Personal Finance Essentials

Retirement Planning

Retirement Planning

46% of Americans Have Zero Retirement Savings

You Can Fix That
in Three Steps

This is perhaps the most challenging of all financial planning issues, for two reasons. First, it’s the most expensive goal to meet; the money people spend in retirement dwarfs the cost of everything else. Second, retirement is the only financial planning goal that must be prefunded.  

You see, you can pay for a house while you’re living in it. You can pay for a car while you’re driving it. And you can pay for college while you’re earning money in your career. But you can’t pay for retirement while you’re retired – you must set that money aside before you get there.  

This is why saving for retirement out-prioritizes all other goals. That’s a shock to parents, who believe it’s their responsibility to save for their kids’ college before saving for their own retirement. (Those parents are simply forcing their children to financially support them throughout their retirement.) 

Fortunately, retirement planning is simple – just a three-step process: 

1

STEP 1

Start by asking how much money you’ll need in annual income. For most people, it’s the same amount you’re spending now.
2

STEP 2

Subtract the amount you expect to receive from pensions and Social Security. The remainder is the amount you must provide from your savings and investments – the money you’ll accumulate between now and retirement.
3

STEP 3

To determine the amount you need to save, simply multiply that annual income need by 25.

Say you spend $8,000 per month. Some of those expenses will vanish by the time you retire – college costs for the kids for example, and commuting expenses associated with work. But you’ll incur new expenses in retirement – such as travel, spoiling grandchildren, and your own medical bills. So, it’s best to assume you’ll need as much money monthly in retirement as you do now.  

Let’s also assume that you and your spouse combined will receive $5,000 monthly from Social Security. That means you need to fund the remaining $3,000 of your expenses. That’s $36,000 per year. Multiply that by 25 and you have the answer: you need $900,000 in retirement assets. With that nest egg, you’ll be able to withdraw 4% per year — $36,000 – to maintain your lifestyle.  

This quick math has a few safeguards built in: 

• It ignores the value of your home, which can be accessed should a financial need occur. 

• People tend to spend less as they age, making it likely that you won’t need the full $8,000 monthly for your entire lifetime. 

• Withdrawing 4% annually means you don’t have to touch the principal. Your account is likely to earn more than 4% per year, meaning the balance will rise over time. And the money remains available – and will pass to your heirs if you don’t spend it. 

Once you determine the amount you need to accumulate, you can create a savings strategy to achieve the goal.

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The Key Challenge in Retirement Planning

Inflation silently doubles the cost of retirement every 24 years — and most Americans aren’t prepared.

A Brief
History of
Retirement

Retirement security has shifted entirely from employer promises to personal responsibility.

How Much
You Need
to Save

Most people retire earlier than planned — and need far more money than they expect.

The Cost of Waiting: Why Starting Early Matters

Starting eight years earlier and investing one-fifth as much still beats 40 years of consistent saving.

Workplace Retirement
Plans

Your employer’s match is free money but auto-enrollment may be costing you far more than you realize.

Individual Retirement Accounts

IRAs give every American — employed or not — a tax-advantaged path to retirement savings that most people underuse.

Investing Your Retirement Savings

Most retirement investors are too conservative, too emotional, and paying far more in fees than they realize.

Required Minimum Distributions

At a certain age, the IRS forces you to withdraw from your retirement and there are penalties for getting it wrong.

Generating Income in Retirement

A structured withdrawal plan from a diversified portfolio typically outperforms an annuity.

Long-Term
Care
Planning

Seven in ten people over 65 will need long-term care and almost none of their insurance will cover the cost.

Disability Insurance: Protecting Your Income

You’re 6.5 times more likely to be disabled than to die before retirement — yet most people have life insurance and no disability coverage.

Managing Retirement Accounts Through Life Changes

Job changes, divorce, loans, and caregiving can quietly devastate a retirement account that took decades to build.

College Savings and Retirement: Getting the Balance Right

You can borrow for college but not for retirement — yet millions of parents are funding their kids’ education at the expense of their own financial security.

Estate Planning for
Retirement
Accounts

A single outdated beneficiary form can override your will and send your retirement savings somewhere you never intended.

Common
Mistakes
to Avoid

The most common retirement mistakes aren’t dramatic failures — they’re quiet assumptions that quietly compound into catastrophe.

Retirement as
a Family
Affair

Retirement planning isn’t just personal — the financial decisions of every family member directly affect everyone.

Planning the Life You Want in Retirement

Retirement planning isn’t about avoiding poverty — it’s about building the freedom to live the life you actually want.