BayLady57 |
04-26-2021 05:15 AM |
Quote:
Originally Posted by Craig Vernon
(Post 1934831)
Ready for our month of May visit and there is much on the agenda. Financial guy says we have enough to live at same level until 94 years of age. I turn 55 in September. Not sure I am ready to stop working but a change certainly wouldn't hurt my feelings. Bring on your wisdom and relatable points of view.
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Since you noted in your post "we" and not I, then I assume you have a spouse and that is a very important factor when planning for retirement and retirement income.
I am a 64 year old female and will retire next year after I turn 65. For some that may be considered a late retirement, but having been widowed at age 44 when my 49 year old husband died suddenly from a heart attack loosing his income in the blink of an eye not only did I have to take on all the household expenses, I had to continue to save for retirement with now one income instead of two. Fortunately for me two weeks prior to my husband's death after working a number of years in various part-time R.N. jobs I started a full-time Federal Government/VA nursing job. Taking this job not only was I able to immediately pick up my own health insurance as I was always covered by my husband, the full-time income I was now getting made up for some of the lost income from my husband, and if I put in 20 plus service years and was disciplined to significantly contribute to the TSP/401K I would retire with an annuitized pension and TSP account to fund a decent retirement income that would meet all my needs and most of my wants within reason. And working 20+ years full-time with a decent salary I would replace a number of those low income years which Social Security uses your highest 35 income years to calculate your benefit which doing this significantly enhanced my benefit.
If life had dealt me a different hand of cards it would have been nice most importantly to have been able to retire with my husband, and with me going from part-time to full-time R.N. employment at 44 we very likely could have retired when I turned 55 and he 60 because we were already mortgage free, and with my ability to keep my FEHB health insurance we both would have had that coverage to and beyond 65. But that did not happen, but I still count myself very fortunate that although it would require me working to 65 I would not end up in financial lack in retirement.
I share my story with you although I was widowed before retirement was really even on our radar to please consider if you have not already what will be the financial situation of the surviving spouse especially if there is going to be a major dependency down the line on two Social Security incomes to make up for spending down other assets before one or both are eligible to claim Social Security and there is no large life insurance policy to make up for the income of loosing a deceased spouse's benefit. Although the option exists for the survivor to jump to the higher Social Security benefit of the two, it will never be equal to the two benefits combined because the survivor will have to give up their own benefit in the process. And if the survivor really needs that lost income as inflation rears it's ugly head, with advancing age along with possible health decline few if any opportunities exist for the survivor to return to the workforce to make up for the income loss.
When to retire is never an easy decision to make and wish you well in whatever decision your choose.
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