A Pocket Guide to Your Money and Personal Finance at Age 70 AARP
A Pocket Guide to Your Money and Personal Finance at Age 70 - AARP...
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Take Charge of Your Money at 70
AARP financial ambassador Jean Chatzky has a plan for making your savings last
Getty Images/photosindia Entering retirement opens up a new universe of saving options, big and small. Where , compared with your peers? Are you making more than your college classmates? 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 70s and beyond: how to , , and , starting right now.The Plan for What You Owe and Own
1 Start a debt-busting avalanche
According to the Census Bureau, the median household debt for Americans 65 and over more than doubled between 2000 and 2011, rising to $26,000. Part of that problem: plastic, particularly for the oldest age segment. Back in 2007, households headed by someone age 75 or older had a median of just over $800 in credit card debt. By 2010 that figure had ballooned to $1,800. At an interest rate of 19.9 percent, that would cost $360 a year. Freeing yourself from credit card debt will make your financial life in retirement easier. You'll get the biggest bang for each individual buck by paying off the highest interest rate debt first, while making minimum payments on the remainder. It's called the avalanche method, and it . If you have a credit card charging you 19 percent it doesn't make sense to send extra money to the one charging 14 percent. Once that highest interest rate debt is retired, move onto the next highest. (To run your own debt-free calculation, try the at JeanChatzky.com.)2 Understand refis and reverses
Ideally, you'd be mortgage-free by now. But if that's not possible, or if you need to tap your home equity for living expenses, options exist. are marketed heavily to older homeowners (eligibility begins at age 62); they convert a piece of home equity into cash or a line of credit. The payout is tied to your life expectancy, so older homeowners can expect more, and the money can be taken as a lump sum, drawn on like a home equity loan, or received in monthly sums that can last as long as you or your spouse lives in the house. But reverse mortgages are complex, are laden with fees and won't allow you to tap all of your equity, and the interest rate can be 1 to 1.5 percentage points higher than you can get by simply refinancing. "Take a 70-year-old who bought a home 15 years ago," says Keith Gumbinger of the mortgage information website HSH.com. "He's halfway through the mortgage and has 15 years left. He can get a new 15-year loan at 3 percent and save a bundle. Or, he can get a 30-year term and cut his monthly payments down to open up even more cash flow." Refinancing has its own issues: You'd be extending your debt, and if you're not drawing a strong enough income the bank may not be willing to work with you. If you have 10 years or less left on your loan, "it may not be worth the hassle," says Gumbinger.The Plan for What You Make and Save
1 Spark a sell-off
opens up a new universe of saving options, big and small. For example, selling your car — and ridding yourself of the insurance and maintenance charges that come with it — can be a great source of cash. Downsize your cache of belongings, if you haven't already: List that mid-century bedroom set or your comic book collection on eBay or Craigslist.Smart Savings
2 Get back to work
About 60 percent of people say they'll , according to CareerBuilder. But the Bureau of Labor Statistics says that only 32 percent of men and 19 percent of women actually do. Career coach Nancy Collamer recommends targeting temporary positions. "We are becoming a nation where work is handled on a freelance or temp basis," she says. "For older people who don't want a full-time job, there's a lot of opportunity." Sites like CoolWorks.com can help you find seasonal jobs in resorts and national parks. "Think about how you want to spend your time," says Collamer, "then think about whether you can get paid to do it." You might earn $3,000 (and a trip to Europe), she says, to lead a coach bus tour. The International Guide Academy offers training at bepaidtotravel.com. Or be an inn sitter: "The reality of owning a bed-and-breakfast isn't as much fun as you think. As an inn sitter, you relieve the people who own the place and want to get away." Learn more at sites like inncaring.com and interiminnkeepers.net.3 Make a policy decision
This sounds morbid, but if you're not in good health and have a life insurance policy that's difficult to maintain, you could sell the policy, sometimes for more than the cash value, says Stephen Rothschild of the LIFE Foundation. This is not a transaction to do yourself, Rothschild notes. Find a professional adviser through the Life Insurance Settlement Association (lisa.org). Nor is it something you should do without exploring other options, like borrowing against your policy or collecting accelerated death benefits, which you might do if you have less than 24 months to live.The Plan for How You Invest
1 Find balance
Rebalance your assets at least once a year when you're in retirement, so that you have the appropriate amount in stocks, bonds and cash (as well as all of their subcategories) for your age and risk tolerance. Why? Because should the market take a major tumble, you have little time to make up what you've lost. If you are reading this and berating yourself for never rebalancing, it's time to punt. Put your money into a fund that will rebalance your account for you — a target date retirement fund.Investing in You
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