Los Angeles Times

Don’t delay building retirement savings

Getting a late start makes it more crucial to maximize 401(k) or IRA contributi­ons.

- By Liz Weston

Dear Liz: I have a family member who at 57 has no savings, a house whose value is 58% mortgaged and debt from a family member of $180,000.

This person is just starting a new job that will cover expenses with about $1,000 left over each month. The job offers a 401(k) but doesn’t allow contributi­ons until employees have been with the company for eight months.

This person has paid into Social Security so that will be there (hopefully) at retirement. What would be the best way for this person to start saving toward retirement? Answer: Your relative shouldn’t wait to be eligible for the 401(k). People 50 and older can contribute up to $6,500 annually to a traditiona­l IRA or a Roth IRA, which is $1,000 more than the usual limit.

If your relative didn’t have a previous job that offered a workplace plan in 2017, then this year’s contributi­ons to a traditiona­l IRA should be deductible.

Next year, when your relative is eligible for the 401(k), the deductibil­ity of contributi­ons will depend on that person’s income. In 2018, deductibil­ity begins to phase out when modified adjusted gross income reaches $63,000 for singles. If IRA contributi­ons aren’t deductible, after-tax Roth contributi­ons typically are a better deal, but the ability to contribute to a Roth begins to phase out for singles at $120,000 in 2018.

Encourage your relative to save and to delay starting Social Security for as long as possible. When Social Security makes up the majority of one’s income in retirement — as it will for your relative — it’s important to maximize that check.

It’s not clear why your relative has been saddled with a family member’s debt, but any retirement plan needs to include options for paying off, settling or even erasing (through bankruptcy) such a substantia­l amount. Your relative should talk to a credit counselor and a bankruptcy attorney to better understand the options.

Monitoring won’t prevent ID theft

Dear Liz: I thought I would share some informatio­n in light of the Equifax disaster.

Two of my credit card issuers provide free credit monitoring. Capital One scans my TransUnion file and Discover uses Experian. Both send email and text alerts about new activity and a monthly “reassuranc­e” email when no such activity turns up in the previous 30 days.

Along with the credit freeze I placed at Equifax, I feel pretty secure at the moment. Answer: Free credit monitoring can certainly be helpful, but understand that it can’t prevent identity theft. At best, credit monitoring alerts you after the fact if someone has opened a new account in your name. Only credit freezes at all three bureaus can prevent those accounts from being opened in the first place.

Unfortunat­ely, credit monitoring and freezes can’t help you with the most common type of identity theft, which is account takeover. That’s when someone makes bogus charges to your credit cards or steals money from your bank accounts.

Financial institutio­ns use different types of software to detect fraud, but nothing replaces vigilance on the customer’s part. We should be reviewing transactio­ns on our accounts at least monthly if not weekly. Online access to accounts can help you better monitor what’s going on.

You also can set up alerts that will email or text you if large or unusual transactio­ns happen. (Just beware of a common scam in which you’re texted an “alert” that your account has been frozen, along with a link that encourages you to divulge your login informatio­n.)

Even if you do everything in your power to avoid identity theft, you still can’t prevent scammers from using your informatio­n to file bogus tax returns, get medical care or commit criminal identity theft (by giving your name to the police when they’re arrested, for example). As long as Social Security numbers are used as an all-purpose identifier by businesses and government agencies alike, you can’t make yourself completely secure. Liz Weston, certified financial planner, is a personal finance columnist for NerdWallet. Questions may be sent to her at 3940 Laurel Canyon, No. 238, Studio City, CA 91604, or by using the “Contact” form at asklizwest­on.com. Distribute­d by No More Red Inc.

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