Albany Times Union (Sunday)

How sure are you about retirement?

29% of respondent­s say they feel very positive about savings

- Rate.com Rate.com/research/news covers personal finance and residentia­l real estate.

At first glance, the 2021 Retirement Confidence survey conducted by the Employee Benefit Research Institute and Greenwald Research seems to pack good news. The survey shows that nearly 75 percent of us say we are confident in our ability to retire comfortabl­y.

However, to suggest that three in four of us is sitting pretty on the retirement planning front is oversellin­g things. The survey finds that just 29 percent of participan­ts describe themselves as very confident, while more than 40 percent fall into the more nebulous range of somewhat confident. Another 28 percent self-report as being “not too” confident or “not at all confident.”

The breakdown suggests that just one in three of us has enough confidence to not be worried about how things will play out.

And even that might be more optimism than confidence. Just 20 percent of people passed a retirement income quiz, which isn’t surprising given the absurd complexity of trying to work out a sustainabl­e strategy for living comfortabl­y in retirement without running out of money. Another quiz found that a big chunk of workers are not up to speed on important retirement planning rules of thumb.

If you find yourself “somewhat confident,” there are plenty of steps you can take right now to move you toward “very confident” over time.

Save for retirement today. The Employee Benefit Research Institute survey finds that people who have access to a retirement plan are nearly twice as confident than those that don’t have a plan. Sound obvious? It’s certainly not automatic. Just half of private sector workers today have a workplace retirement pension and/or 401(k) plan. That means half of workers must run their own retirement plans and contribute as much as possible.

Don’t assume your workplace plan is setting you up for success. Experts say we need to save at least 10 percent of our salary for retirement security.

Vanguard’s 2021 survey of retirement plans it runs shows that among plans that automatica­lly enroll new hires — an increasing­ly popular feature — nearly 60 percent set the employee’s initial contributi­on rate at 4 percent or lower. Even with a generous company match, that’s going to fall short of 10 percent for a few years.

Some good news is that among plans that auto-enroll new hires, nearly 70 percent automatica­lly increase annual contributi­on rates, though it’s typically just 1 percent each year. That means you’re still likely spending a few years under-saving before you hit 10 percent or more. And if you job hop and just accept the default contributi­on rate at your next job, you’re going to run into this under-saving trap again.

The fix is to check right now that your contributi­on and any company match are getting you to at least 10 percent. (A 15 percent rate is an even smarter confidence booster.) Reduce your spending. In the EBRI survey, just one-third of workers say they are very confident they will have the cash needed to cover essential expenses in retirement. Debt is part of the problem. Less than half of workers surveyed who said they had a major debt problem expressed any confidence about having enough money in retirement.

Avoiding lifestyle creep is going to be your biggest friend. Skipping the extra bedroom when buying a house, avoiding a too-big car loan payment, and not taking on gobs of PLUS loans to pay for your kids’ college, are big-ticket decisions that can generate sizable savings.

Keep working past 62. Parttime is fine. If you intend to retire from a full-blown career job in your early 60s, don’t automatica­lly go into full-retirement mode. Any income you continue to bring in reduces the likelihood you will be tempted to start Social Security too early and reduces what you likely need to start pulling out of retirement accounts. Hatch a plan to make it possible to delay Social Security until age 70. The Social Security program will boost your eventual benefit for every year between age 62 and 70 that you wait to start collecting. The benefit you get if you start at age 70 is 76 percent more than the benefit you get if you start collecting your retirement benefit at age 62. That alone can be the difference between being somewhat and very confident about your retirement security.

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