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More on the “Savings for Retirement” Dilemma

The amount of accumulated savings most future retirees expect to have available to supplement their retirement is an oft-reported issue in the media, with most pundits suggesting that too many people are not focused enough on how much supplemental cash…

Social Security Solvency Issue: Status Quo?

The impending depletion of Social Security’s Trust Fund reserves is in the news a fair amount these days, and each passing year has steadily reduced the projected date at which the reserves would be fully exhausted. The Covid-19 pandemic, of…

The Benefits of Easing in to Retirement

An increasing number of workers are continuing to remain in the workforce past the mythical “age 65” mile marker, and there are sound reasons for this. In fact, This excerpt from a report appearing on reversemortgagealert.org puts this fact in…

Tips on Accessing the Re-Opened Social Security Offices

CNBC’s Lorie Konish, in a recent post on their website, Offers a few suggestions on how best to take advantage of the recently re-opened Social Security offices. Among the suggestions, of course, is a reiteration of the agency’s general suggestion…

Taxation of Social Security Benefits at the State Level: Something to be Aware of for Retirement Planning

If you’re looking ahead to retirement and doing your due diligence with respect to cash flow, one of the key items to look at is how your Social Security benefits will be taxed. It often comes as an unpleasant surprise…

Secure Act 2.0 is a start

To change the way Americans save for retirement, the House passed the Securing a Strong Retirement Act, better known as Secure Act 2.0, on March 29th. However, some experts disagree on effective this new legislation will be in helping Americans…

The substantially equal periodic payment exemption

According to the new analysis, more than three million Americans decided to retire earlier than they would have due to the COVID-19 pandemic. For those early retirees under the age of 59.5, who decided to take distributions from their retirement…

You opened an IRA, now what?

You know you should have an individual retirement account (IRA), but what do you do with it? IRAs come in two forms – traditional, where your contributions are tax-free, and you pay taxes when you remove the funds during your…

Social Security benefits for spouses, ex-spouses, and survivor benefits

According to the Social Security Administration, 37 percent of men and 42 percent of women receive 50 percent or more of their income from Social Security. Also, the statistics show among elderly Social Security beneficiaries, 12 percent of men and…

Could higher interest rates help certain retirees?

Although potential homebuyers are nervous about the Fed raising interest rates; however, some retirees are smiling about it. Why? If the retiree has a part of their income coming from fixed-income investments, they could see those yields rise. Another group…

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