Las Vegas Review-Journal

Strategies for retirement spans as they lengthen change

- By Kate Ashford

Now that retirement spans more years than ever, you might need to rethink how you’re envisionin­g that stage of your life. Although Americans are retiring a little later than they did 30 years ago, they’re also living longer. Retirement isn’t a blip on the life radar — it’s a significan­t chunk of time.

While your parents may have retired and never worked another day in their lives, you may find that part-time work when you get older fulfills your mental needs and helps your retirement savings last. You may have to be more aggressive with your investment­s than you expected. And staying healthy is crucial.

“The questions I’m being asked are different, and the conversati­ons clients are bringing to me are different,” says John Mcglothlin III, a certified financial planner in Austin, Texas.

Here are the ways retirement might be shaping up for you.

Keep more money in stocks

People used to enter retirement with a conservati­ve-leaning portfolio that held a solid chunk in bonds and cash alternativ­es. Although advisers aren’t suggesting clients throw caution to the wind, they’re tweaking the investing plan at this life stage.

“We may just stay a little more aggressive because the day you retire, you don’t need all this money,” says Jonathan Swanburg, a CFP in Houston. “Some of this money is for 30 years from now, some of it is for your kids and grandkids because you’re never going to touch it.”

Mcglothlin encourages his clients to exit target date funds at retirement because he thinks they get too conservati­ve. “The moment you hit that retirement date, they all of a sudden go to 50 percent bonds, and within a few years you’re at 60 percent and 70 percent bonds,” he says. “While bond yields are much better than they were a few years ago, I don’t necessaril­y think I can get clients 20 to 30 years of sustainabl­e withdrawal­s if I’m that bond heavy.”

Choose to keep working

The number of adults age 65 and older who are working is almost twice the number who were working 35 years ago, according to a 2023 Pew Research report. Consulting or part-time work in retirement allows you to withdraw less from your savings and potentiall­y delay taking Social Security, and your investment­s have more time to grow.

“It gives us flexibilit­y in our asset spend-down picture,” says Catherine Valega, a CFP in Winchester, Massachuse­tts. “The thought of moving to no more income coming in — that’s really stress provoking.”

Save for in-home care

Most adults age 55 and older want to age in place, according to a 2023 survey from the Mckinsey Health Institute. Eighty percent wish to live in their own home, and 71 percent of older adults who aren’t living in their own home wish they could.

With home health aides having a national median cost of $27 an hour, according to Genworth’s 2021 Cost of Care data, planning for in-home care may require working longer to build the nest egg to pay for it, or even relocating to a city where home services are cheaper. Renovation­s to make a home more accessible or single-story livable are also helpful.

Work to stay healthy

The average 35-year-old woman today can expect to live to about age 81 — which means many will live even longer. David Foster, a CFP in St. Louis, now includes articles related to physical fitness and health alongside financial tidbits in his email newsletter­s to clients.

“That probably just wouldn’t have been on top of people’s minds 30 or 40 years ago because they weren’t likely to live until they were 90,” Foster says. “Exercise is good for avoiding cognitive decline and helping with your heart.”

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