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Category: Social Security

Tips for Building and Protecting Your Retirement Income

Tips for Building and Protecting Your Retirement Income

The creative team for real estate developers came up with the term “the golden years” in 1959 as part of a pitch to sell homes in the nation’s first large-scale retirement community. Developers of the $2 million golf resort in the middle of an Arizona desert were hoping to sell the idea of “an active new way of life” for people approaching retirement.[i] Their idea worked.

The “golden years” refers to the years of retirement, normally after age 65. Making the golden years truly golden involves having relatively good health, adequate income, and a meaningful life.

While good health and living meaningfully depend on lifestyle choices and sometimes heredity, maintaining or generating adequate retirement income requires prudence and well-laid financial plans.

Risk Management and Growth Strategies for Your Retirement Income

Here are six ways for managing your money in retirement:[ii]

  1. Cut investment expenses and fees. You can potentially increase your income by reducing your outgo. If you have income from mutual funds, look for hidden fees. You may have fees for fund management, transactions, and loads. Get with your financial advisor to examine the lowest-cost options for your investment funds.
  2. Take a look at how your investments are taxed. You may want to consider moving your investments with the highest possible tax liability to tax-deferred accounts and those investments with the lowest taxable liability to taxable accounts. Keep in mind that this may involve transactional fees. Investors should consult with their tax advisor regarding the tax consequences of investing.
  3. Catch-up contributions are one way to build your retirement fund quickly. Annual contributions to tax-deferred accounts are limited, but once you reach the age of 50, you’re allowed to add more into your retirement account. Once you’re 55, you can also make catch-up contributions to your health savings account.
  4. Although Social Security income is only supposed to be part of your retirement income, you can boost your benefits by waiting to apply. Full retirement age, when you’re eligible to receive 100% of your designated benefit, is currently 66 or 67. You get about an 8% increase per year by waiting until you’re 70. For healthy older workers, this is an excellent way to boost your annual Social Security benefit by up to 24%.
  5. Part-time work for retirees is becoming an increasingly attractive option to boosting retirement income. Part-time employment may also improve your quality of life in retirement.[iii]
  6. Paying off your debt before you retire helps to bolster retirement income. Unfortunately, it’s becoming more commonplace for workers to enter retirement with mortgage or credit card debt. If you aren’t retired, you should consider making debt elimination a priority.

If you would like to talk more about your options, please give us a call at 800.929.1001.

Financial & Estate Planning

[i] http://rowleylegal.com/2014/08/03/the-term-golden-years-was-coined-in-1959-as-an-advertising-pitch-for-sun-city/

[ii] https://www.cnbc.com/2018/06/12/4-easy-ways-to-increase-your-retirement-income.html

[iii] https://www.fool.com/retirement/2018/02/04/boost-your-retirement-income-with-these-6-tips.aspx

Social Security: A grab bag of considerations

1418245050857[1]Let’s just get to it, shall we?

1) Social Security is a benefit, not an issue. Not paying enough attention to Social Security is really the issue, here. If you’ve worked a good portion of your life, chances are, you’re eligible. You’ve paid into it, and therefore, you should know how to get paid out of it. And if this topic is becoming more common in the circles you run in, then roll up your sleeves. For starters, check out the following and you’ll soon be the hit of every party where folks leave when Matlock is over: Web: Social Security. Books: Social Security for Dummies and Get What’s Yours.

2) Your decision on when and how to file for Social Security should be made in the context of how this benefit factors into your financial plan. Folks ask, “What is the best age for me to file?” Well, it depends. What does your financial plan say you need to have in order to accomplish your goals and dreams? No plan? Then get with a Financial Planner and get your plan together. If you have the retirement assets in place and don’t need to claim your benefit at 62, then maybe you don’t. Maybe you take it at 70 and bring home 76% more than had you filed at 62. Yes. 76% more. You didn’t know that? Not many folks do. And how long did it take to learn how to receive thousands and thousands of dollars more in retirement benefits? Lots of folks have opted for the earliest filing date possible and have lived long, less comfortable lives. It’s less painful learning from other people’s mistakes than it is learning from your own.

3) Waiting may not be for everyone. If you absolutely have to start receiving the benefit at 62 in order to get by, then take it. Or, let’s say your blessed enough to be able to wait until full retirement age to file (66, let’s say), then you’ll receive 32% more per month than if you filed at 62. It pays to be patient. If you can’t afford to be patient, financially speaking, then it still pays, just not as much.

4) This isn’t just about you. Benefits, off of your work record, can exist for spouses (62 or older), ex-spouses (62 or older), survivors, children, grandchildren, and even parents – your parents, that is. Sure, there are stipulations, rules, conditions and exceptions, but the benefits available are numerous. Look into them if you believe they may apply to you and your family.

5) Do over! Believe it or not, there’s a do over. If you’ve filed for retirement benefits, Social Security gives you a year from the filing date to say, “Oops! I’ve changed my mind.” You can pay back everything you’ve received and be treated as if you’ve never filed for the benefit. This includes any Medicare Part B premiums or tax withholdings that were deducted from your Social Security payments. One year – that’s it. After that, what’s done is done.

6) File and Suspend. This a strategy you must be aware of.

Here’s how it works: At your Full Retirement Age (FRA), you can file for your retirement benefit and tell the good folks at the Social Security office to suspend them (put them on hold) until you start them up again. “So why would I do that?” you may ask. Well, now that you’ve formally filed for a retirement benefit, your spouse (at age 62+) and children (with certain stipulations met) can now collect benefits on your work record. Also, suspending allows you to accumulate Delayed Retirement Credits (DRCs) which add up to the tune of 8% per year until you restart your benefits. You can only suspend retirement benefits, by the way, and only until age 70. After 70, you’ll receive your retirement benefit complete with the accumulated credits.

7) The ol’ Restricted Application move. So let’s say your spouse has taken advantage of number 6 and has filed and suspended. “What about me?” you ask. “What can I do?” Assuming you’re at FRA, and haven’t previously filed for any benefits, you can file an application restricting your benefit to your spousal benefit only. This will allow your own retirement benefit to grow by 8% per year until you claim it or until you reach 70.

8) Avoid the “D” word: Deeming. If you file for a spousal benefit before reaching FRA, Social Security will deem you to be filing for both a spousal benefit and your own retirement benefit. That’s just one of the traps, uh, rules. The result? You’ll receive both benefits –at a reduced level – and will be left with, essentially, the larger of the two benefits. You don’t want a reduced anything. You want the max everything. So how do you avoid deeming? Don’t file for your spousal benefit before reaching your full retirement age.

9) Another “D” word: Divorce. There are several if/thens on this one. If your ex-spouse is currently entitled to retirement or disability benefits, then you may be eligible for divorced spousal benefits. If you’re single, over 62, not currently remarried, and were married to said ex-spouse for at least 10 years, then you’ve got a chance. If, let’s say, your ex-spouse is not collecting their own retirement or disability benefit, then you must be divorced for at least 2 years before you can collect.

10) Taxes. Depending on your “combined income” (which is defined as the total of your adjusted gross income plus any non-taxable interest you may receive, plus half of your Social Security benefits) you may owe Federal taxes on your benefits. Currently, you will never be taxed on more than 85% of your benefits. I’ll spare you the formulas and brackets, but I will leave you with this – consult your CPA/Tax Preparer for additional counsel.

I’m stopping at 10, but the list goes on. If you’re approaching 62 and will be eligible to receive Social Security benefits, you’d do well to keep this topic front and center. This is a lifetime, inflation-proof benefit (thanks to cost of living adjustments) and your government has made it available. And one way or another, you’re going to make a decision on how and when to file. I want you to make the best decision. Give it the consideration it’s worth. If you have questions that you’d like to discuss with a Planning Associate, please call us. We can help.

Stay tuned, an election year is coming up!

Social Security: An Invitation to the Party

imagesCAA5W5G4Before we get too far into the topic of Social Security, let’s talk about birthdays for a moment. Hopefully, all of us will have one this year. A few days ago, and without much fanfare, I celebrated my 47th . My favorite home-cooked meal with my wife and kids and a little rocky road for dessert. Perfect. Absent was the reluctant restaurant workers’ version of Happy Birthday sung in English but sounding as foreign as any language can possibly sound. None for me, thanks. Just love, laughter, and second helpings. This is how I want it. It’s my birthday, after all. Relatively small investment, big return. (See what I did there.)

Social Security is also celebrating a birthday this year – thankfully. This August, Social Security turns 80. Inspired by the country that brought us BMWs and Beethoven, FDR signed the Social Security Act into law to provide for unemployment insurance as well as help for seniors and needy children. Title II of the act created the retirement benefits that we’ve come to recognize as Social Security.

      “We can never insure 100 percent of the population against 100 percent of the hazards and vicissitudes of life, but we have tried to frame a law which will give some measure of protection to the average citizen and to his family against the loss of a job and against poverty-ridden old age.”
                                                                                                 FDR (at the bill signing)

In keeping with blog etiquette, I’ll not introduce you to the thousands of pages of Social Security rules that exist. But I do want to share a few questions and answers with you that we’ll address in greater detail next week.

Q: I’m eligible to file for Social Security at age 62. Should I?
A: Well, it depends. I can offer tens of thousands of reasons why you might want to wait. That said, your particular situation may dictate that you consider filing at 62.

Q: When am I considered to be at Full Retirement Age (FRA)? Is it really that important?
A: If you were born between 1943 and 1954: 66, 1955: 66 and 2 mos, 1956: 66 and 4 mos, 1957: 66 and 6 mos, 1958: 66 and 8 mos, 1959: 66 and 10 mos, 1960 and later: 67. And yes, FRA is a very important concept in Social Security world.

Q: Are there strategies for filing and claiming that I should know about?
A: Most certainly. And we’ll talk about them in the next post.

Q: Will Social Security even be around by the time I’m eligible?
A: Making approximations on your age, I’d say yes. Might it look different than it does now? It certainly may.

The above merely scratches the surface of what you need to be familiar with before visiting your local Social Security office. And as well-intentioned as the folks there may be, they’re not to offer advice or to make your decision for you. This decision is yours, and it’s a big one. Over the next post or two, I’ll provide information to get you moving in the right direction, asking the right questions, and planning for the retirement you’ve always wanted.   Social Security is not an “issue”. It’s a benefit. Not paying enough attention to it – now that’s an issue – and one that could cost you thousands. But let’s stay on the bright side; your Social Security benefit can last a lifetime…and keep up with the cost of living, to boot!  And that, my friends, is worth celebrating.

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