Many financial professionals will, for a fee, help you navigate your way to and through retirement. But using a financial advisor isn’t mandatory. If you can’t afford, don’t trust, or otherwise would prefer not to use an advisor, managing your retirement is always an option. You have to map out a sensible plan and be willing to follow it. Here are some of the basics of a do-it-yourself strategy.
Key Takeaways
- You don’t necessarily need a financial pro to help you plan for retirement.
- If you don’t already have a basic understanding of investing, take some time to learn about stocks, mutual funds, and other places to put your retirement savings.
- As you get closer to retirement, you’ll want to read up on withdrawal strategies that can help you maximize your income and minimize your taxes.
Start Well Before Retirement
If you are serious about taking retirement into your own hands, start as early as possible by adopting one simple habit: Pay yourself first. Figure out a weekly or monthly amount of money that you can set aside for the future.
Retirement plans like 401(k)s, which take money automatically out of your paycheck, make that almost effortless. Also, it’s important to maximize your employer’s 401(k) match and to avoid excessive fees and commissions when you invest.
If you don’t have a 401(k), you can sign up for regular automatic withdrawals that will come out of your bank account and go into an individual retirement account (IRA).
A traditional IRA provides a tax deduction in the years that you make contributions, meaning the contribution amount reduces your taxable income to an IRA. However, in retirement, the withdrawals or distributions are taxable at your income tax rate in the year of the distribution.
A Roth IRA is an IRA that allows certain distributions to be made on a tax-free basis assuming specific conditions have been met. However, Roth IRAs do not provide a tax deduction in the years they’re funded, meaning they’re funded with after-tax dollars.
For both Roth and traditional IRAs, your distributions can begin at age 59½ and not before‚ although there are exceptions. If you withdraw IRA funds before age 59½, you’ll pay a 10% penalty tax in addition to paying federal income taxes on the distribution amount; and possible state taxes as well.
IRA Contribution Limits
The Internal Revenue Services (IRS) limits how much you are allowed to contribute each year to an IRA and a workplace retirement plan. The annual contribution limit for both traditional and Roth IRAs is $6,000 for 2021 and 2022. For individuals aged 50 and over, they can deposit a catch-up contribution in the amount of $1,000.
For 2021, you can contribute up to $19,500 into a 401(k) or Roth 401(k). This increases to $20,500 in 2022. Those who are aged 50 and over can make an additional $6,500 catch-up contribution in both 2021 and 2022.
There’s a penalty for over-contributing—called excess contributions by the IRS—which are taxed at 6% per year for each year the excess amounts remain in the IRA.
IRA Income Limits
It’s important to keep in mind that some IRAs, specifically Roth IRAs, have income limitations established by the IRS. You could be prohibited from contributing, or your contributions could be phased out, depending on your tax filing status and income.
For 2021, the income phase-out range for singles is $140,000. Meaning if you make this amount or more, you cannot contribute. This amount increases to $144,000 in 2022.
For married couples who file a joint tax return, the Roth income phase-out range for 2021 is $198,000 to $208,000, and for 2022, it’s $204,000 to $214,000. In other words, you can’t contribute to a Roth if you make more than $208,000 in 2021 and $214,000 in 2022 as a married couple filing jointly.
Choose Appropriate Investments
Because your retirement could be years—even decades—in the future, you need to put money into investments that will generate interest, pay dividends (or cash payments), and grow in value so they can be sold later for a profit.
You have to be able to beat or keep up with inflation—the pace of rising prices—since inflation is not going to stop when you retire.
If you aren’t already familiar with the basics of investing, take some time to learn them. Stocks are relatively risky but historically can generate high returns.
Mutual funds have many advantages and should probably be the centerpiece of most retirement portfolios. You can buy mutual funds that invest in stocks, bonds, a combination of the two, or many other types of assets.
“Having an appropriate asset allocation that is represented by a broad base of index mutual funds can help reduce the emotions associated with the more frequent rise and declines of individual stock prices,” says Kevin Michels, CFP®, a financial planner with Medicus Wealth Planning in Draper, UT.
Index funds also have the advantage of relatively low fees and costs—another important thing to keep an eye on as you invest.
It’s crucial to control investment expenses in retirement as high fees can erode returns.
While buy and hold is a time-honored investing strategy, you will also want to review your asset allocation over time. Investments that are appropriate for a 24-year-old may not be for a 64- or 74-year-old.
“When you get older, it is much more important that you find safe investments,” says Kirk Chisholm, wealth manager at Innovative Advisory Group in Lexington, Mass. “When you are close to retirement, you cannot afford to lose a large percentage of your savings.
You can lower your risk by finding bonds with a short maturity date, CDs, fixed annuities (not equity-indexed or variable), safe dividend stocks, physical real estate, or other assets that you would consider yourself an expert in.”
What to Do as Retirement Draws Closer
Before you retire, try to make a reasonable estimate of how much money you and your family will need to live comfortably during retirement.
Then add up all your likely income sources and compare the two. If your income won’t be adequate to cover your expenses, you’ll need to make some adjustments.
“Most important,” says Cullen Breen, president of Dutch Asset Corporation, in Albany, N.Y., “is the Golden Rule: Keep your expenses as low as possible. This cannot be overstated and is the single most important thing that you can control.”
Social Security
You will probably have multiple sources of retirement income, starting with Social Security. You can get an estimate of your future Social Security benefits at the website SSA.gov.
If you have earned at least 40 credits (roughly ten years of work), you can obtain a personalized estimate using the SSA’s Retirement Estimator.
Or, you can plug your current income and planned retirement date into the Social Security Quick Calculator for a ballpark figure.
If you’re married, bear in mind that even if your spouse isn’t eligible for Social Security based on their own work record, they may be entitled to spousal benefits based on yours.
You may also be able to increase your Social Security income substantially by taking benefits later, rather than when you’re first eligible.
Other Sources of Income
Your other sources of retirement income might include one or more defined-contribution plans, such as a 401(k) or 403(b), a traditional defined-benefit pension, and any IRAs you’ve established over the years.
Outside of retirement accounts, you will probably have other assets, such as individual stocks and bonds, mutual funds, exchange traded funds (ETFs), annuities, and CDs.
When the time comes (or earlier, if at all possible), you will also want to read up on withdrawal strategies that can help you maximize your retirement income, minimize your tax bill, and—especially important—not deplete your savings prematurely.
What Is a Good Amount of Money for Retirement?
What is considered a good amount of money for retirement will vary depending on the individual. It will depend on a person’s job before retirement, their current lifestyle, their expected lifestyle in retirement, their financial obligations, such as children or grandchildren, and their health. In general, a good amount of retirement money is considered to be 70% to 80% of the income from your last job before retirement.
What Is the Contribution Limit for a 401(k) Plan?
The annual contribution for a 401(k) plan in 2021 is $19,500. This amount increases to $20,500 in 2022. If you are aged 50 or older, you are allowed an additional contribution amount of $6,500 in both 2021 and 2022.
What Are Some Good Ways to Manage Money in Retirement?
Some good tips to manage your retirement money include waiting as long as you possibly can to start receiving Social Security benefits, adjusting your spending habits, creating separate funds for out-of-pocket healthcare costs, analyzing your home equity and possibly downsizing your home, being tax-efficient with withdrawals from retirement funds, and generating retirement income.
The Bottom Line
It is not necessary to hire a professional to plan for your retirement. There is a tremendous amount of information that is easily accessible to educate yourself on some of the best strategies and tips for creating a retirement nest egg that will allow you to live a comfortable life in your post-working. years.