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The U.S. Department of Labor released some tips, on how to prepare for your retirement. It doesn’t matter how old you are now; actually the younger you are - the better! Okay, some tips apply for US citizen only. Anyway, here they are:
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1. Know Your Retirement Needs Retirement is expensive. Experts estimate that you’ll need about 70 percent of your preretirement income - lower earners, 90 percent or more - to maintain your standard of living when you stop working. Take charge of your financial future. Start by requesting Savings Fitness: A Guide to Your Money and Your Financial Future. 2. Find Out About Your Social Security Benefits Social Security pays the average retiree about 40 percent of preretirement earnings. Call the Social Security Administration at 1.800.772.1213 for a free Social Security Statement and find out more about your benefits at www.socialsecurity.gov. 3. Learn About Your Employer’s Pension Or Profit Sharing Plan If your employer offers a plan, check to see what your benefit is worth. Most employers will provide an individual benefit statement if you request one. Before you change jobs, find out what will happen to your pension. Learn what benefits you may have from previous employment. Find out if you will be entitled to benefits from your spouse’s plan. For a free booklet about protecting your pension, request What You Should Know about Your Retirement Plan. |
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4. Contribute To A Tax-Sheltered Savings Plan
If your employer offers a tax-sheltered savings plan, such as a 401(k), sign up and contribute all you can. Your taxes will be lower, your company may kick in more, and automatic deductions make it easy. Over time, compound interest and tax deferrals make a big difference in the amount you will accumulate.
5. Ask Your Employer To Start A Plan
If your employer doesn’t offer a retirement plan, suggest that it start one. Simplified plans can be set up by certain employers. For information on simplified employment pensions, order Internal Revenue Service Publication 590 by calling 1.800.829.3676. Or you can view a copy on the IRS Web site. You may also want to request a copy of Choosing a Retirement Plan for Your Small Business.
6. Put Your Money Into An Individual Retirement Account
You can put up to $3,000 a year into an Individual Retirement Account (IRA) and gain tax advantages. The chart below illustrates the way your account can grow in an IRA.

When you open an IRA, you have two options - a traditional IRA or the newer Roth IRA. The tax treatment of your contributions and withdrawals will depend on which option you select. Also, you should know that the after-tax value of your withdrawal will depend on inflation and the type of IRA you choose.
7. Don’t Touch Your Savings
Don’t dip into your retirement savings. You’ll lose principal and interest, and you may lose tax benefits. If you change jobs, roll over your savings directly into an IRA or your new employer’s retirement plan.
8. Start Now, Set Goals, And Stick To Them
Start early. The sooner you start saving, the more time your money has to grow. Put time on your side. Make retirement savings a high priority. Devise a plan, stick to it, and set goals for yourself. Remember, it’s never too early or too late to start saving. So start now, whatever your age!
9. Consider Basic Investment Principles
How you save can be as important as how much you save. Inflation and the type of investments you make play important roles in how much you’ll have saved at retirement. Know how your pension or savings plan is invested. Financial security and knowledge go hand in hand.
10. Ask Questions
These tips point you in the right direction. But you’ll need more information. Talk to your employer, your bank, your union, or a financial advisor. Ask questions and make sure the answers make sense to you. Get practical advice and act now. Financial security doesn’t just happen. It takes planning and commitment and, yes, money.
Facts
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Today, only 42 percent of Americans have calculated how much they need to save for retirement.
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In 2001, of those who had 401(k) coverage available, 30 percent didn’t participate.
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The average American spends 18 years in retirement.
Putting money away for retirement is a habit we can all live with. Remember … Saving Matters!
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Sweet reading!!!!
although, for aspiring nomads, this would smack of “rat-race”! lol!
How true actually! Although a bit planning ahead is better than no planning at all. You could also use the Rat Race to your advantage, like planning to work 10 years full power and saving what you need to live nomadic after. That’s what I did, although the initial 10-12 years became 14 years in the end. So yeah, pulling through with that could mean quite some frustration and hardship as well, plenty of discipline and doubts - nothing you necessarily want to start with, but hey - it’s even harder to create something out of nothing.
How do you calculate how much you need to retire????
Ravi - that is a good question and one that has a different answer for everyone. It really depends on your current standard of living/savings/family situation/passive income streams you already have, your future material demands and needs, the country where you are planning to retire, your health status and other factors. I wrote a few more detailed posts about it, you might want to click on the ‘money’ or ‘retire’ category on the upper top left part of the site and scroll back through some of the existing posts. If you have detailed questions, let me know and I’ll try to help you find an answer that works for you.