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What Would You Like Your Retirement to Look Like?

 

You’re on a beautiful golf course. It’s a sunny afternoon. Once you finish the 18th hole, you’re on your way to meet with friends for lunch at the new restaurant on the corner.

Perhaps you prefer putting your life skills to work by volunteering at a charity or maybe working part time at the local home supply store.

‘Tis retirement. You decide how you spend your leisure.

You’re no longer constrained by the demands of a job or a work routine. You set your own schedule. You choose how you’ll spend your day. Those long years of employment are over, and you’re setting sail for your golden years, on your own terms.

Questions and concerns about retirement

While the scenes described above appear idyllic, they do require preparation and planning.

How do you envision your retirement? What do you want it to look like? And, most important, what do you plan to do, and what kind of retirement strategy will you implement during your working years to pursue your retirement goals?

Those are some of the questions you should ask yourself. In the years prior to retiring, you should begin painting that picture. You’ll have to compare and contrast your retirement dreams with your financial ability to sustain a comfortable lifestyle.

Here are additional questions to consider as you shape your financial strategy:

How long do you want to keep working full time? Are you interested in taking part-time work once retired? If so, do you want to pursue something in your current profession or try something new?

Once you’re retired, with or without a part-time job or doing charity work, what types of hobbies or activities do you wish to do?

How do you want to spend most of your time? If you’re so inclined, plot out your typical day of retirement.

Sometimes planning for retirement and being retired can feel like work. But the “work” is necessary. After all, you can probably expect to live nearly another two decades[i] or more, according to estimates.

Are you healthy?

As you dig deeper into developing your plan, consider these questions: Are you healthy? What do your genetics reveal about your longevity? Does your family line have predispositions or tendencies to certain conditions (heart disease, cancer, diabetes)? In other words, what do you think is your projected lifespan, and how do you expect to maintain an active lifestyle during those years?

As you start laying out your retirement plan, you also have to assess your financial condition. The federal government requires seniors to make minimum withdrawals (required minimum distributions) from certain accounts, including your IRA, SEP IRA, SIMPLE IRA, and retirement plan accounts at the age of 70 ½.[ii]

Basically, you have to look well into the future—sometimes as much as 35 years or more depending on your health and lifestyle—in determining your budget. To oversimplify it, how can you make your retirement savings stretch across several decades or so of retirement? Your investments have the potential to continue generating interest income over your retirement.

Don’t forget your health maintenance. Medical expenses, which may include long-term care, in the later years of retirement must be factored into the equation. Some estimates put health and medical costs for a retired couple at $280,000.[iii]

Shifting gears

The shift from work to retirement can feel jarring. Some people ease into it while others take the leap. After retiring, some retirees, still healthy and active, work part time to keep income at a comfortable level.

Delaying taking Social Security allows retirees to increase their benefits by about 8% per year after their full retirement age to a maximum of about 125% of your full retirement age amount.[iv]

Consult with a financial professional to help you wade through the financial morass of retirement preparations. Financial professionals have the tools, the resources, and the experience to help you develop the most productive retirement plan to suit your needs.

If you’d like more information about your financial options or to learn more about your financial needs, we’re happy to help. Call CapSouth at 800.929.1001 or visit our website.

Investment advisory services are offered through CapSouth Partners, Inc., dba CapSouth Wealth Management, an independent registered Investment Advisory firm. Information provided by sources deemed to be reliable. CapSouth does not guarantee the accuracy or completeness of the information.  This material has been prepared for planning purposes only and is not intended as specific tax or legal advice.  Tax and legal laws are often complex and frequently change.  Please consult your tax or legal advisor to discuss your specific situation before making any decisions that may have tax or legal consequences.

This article contains external links to third party content (content hosted on sites unaffiliated with CapSouth Partners). The policies and procedures governing these third party sites may differ from those effective on the CapSouth company website, as outlined in these Disclaimers. As such, CapSouth makes no representations whatsoever regarding any third party content/sites that may be accessible directly or indirectly from the CapSouth website. Linking to these third party sites in no way implies an endorsement or affiliation of any kind between CapSouth and any third party, including legal authorization to use any trademark, trade name, logo, or copyrighted materials belonging to either entity.

[i] https://www.forbes.com/sites/wadepfau/2016/08/25/how-long-can-retirees-expect-to-live-once-they-hit-65/#72e7700b6b4f

[ii] https://www.irs.gov/retirement-plans/retirement-plans-faqs-regarding-required-minimum-distributions

[iii] http://time.com/money/5246882/heres-how-much-the-average-couple-will-spend-on-health-care-costs-in-retirement/

[iv] https://www.ssa.gov/OACT/quickcalc/early_late.html

Need Life Insurance in Retirement?

Why do you get life insurance? It may be because you understand that tragedy can strike in a moment. Or perhaps you may want to make sure your family is taken care of after you’re gone. Does one need life insurance in retirement?

Life insurance helps provide you and your family with peace of mind for your future needs.

Insurance payouts may cover mortgage, car payments, and other ongoing debts so that your family can sustain a comfortable standard of living.

Here are six reasons to consider for buying life insurance:[i]

  1. To pay funeral and burial costs
  2. To cover children’s ongoing expenses
  3. To replace lost income
  4. To pay off debts
  5. To buy a business partner’s share
  6. To pay taxes

Reexamining your insurance needs.

Is there a time in your life when you no longer need life insurance? For example, your children are grown, your debts are paid, you’re retired, your savings are adequate, and retirement income levels are sustainable.

How do you determine your life insurance needs at different stages in life?[ii]

If you’ve achieved your retirement goals and built robust savings, you may not need life insurance coverage, or you may want to reduce it. However, before you make changes, review your finances closely to see what options are best for you.

Examine pension and other retirement funds to make sure proper survivor designations are in place and sufficient benefits will be available. A minor income reduction, for example, can significantly hamper a survivor’s lifestyle and ability to keep pace with ongoing expenses.

You may need life insurance to cover peripheral financial expenses, such as estate taxes, retirement distribution fees, or charities. Owners of larger farms or businesses may need additional coverage to pay unanticipated taxes or other fees to avoid losing the properties.

Long-term care later in retirement may cost thousands of dollars per month. Life insurance may help offset or cover potential medical expenses or maintain care insurance payments.[iii]

You have several options that are worth exploring that may help you streamline your insurance needs.[ii]

If you would like to discuss your current financial needs or review your current policy, we’re happy to talk. Please contact us at 800.929.1001.

Investment advisory services are offered through CapSouth Partners, Inc., dba CapSouth Wealth Management, an independent registered Investment Advisory firm. Information provided by sources deemed to be reliable. CapSouth does not guarantee the accuracy or completeness of the information.  This material has been prepared for planning purposes only and is not intended as specific tax or legal advice.  Tax and legal laws are often complex and frequently change.  Please consult your tax or legal advisor to discuss your specific situation before making any decisions that may have tax or legal consequences.

This article contains external links to third party content (content hosted on sites unaffiliated with CapSouth Partners). The policies and procedures governing these third party sites may differ from those effective on the CapSouth company website, as outlined in these Disclaimers. As such, CapSouth makes no representations whatsoever regarding any third party content/sites that may be accessible directly or indirectly from the CapSouth website. Linking to these third party sites in no way implies an endorsement or affiliation of any kind between CapSouth and any third party, including legal authorization to use any trademark, trade name, logo, or copyrighted materials belonging to either entity.

[i] https://www.moneycrashers.com/reasons-buy-life-insurance/

[ii] https://www.usatoday.com/story/money/columnist/powell/2018/05/02/how-determine-if-need-life-insurance-retirement/563375002/

[iii] https://longtermcare.acl.gov/costs-how-to-pay/costs-of-care.html

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

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