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Retire at 62 - Early Retirement or Later?

You can retire at 62 and can consider it as early retirement, but it come with a penalty. You can also retire in the years between the earliest retirement dates and full retirement and get a bit more money with each passing year. Suppose you create a financial plan based upon the three-legged financial stool of personal savings, part-time income (by having retirement part time jobs), and getting Social Security Income (Social Security benefits). As your planned-for retirement date approaches, (more…)

5.05.2011

Retirement Income Planning: Social Security, Pension Income Benefit, Investments

Issues around retirement income planning are the most obvious. The traditional “three-legged stool” of retirement income planning—Social Security, pension income benefit, and income from personal savings and investments—is increasingly unsteady. Social Security faces a funding crisis in the first half of the twenty-first century because soon there may not be enough workers paying into the system to support those receiving its benefits. Social Security income lifts more than one in three older persons out of poverty—more than 60% of them women. It is by far the single most important contributor to financial security in old age in America. (more…)

22.03.2011

How Much Money Do You Need to Retire? Retirement Planning, Advice, Tips

money to retire
It doesn’t matter how much money that people could have, we all won’t ever be truly comfortable and secure enough for retiring. This is because we are unable to estimate the amount of money we will need in retirement. The single most frequently asked questions I get has to do with retirement. Particularly, everyone is questioning how much money to retire they have to have for retire comfortly and securely.

If you put your money in simple Certificates of Deposit for your retirement investment, a realistic rate of interest for these types of retirement accounts is an average of 6 percent. Assuming an inflation rate of 3 percent, you would have to put $30, 000 gained back into your principle of bonds and CDs, so that you will get the same sum of money each year after inflation.

In most parts of the US and with the average lifestyle of retires, this isn’t enough money to retire. The benefits are easy to understand–the reduce the interest rate, the lower your monthly payment and total cost of buying a home. When you have twice the amount in principle (2 million dollars instead of 1 million dollars), then you would be earning $60,000 a year after inflation. Let’s say you again no longer have a mortgage to pay, have a million dollars to invest earning an average of 6%, and need $60, 000 a year to live (and you need to increase this amount by 3 percent every year for inflation). Do you need more or less than $60, 000 a year to live in retirement? So this scenario is not a good retirement investment advice you will follow trough.

To make calculating even more difficult, it is unlikely that you will invest all of your retirement money in bonds and CDs. Let’s say after two years in retirement, you lose a large percentage of your investments from typical market volatility. This may force you to return to the work force in your silver light years.

Furthermore, you will have to expect unstable bills into your retirement calculations, such as periodic medical bills, an unusually expenses along life, a new car every decade or so, possible assisted living, and so on. You will likely need more income than anybody can reasonably predict, especially since it is nearly impossible to guess how long you will live with any accuracy and reliability.

Therefore, I hope I have convinced you to seriously think about how much money is needed when heading off retirement. And try to never touch your investment principle and always factor the rate of inflation, otherwise you may run the risk of not having sufficient money in retirement particularly if you live a very long life with a lot of medical bills. And if you are very conventional with your investments and way of life requirements, then you will need a minimum of two million dollars along with a home that is already paid to retire.

The short response to the question, “How much money do I need to retire?” is “It depends”. If there is a lack of money, you’ll need your cost savings to supplement them. If the sum required is greater than 4 %, then you definitely probably need to save more or push back your own retirement time. Every scenario differs from the others and unique.

26.01.2011

How to Maximize Your Social Security Benefits ?

Social Security Benefits
As I said earlier, the amount you receive from Social Security varies based on how much you put into the system and when you start taking social security benefits. You have limited control over what you put into the system because it’s dictated by the FICA taxes that serve to allocate a portion of your earnings into the system. You do, however, have control over when you and your spouse take money retirement from the system. (more…)

24.01.2011

How to Pay for Retirement | Growth of Individual Retirement Accounts

individual retirement account
Americans are increasingly become aware and responsible for their retirement wealth. Many of us are know that the prospect of living with social security income and a employer pension plan is reduced dramatically and not attractive. More and more pensioners and retirees are less put trust on traditional sources of income; saving for retirement and work part time are seen to be more attractive. But the condition for future pensioners and retirees will be getting worsened. Given the desire to build a large nest egg for retirement was the need to build a replacement income. (more…)

6.01.2010

Early retirement - Questions to Ask Before Retire Early

retire early questions
The thought of retire early may be an illusion for some and a punishment for others. Everything is, as the saying goes, depending on how you look at it. First, is it the decision whether retirement is voluntary or forced? Often when companies offer their employee early retirement is not really such an offer since the other option is to be fired. (more…)

12.12.2009

Paying for Your Social Security Pension

social security pension
If you check your paycheck stub, you find an entry labeled FICA, which is an acronym for Federal Insurance Contributions Act. Your “contribution” is matched by your employer and is deposited in the Social Security Trust Fund. It shows you how much money was paid into the Trust Fund by employers, employees, and the self-employed in 1998 (the figures used are from the IRS). (more…)

29.05.2009

How Much Money You Need to Retire?

If you are asking yourself, how much to retire? You are asking yourself the wrong question. It should be how bad do I want to retire?

It is 2009 and 401K’s have turned into 201K’s…or worse. It is especially cruel to the baby boomers that have saved and saved only to see many years of steady gains disappear in their portfolios.

There is hope to still go ahead and retire if you are willing to examine some alternatives to “normal” retirement. (more…)

11.05.2009

Thinking of Pension Plan for Your Children

It might sound like an odd idea but children’s pension schemes are becoming an increasingly common way for parents, grandparents and other interested parties to give children the best possible leg up on road to effective retirement planning.

In effect, a children’s stakeholder pension is no different than anyone else’s pension. Anyone can choose to pay into the pension fund - provided, of course, that the parents are aware - and the pension fund is invested in exactly the same way. (more…)

9.04.2009

401k Questions to Ask About Company Match Contribution

401k Questions
If you are counting on your 401k plan for retirement - beware! The current financial crisis and stock market collapse are troubling enough, but what many retirement savers don’t know is that their 401k plans may not be up to the task.

401k’s have become the predominant retirement funding tool in the U.S. Twenty-five years ago, traditional defined benefit pensions plans were the primary type of retirement plan covering more than 60% of the workforce that had pension plan coverage. Today, defined contribution plans (mostly 401k) are the primary retirement plan for 63% of the covered workforce. (more…)

26.03.2009
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