A Pocket Guide to Your Money and Personal Finance at Age 50 AARP
A Pocket Guide to Your Money and Personal Finance at Age 50 - AARP...
— Receive access to exclusive information, benefits and discounts If you’re off track, adjust, says Beth McHugh, vice president of Fidelity Investments. Could you delay retirement? Live on a little less? Work part-time? Find out now. “The closer you get to retirement, the harder it is to close the gap.”
Take Charge of Your Money at 50
Your savings Your salary Your spending Your investments AARP financial ambassador Jean Chatzky puts it all in perspective
Getty Images Your 50s are prime time to pay down nondeductible debt. That means car loans, credit cards and lingering student or personal loans. Where do you stand, , compared with your peers? Are you ? How do your stack up against those of the rest of your generation? We’re forever asking such questions. “Our brains are comparison machines, always tuned in to relative differences,” says social psychologist Heidi Grant Halvorson, coauthor of Focus: Use Different Ways of Seeing the World for Success and Influence. Trouble is, comparing can get discouraging. So don’t get hung up on what might have been. Instead, Halvorson says, “look at people who are doing it right — or at least better. Don’t think ‘How good am I at this?’ Think ‘How can I get better?’ ” See also: The tips on the next pages will help you do just that, walking you through the you’ll face in the next 10 years of your life. It’s a pocket guide to your money in your 50s: how to maximize your income, , spend smarter and save more, starting right now. Photo by Brad Trent Jean Chatzky.AARP Financial Ambassador Jean Chatzky
Financial expert Jean Chatzky is a regular contributor to and . Read Jean's articles, watch her money tips videos and learn more about how to save more and spend less at Also, be sure to make use of AARP's suite of interactive Money Tools — including the and the — at .The Plan for What You Owe and Own
Expert advice: Don’t pay off the house at the expense of retirement saving. You may end up with no mortgage but zero cash.1 Start a debt-busting avalanche
Your 50s are prime time to pay down nondeductible debt. That means car loans, credit cards and lingering student or personal loans. Why now? At this stage, you’re most likely to have the resources to clear the decks. You’ll get the biggest bang for each individual buck by paying off the highest interest-rate debt in your portfolio first, while making minimum payments on the remainder. It’s called the avalanche method, and it gets you cheapest and fastest. If you have a credit card charging you 19 percent interest and a car loan at 4.1 percent, throw every extra dollar you have at the higher rate. Once the highest interest-rate debt is retired, move on to the next highest. (To run your own debt-free calculation, try the Credit Card Avalanche Calculator at .)2 Lock in low rates
You can speed your debt-free quest by reducing interest rates where possible. In June, the average rate on a 48-month new car loan was 2.57 percent, per Bankrate.com; for a used car, it was 2.7 percent. The Capital One Platinum Prestige credit card is offering zero percent interest through September 2014, while Discover’s new “it” card touts zero percent for 14 months. You’ll likely need a credit score over 720 to qualify for such rates. Coming up short? Pay your bills on time, use no more than 10 to 30 percent of your available credit and don’t close old credit cards.3 Make a move on your mortgage
It’s easier to sleep when the roof over your head isn’t going anywhere. “The happiest clients are the ones who go into retirement completely debt-free, including the mortgage,” says financial planner Bill Losey, author of Retire in a Weekend. If your interest rate is 4.5 percent or higher (as of December 2012, 45 percent of the nation’s first mortgages have interest rates above 5 percent, according to CoreLogic), , says Keith Gumbinger of mortgage-information website HSH.com. Act fast, as rates have been rising (the average rate on a 30-year fixed-rate loan topped 4 percent nationally in June). For timing purposes, a 15-year loan is better than a 30, but payments will be significantly higher. You can turn a 30-year loan into a 23-year loan just by making one extra payment each year. But don’t pay off the house at the expense of retirement saving. “You may end up with no mortgage but zero cash,” Gumbinger warns. “That’s foolhardy.”The Plan For What You Make And Save
1 Upsize your income
Yes, these are supposed to be the prime earning years. If your current paycheck isn’t living up to its end of the bargain and a raise isn’t likely this year, : Even modest income gains at this point add up over time. Say you started investing an extra $200 a month in a diversified portfolio earning 8 percent annually. By 70, that could be over $100,000 in your retirement coffers.2 Boost your brand
Only a third of employees used career-development benefits and training, according to the “Cornerstone OnDemand 2013 U.S. Employee Report.” That’s a huge missed opportunity, especially at this age.Wanna Save Money
Catch the latest episode of The Cheap Life starring Jeff Yeager, AARP's Ultimate Cheapskate. Even if you don’t plan on switching jobs, use those professional-development perks to meet new people and pick up skills, says career coach Nancy Collamer. In her book, Second-Act Careers, Collamer touts using your expertise to develop multiple streams of income. “It used to be that experts had one option, going to work at a college as an adjunct [professor],” she says. “Today there’s consulting, teaching, coaching, training.” But in order to do that, you have to build your personal brand. Start now. Volunteer to speak on panels. on LinkedIn. Launch your own blog.3 Or prep your second act
One in four Americans ages 44 to 70 envisions being an entrepreneur, according to the Small Business Administration. If you’re one of them, get on it while your career is still active. “Start part-time at least three to five years before you retire,” says planner Losey. “Do it in the evenings and on weekends. If it’s profitable by the time you retire, keep it going.”4 Max out to play catch-up
Hitting 50 means that you can kick up your retirement account contributions another notch. To max out 401(k)s and similar plans, add an additional $5,500 to the $17,500 annual maximum contribution level; for IRAs, the contribution limit goes from $5,500 to $6,500. That breaks down to $1,916 a month pretax for a 401(k), and $542 a month for an IRA. Make those IRA contributions easier by signing up to have them debited from your checking account automatically.The Plan For How You Invest
1 Run the numbers
To see if you’re on track, put a retirement calculator through its paces (try AARP’s at ). Even simpler is this handy rule of thumb that Fidelity developed. By age 50 you should have saved four times your current income; by 55, five times. And to retire, you should have eight times your preretirement income. Among the assumptions behind these figures: You’ll get a 1.5 percent raise and grow your portfolio by 5.5 percent annually, retire at 67 and live to 92. It also assumes replacing 85 percent of preretirement income.Investing in You
— Receive access to exclusive information, benefits and discounts If you’re off track, adjust, says Beth McHugh, vice president of Fidelity Investments. Could you delay retirement? Live on a little less? Work part-time? Find out now. “The closer you get to retirement, the harder it is to close the gap.”