How to Tell if You Are Saving Enough for Retirement

February 26, 2010 RSS Feed Print
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Few Americans know how much money they'll need to save for retirement. Some 44 percent of employed Americans—and even 29 percent of those ages 55 and older—admit they don't know how much money they will need in retirement, according to a recent ING Direct survey. Among those who have a retirement savings goal, a third of current workers 55 and older believe they need $250,000 or less in order to retire. Another third of older workers think they need to save $1 million or more. Here is how to tell if you are saving enough. 

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Monitor current expenses. Unless you're intending to enter retirement newly mortgage free or to downsize significantly, estimate that your expenses will remain largely the same in retirement. If you plan to travel or take up expensive hobbies, your cost of living may even increase. "Most people don't change how much they spend when they retire," says Constance Stone, a certified financial planner and president of Stepping Stone Financial in Chagrin Falls, Ohio. "Work off the scenario that you are going to spend about the same as you do now in retirement." 

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Consistency matters. Beginning to save for retirement as soon as you begin working full time is generally the best way to accumulate a large retirement account balance. "You should be saving a minimum of 10 percent of your gross income in 401(k)'s or taxable accounts," says Scott Leonard, a certified financial planner and chief investment officer for Trovena in Redondo Beach, Calif. If you're saving less, step up your retirement savings each time you get a pay boost. "Every time you get a raise, take 20 percent of the value of that raise and put that into savings," Leonard says. 

Factor in Social Security benefits. Most Americans don't have to finance retirement completely on their own. Some employees still have traditional pensions that guarantee income for life. Retired workers also received Social Security checks worth an average of $1,164.30 each month in 2009. Although you are not likely to be able to sustain your desired lifestyle using Social Security payments alone, you'll have a nice base to build your savings upon. Workers can boost their Social Security checks by 7 to 8 percent for each year they delay signing up for benefits between ages 62 and 70. You can get an estimate of your future Social Security benefits at ssa.gov. Factor that amount into your savings calculations. 

Budget for taxes. Your entire 401(k) balance isn't available for spending in retirement. Regular income tax is due on withdrawals from traditional 401(k)'s and IRAs. If you withdraw $20,000 from a retirement account and are in the 25 percent tax bracket, $5,000 will be due to Uncle Sam. No income tax is due on Roth 401(k) and Roth IRA distributions in retirement because you already paid tax on that money before it was deposited. 

Consider health expenses. Healthcare expenses can make a huge dent in your retirement savings. Even after retirees qualify for Medicare coverage at age 65, they must still pay for premiums, deductibles, copays, and common uncovered items such as eyeglasses and dental care. Out-of-pocket medical expenses throughout retirement for a 65-year-old couple retiring in 2009 could be between $240,000 (Fidelity Investments estimate) and $338,000 (Employee Benefit Research Institute calculation). The Urban Institute recently projected that median out-of-pocket healthcare costs for retirees will reach $6,200 annually in 2040. None of these estimates include the cost of long-term care, such as assisted living or nursing home care, which could easily be the biggest retirement expense of all. "Just about half of my clients have had knee replacement and then have to get care in the home," says Susan Spraker, a certified financial planner and president of Spraker Wealth Management in Maitland, Fla. "People are not planning for what are they going to do when they can't live on their own anymore." 

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The article from K of AZ was one whom I could really relate to in my lifetime.

I have always, paid for, enabled, worked two jobs just to help out family or

be able to take vacations at times.

Now older and almost to retirement age, I find myself without much debt,

yet not enough to be able to retire..

Since we do not know what the future holds for us, I now am trying to

save as much as possible while still working.

I do plan to work as long as possible as I enjoy working and have

no spouse to keep me from doing so..As long as my health holds

out, I will keep working these days.

I suppose I should have planned better, been more cold hearted

in choices to help those who could have done better to help themselves.

But, having a big heart doesn't help with your retirement..

Kim of FL 10:33AM September 28, 2010

My husband and I have no savings. He is 58 and I am 52. He has a retirement plan at work for 23 so far years at work. By the time we retire our morgage, car, and loans will be paided for. So... what should we do? Right now money is tight and we cannot save much.

Lynn of KY 10:56AM September 16, 2010

My answer: never enough, unless you stand to inherit a bundle. No matter how much you save, another market crash is going to come along and burst your bubble, wiping out 35%+ of all the hard earned money you have saved. Another MAJOR repair will be needed on that little house you have lived in since early marriage (in order to pay off the mortgage & save that money). Another careless driver is going to crash into that car that you love and just recently paid off, requiring another loan or substantial withdrawl to purchase another one (one that you like less, at that). Another medical diagnosis will be made that requires outragious co-pays for supplies and drugs (even with decent health care coverage and a drug plan). My wife thinks we should just stash our savings in canning jars and bury them in the yard (interest income on buried savings is about the same as you'd get by putting your money in a CD acct today anyway). Do I sound cynical? Even by contributing the max amount into IRAs just about every year since their inception (although there have been a few years when we weren't able), and by us working two jobs when we could have lived on one(although there have been several unfortunate periods of unemployment), and by saving at least 10% of our gross income religiously, and by trying to invest wisely, and by pinching pennies all our lives, I know we are better prepared than some, but we have gotten knocked back SO MANY times, we doubt that we will ever have enough to retire at 62 as we have always dreamed. At the current ages of 57 & 58 and after the last market crash, we probably should bury our retirement dreams in the yard along with the money.

Jay of PA 8:49AM May 10, 2010

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