Five easy pointers to help you plan all during your retirement years 

If you’re retired, you enjoy good news in that you’ll probably live longer and perhaps better that your parents and grandparents did. The bad news: You’ll live a longer and perhaps more expensive life, too.

You face decisions your parents or grandparents likely didn’t face before you.

This means every year you need to re-evaluate your situation and health to ensure the foundation for your retirement (which might include years of less-than-great-health). Let’s say you are 58 – you need to plan for the next 37 years – more than a third of your life.

Pointers to Help Plan During Retirement

Here are five areas to consider, in ascending order of importance:

  1. Costs of advice. You probably have a lot of questions. How much do you pay someone now to help you coordinate your investments? How much do your investments cost?

Is your portfolio sufficiently diversified? Did you buy annuity policies that you don’t really understand and that may become expensive for you to own? Do you need someone to only manage your investments or to also provide financial planning advice?

The average American spends more time analyzing the cost of a new TV than the costs and qualities of a financial advisor.

2. Social Security. Don’t decide about benefits and lump-sum pension choices without input from an objective financial planner – or you may leave significant money behind. Remember too that the Social Security Administration won’t necessarily provide advice on your best strategies.

3. Your home and future health. Consider the final 15-plus years of your life. Where will you live when you’re 80?

In a large home with stairs? Will most of your wealth center around your home as your retirement years tick past? Who will care for you if you can’t yourself (don’t plan on a spouse, as you may become a widow or widower)?

Get objective advice on long-term care planning and your options for a reverse mortgage to convert your home equity into cash.

4. Know what you own. Are you one of the tens of thousands with half-forgotten old 401(k) plans from previous employers? Have multiple accounts with various brokers? Outdated estate documents or long-forgotten life insurance policies?

Consolidate your holdings and paper trail, a kindness not only to your current recordkeeping but also to your future heirs.

5. Make your wants clear. Include your adult children or siblings in a frank discussion about where your assets are and your preferences for treatment if you end up in the hospital.

You don’t need to give specific dollar information, but family or friends need to know your preferences and where to find your assets if you die or can longer communicate. Death and taxes are inevitabilities we all face. Make that time as easy as you can for your executor and heirs.

As you can see, there is a lot to think about when it comes to retirement planning. That’s where the Wealth Guardians come in! We are here to help answer all of your questions and provide objective advice based on your unique financial needs and wants. Most importantly, we’ll help create your Custom Retirement Paycheck Plan that will give you the peace of mind you deserve.

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Our Custom Retirement Paycheck Plan shows how to protect your retirement from the risks of unexpected market swings, tax changes, and health care expenses using a mathematically tested strategy to create lifetime income allowing you to stop worrying about outliving your money and get on with enjoying the rest of your life.

Let us show you in black and white a custom retirement income plan that is comprehensive, individualized and based on strategies that balance growth with downside protection. Get your Custom Retirement Paycheck Plan now!

Give us a call at our Charlotte office at (704) 248-8549, or our Clemmons office at (336) 391-3409. Or, click here to request a no-cost, no-obligation meeting.


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