How to Save for Retirement When You’re Still Paying Off Debt

How to Save for Retirement When You’re Still Paying Off Debt

Saving for retirement should be a critical component of any financial plan, but it can be challenging if you’re also working toward debt repayment. The good news is that it’s possible to do both at the same time. The key is to be consistent and disciplined, and in time you’ll see the benefits of your efforts. Read on for strategies you can use to save for retirement while tackling debt.

Prioritize High-Interest Debt

High-interest debt, such as credit card debt, can quickly accumulate interest and make paying it off even more challenging. By addressing this debt first, you can reduce the amount of interest you’ll pay over time. The amount of money you’ll rescue from credit card interest can be applied to remaining debt payments. Once your highest interest debt is paid off, move onto the debt with the next highest interest rate. This is known as the avalanche method of paying off debt.

Build an Emergency Fund

Establishing an emergency fund will help you cover unexpected expenses without having to rely on credit cards and thereby adding to your debt. Aim to save at least three months’ worth of living expenses in your emergency fund before you start allocating more funds toward retirement savings.

Increase Your Cash Flow

Increasing your monthly cash flow will provide you with more cushion in your budget to save for your emergency fund, meet your debt repayment plan, and save for retirement. In order to increase your cash reserves, think about requesting a raise, making a career change, or taking on a side hustle.

Consider a Balanced Approach

A balanced approach involves allotting a portion of your income toward paying off debt and a portion toward saving for retirement. You’ll need to decide what percentage of your income should go toward each goal, but this approach can help make progress toward both debt repayment and retirement savings without neglecting one for the other.

Cut Expenses and Establish a Budget

If you’re struggling with debt and saving for retirement, it’s probably time to take a closer examination at your income and expenses. Where is your money going each month? What can you do to build better financial habits? Look for areas where you can cut back, such as dining out, shopping, and entertainment. Even small slashes in costs can have an impact on your finances. When you begin to pay attention to where your money is actually going, you can make informed decisions that will help you redirect more funds toward your savings goals.

Automate Savings

Automating savings is an ideal way to ensure that you’re on track to meet your retirement goals. If your employer offers a retirement plan that allows you to contribute a percentage of your paycheck toward retirement savings, be sure you’re taking advantage of it. You can also set up automatic transfers from your checking account to a retirement savings account like an IRA. Automating savings is a set-it-and-forget-it approach that provides consistent progress in saving for retirement.

 

Here’s What Retirees Can Expect from Social Security Benefits in 2023

Here’s What Retirees Can Expect from Social Security Benefits in 2023

Retirees are feeling the effects of soaring inflation, and it’s stretching their budgets. More than 70 million retired Americans depend on a Social Security benefit program as a source of income, especially during economic downturns, so annual changes to payouts are always expected. Read on to learn what’s in the cards for Social Security benefits next year, including a higher payout.

COLA Boost

Get ready for a historic increase to 2023’s cost-of-living adjustment (COLA). 2022 saw an adjustment of 5.9%, which was already uncommonly high, but in 2023 monthly checks will increase by 8.7%. That’s approximately $146 per month ($1,752 per year) for the average retiree. This is the highest COLA increase since 1981. All retirees currently receiving Social Security benefits will see this increase in January of 2023.

Maximum Taxable Earnings Will Increase

Due to an increase in average wages, Americans will see more Social Security taxes taken from paychecks in 2023 because more of their income will be liable for the tax. Maximum earnings subjected to Social Security taxes will increase from $147,000 in 2022 to $160,000 in 2023. This means that workers paying into the system are taxed on wages up to this amount, typically at the 6.2 percent rate.

Maximum Social Security Benefit Also Set to Increase

The maximum benefit for retired workers who claim Social Security at full retirement age — which is 67 for anyone born after 1960 — will be $3,627 in 2023, up 8.4% from $3,345 in 2022. Take note that the maximum benefit will be different for those who claim benefits before the full retirement age, and the same can be said for those who claim benefits after the full retirement age. For instance, if you begin claiming benefits at age 62, your maximum monthly benefit in 2023 will be $2,572. On the other end of the spectrum, if you begin claiming benefits at age 70, your maximum monthly benefit in 2023 will be $4,555.

Work Credits Will Be Harder to Reach

In order to earn retirement benefits, workers must accumulate at least 40 work credits during the whole of their careers. The maximum number of credits eligible to be earned per year is four, and the value of each credit fluctuates from year to year. In 2023, a single credit will be worth $1,640, up from $1,510 in 2022. Thus, workers will need to earn more income in order to collect the credits they need to retirement benefits.

 

 

Retirement Planning Catch-Up Strategies for Late Starters

Retirement Planning Catch-Up Strategies for Late Starters

Approaching retirement planning when you’re late in the game can be a daunting task, but with the right strategies, you can get on track to build a nest egg that will provide some support by the time you reach retirement. Read on for proven catch-up options for late starters.

Identify How Much Savings You’ll Need

You might tell yourself that you won’t need much in retirement, but you might be surprised to learn that even a life of simplicity could require $1 million in the bank once you step away from the workforce. Given that most financial experts agree on an annual withdrawal of 3% to 4% of your retirement portfolio, that’s $30,000-$40,000 per year with a $1 million portfolio. This scenario excludes Social Security income as well as pensions, rental properties, or other sources of income.

Thinking through how much money you’ll need to live comfortably with the lifestyle you plan to lead in retirement will help you determine how aggressively you’ll need to save.

Pay Down Debt

While it’s important to pay down debt, you don’t want to surrender retirement goals to do so. You’ll need to come up with a plan to pay off credit card debt, car loans, and other high-interest or non-mortgage debt while also saving for retirement.

As for your mortgage, how you handle this debt as you approach retirement depends on where you are in your repayment journey. If you’re closer to the early stages of your mortgage and most of your monthly payment is assigned to interest, it might make sense to pay down some of the principle. However, if you are closer to the later stages of your mortgage and your payments are generally assigned to the principal, you might think about investing that money for retirement rather than putting any additional funds toward mortgage payments.

Invest Your Age

You might think that in order to make up for lost time, you should take on more investment risk. But with more risk comes the potential for more loss to your principal. Your risk should correlate with your age. While investors in their 20s and 30s can afford more risk because they have more time to recover any losses, investors in their 50s or older don’t have that luxury. As you near retirement you might consider one of the following blueprints for asset distribution, depending on your personal level of risk aversion:

  • High (but acceptable) risk: Invest in stock funds a percentage of 120 minus your age. Put the rest into bond funds.
  • Moderate risk: Invest in stock funds a percentage of 110 minus your age. Put the rest into bond funds.
  • Conservative risk: Invest in bond funds a percentage equivalent to your age. Put the rest in stock funds.

Fund a Roth IRA

If you are able to max out your 401(k), consider opening a Roth IRA and fully funding that as well. Roth IRAs are an opportune way to save and grow investments. Contributions to a Roth IRA grow tax-free, and qualified withdrawals are tax-free. The yearly contribution limit for both traditional and Roth IRAs is $6,000 for 2022. The catch-up contribution for those 50 years and older is $1,000.

Be Sure You Have Sufficient Insurance

Fact: Unforeseen hardship is the cause of most personal bankruptcies. You have a greater chance of avoiding bankruptcy when you have adequate health, disability, home and car insurance in place. Further, if you have dependents, think about term life insurance. Note that, in general, term life insurance is recommended over whole life insurance. Be sure to look for insurance agents who have a fiduciary duty to you, meaning the agent must legally and ethically act in your best interest.

Put Your Retirement Saving Plan First

It’s typically agreed that draining retirement funds to send children to college is a bad financial move. Aside from the fact that your 401(k) may not permit you to take out a loan on your retirement account balance, consider that your children have their entire working lives ahead of them, and they can begin saving for retirement much earlier than you did. At this stage in the game, protecting your own financial retirement security will help to ensure that the burden doesn’t fall to your children in the future.