophia and Olivia, even though they are only 18 and 20 years old.
Below are some of the things I found interesting:
- Fear, shame, and anger
are the main obstacles to wealth. They cause youto do the wrong things and miss
out on the smart choices that can move us toward our financial goals.
- The only way to conquer fear
is through action.
- What I don't think is healthy
- emotionally or financially - is when an adult child living in your home
doesn't contribute to household costs. This has nothing to do with tough love.
This has everything to do with continuing to be the strong, supportive parent
who helps guide your children to become their best selves.
- Parents should be directing
their money into their retirement savings accounts.
- The money that parents spend
on their adult children is money they really should be socking away for their
future, yet they can't stop themselves from being the provider. This is an
unhealthy financial dynamic.
- Differentiate between
financial assistance that helps with kids' needs versus money that funds their
wants.
- Resist co-signing for
loans for your adult children.
- A big problem is the "it's only" syndrome. It's only $100 or $200 a month to help with the rent. It's only an extra $20 a month to keep paying for their cell plan. Add up all the ways, big and small, you continue to provide support to an adult child. See how much "it's only" is costing you every year.
- A hard no to: helping with a
loan for a new car for an adult child, carrying an adult child on your health
insurance and cell phone plan, and kicking in money for their vacations.
- If a child needs a car, they
should be shopping for a used car that they can pay for with the shortest-term
loan possible.
- If your child is working,
they should cover their share of the health premium.
- Consider how reducing your
support for others will enable you to achieve your ultimate retirement goals:
security and not needing your family to support you later on.
- Make sure you are helping
your adult child become financially independent.
- If you reduce your monthly spending by $500 or $1,000 a month today, that's $500 or $1,000 a month you won't need to generate in retirement.
- Moves to make during your
working years:
---Prioritize paying off all debt before you retire.
---Embrace living below your means.
---Save more for retirement...in the right accounts.
---Have a plan to work longer.
---Consider long-term insurance.
- Ditch the landline and use
cell phone only.
- Keep FICO score very high
keeps auto premiums lower.
- Retirements savings must take
precedence over paying for college.
- Spend the least amount you
can for a reliable car. If you need to take out a loan, commit to a term that
is no longer than 36 months.
- There are three ways to save money today
that you can then use without owing any tax in retirement: a Roth 401(k), a
Roth IRA, and Health Savings Account (HSA)
- Plan to work until you are
70.
- Use the Social Security
benefit calculator to get an estimate of what you may qualify for: www.ssa.gov/benefits/retirement/estimator.html
- Visit kerryhannon.com about
career transitions and great jobs for those who are 50+ years old.
- Long-term health premiums are
lower for those in their 50s and 60s because as you age, a pre-existing health
condition could be grounds to deny you coverage. And the longer you wait, the
higher your premium will be.
- See suzeorman.com/retirement
to learn more about key features to shop for in an LTC insurance policy.
- If you are intent on not
moving, make paying off your mortgage before retirement a priority. Tackle
remodeling work today that will accommodate the needs of an older version of
you.
- If you plan to stay put:
---Pay off the mortgage before you retire. Ideally, pay it off by age 65.
---Be able to pay your essential living costs (e.g., housing, groceries, utilities) guaranteed income (e.g., Social Security, pension payout, an income annuity you purchase at retirement).
---Don't rely on a reverse mortgage to pay the bulk of your expenses.
---Consider whether your home will be socially isolating to an 80+ you.
---Think through whether your home will be physically challenging for an older you (and your friends).
- The steps up to your front door.
- That you must climb stairs to your bedroom
- How you step into the tub to take a shower
- A narrow hall or doorway that doesn't allow a walker or wheelchair through.
- A bedroom on the main floor or a room that can be easily transformed into a bedroom and a bathroom on the main floor with a walk-in shower that has a bench are what allows you to stay in your home longer.
- Look around your home and see
how plausible and comfortable it will be to stay in your home if you become
ill, arthritic, or injured.
- Changes to make today: better
lighting, more light switches, replace throw rugs with wall-to-wall carpet, and
professionally-installed grab bars in the bathroom.
- Go to the National Association
of Home Builders for their "NAHB aging-in-place remodeling checklist."
- Certified Aging-in-Place
Specialist (CAPS) contractors are who you want to do remodeling.
- If you need to borrow money for
remodeling, doing it while you are working will be easier to get than when you
are retired. Before doing this, you have to look at how much that will eat into
your retirement. Moving may just be the best thing you can do to ensure that you
have the money you need for your 80s and 90s,
- Contact mortgage lender to ask
for an “amortization schedule” that will have your loan paid off by the time
you are 65.
- Find more monthly cash flow to
put towards your mortgage payment.
- An emergency fund should be
large enough to cover your basic living expenses for eight months.
- Aim to spend just 3%
of your portfolio in the first year of retirement and then adjust that amount
for inflation in subsequent years.
- Your home is aging too which
means more wear and tear on top of the regular maintenance costs. How old are
your roof and HVAC system? If your intention is to stay in your home for 20 or
more years, the reality is that you will likely have major maintenance
expenses.
- Consider what tasks you do
today that you might not want to - or be able to - keep doing long into
retirement. Snowblowing, gardening, regular housekeeping, and general upkeep.
- A reverse mortgage can create
extra income in retirement by using some of your home's equity. The income you
receive is tax-free.
- A reverse mortgage is a bad
idea if you need it to cover the majority of your fixed living costs in your
60s and early 70s. Don't use it keep up with rising property tax, insurance,
and maintenace; or if you will move in less than 5-10 years. Don't use it for
wants (vacations, RVs) or pay off credit card debt.
- You don't have to repay any of the money on a reverse mortgage while you remain in the house. It is only when you move or die that the borrowed money must be repaid.
- Think about how your home
will work for you when you are 80 or 85. If you can no longer drive or want to
drive, is there convenient public transportation, taxis, Uber/Lyft so that you
can get around easily? How far do you live from town or friends?
- In your 60s, keep
investing for a long retirement, delay starting Social Security until age 70,
and enroll in Medicare and supplemental coverage.
- When one spouse dies, the
surviving spouse is entitled to just one Social Security benefit. If you have
the high earner delay until age 70, you lock in the highest possible benefit
for the surviving spouse.
- Medicare doesn’t cover long-term
costs.
- If you don’t have a reliable
income stream that can support you for a long life, then you are probably going
to make your life and your kids’ lives more difficult.
- Retirement sources that offer
guaranteed income: social security, pension, and income annuity that you
purchase.
- Focus on a lifetime payout for
a guaranteed income. Consider an annuity that will continue at the same level
for the surviving spouse.
- Look at deferred income
annuities. Buy the annuity today, but don’t start the payouts until a set
period of time, such as 5 years or 10 years.
- An income annuity with a cash
benefit will pay you a lifetime benefit, but if you die before your total
payouts equal the up-front premium you paid, your beneficial will continue to
get payments until total payments equal what you paid for the income annuity.
- Do not invest with any company that
has any form of a grade with even the letter B.
- Have a separate bear-market
emergency fund in retirement that has at least two years of living expenses in
it. If you expect that you will not cover all your living expenses from
guaranteed income, then keep three years of expenses in super-safe accounts
that you can tap whenever you need to and know the money will be there for you.
- Invest equal amounts in five
different CDs: 1 year, 2 year, 3 year, 4 year, and 5 year. When the 1 year CD
matures, invest it in a new 5 year. You will have a CD maturing each year. That
will pay you more interest than if you kept all of your money in a 1-year CD.
- You would need $1 million in
order to withdraw $40,000 or 3% in your first year.
- Subtract your current age from
110. That is how much you may want to consider keeping in stocks. Mutual
funds accomplish this since they have a variety of stocks in one fund.
- Treasury bonds are the best
option for a retirement portfolio. They are the safest type of bonds.
- Must-have documents: a living
revocable trust with an incapacity clause; will; advance directive and durable
power of attorney for health care; and a financial power of attorney.
- Check all beneficiaries to make sure they are
up to date.
- Ask your kids today what they
want and spell that out in a will.
- If more than one child wants
something, have an open discussion while you are still alive.
- Name an executyor of your will.
- Keep docuemnts in a waterproof
and fireproof box that is easy to grab and go at a moment’s notice.
- If the documents are in a bank
safe deposit box, make sure the name of trust’s successor trustee (and maybe
even one more family member or someone you trust) is also listed on the
account.
- Spell out your final wishes. If you don’t want your family to overspend, put that in writing. It will make it
so much easier on them.
- Patience and perseverance must prevail in the years to come. When it comes to your money, you have to accept – and expect – that your money will have its ups and downs.
4 comments:
Sounds like a book with lots of good adv, thanks for sharing! Valerie
Dagan and Leah have power of attorney. Too late for me to change much at 70 on SS--LOL! But go for it and teach the girls, yes! :)
Yes, I like her very much. I too wish I had some of this wisdom at an early age.
Interesting info. I wish I'd known some of these things at a younger age, or at least would have been willing to listen to them.
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