San Antonio Express-News (Sunday)

RETIREMENT

-

From

income. The society recommends a home inspection before retirement so you can identify and budget for those costs. But you also could schedule some of the expensive stuff — replacing a roof, for instance, or upgrading the heat and air conditioni­ng system — while you’re still working.

Likewise, investment­s in energy efficiency could help you avoid big bills when you’re less able to afford them. Adding insulation, installing a smart thermostat and choosing energy-efficient appliances can help. In sunnier climates, solar panels can dramatical­ly reduce your energy costs.

Consider upkeep, as well. You might want to replace a labor-intensive grass yard and planting beds with lowermaint­enance landscapin­g. You could swap out siding that needs to be painted every few years with a more durable option, such as vinyl, fiber cement or modified wood. Declutteri­ng can make your place easier to navigate and to clean.

Build your equity

You may still face big bills or have trouble making ends meet in retirement. In that case, your home’s equity could be helpful. You could access your home’s value by selling it, using a reverse mortgage or getting a home equity line of credit.

But you can’t tap equity you don’t have. In 2016, 46% of homeowners age 65 to 79 still had mortgage debt, according to Harvard University’s Joint Center for Housing Studies.

The median balance owed was $77,000.

A mortgage in retirement isn’t ideal for many people, financial planners say. Few people get much if any tax benefit from their mortgages, and having to make the payments can cause people to deplete their retirement savings more rapidly.

Planners say you shouldn’t prioritize paying off your mortgage over saving for retirement and for emergencie­s. And you probably shouldn’t take money from retirement funds to pay off a mortgage. But once you’re on track with your savings goals, you could make extra principal payments to pay down the loan more rapidly. You also can avoid having a mortgage in retirement by opting for shorter loans when you refinance. If you’re 50, for example, you might choose a 15-year loan over one that lasts 30 years.

Assess accessibil­ity

Consider incorporat­ing accessibil­ity features into any planned renovation­s. Grab bars in bathrooms, lever-style handles on doors and faucets, and rocker-style light switches (preferably accessible from a wheelchair) are relatively lowcost upgrades, for example. Costlier changes include widening doorways and hallways, adding a curbless shower, installing non-slip flooring and creating a zerostep entry.

Ideally, your home would have just one level, but a home with stairs can work if it has a bedroom and full bath on the entry level. If that’s your situation, you could focus your renovation­s on making those spaces accessible rather than trying to remake your whole house.

Sometimes there’s simply too much that needs to be done or your home has features you can’t affordably modify. Even if you think you can manage a bunch of stairs or a home that’s far from your neighbors, your living situation could worry your loved ones, Jones notes.

“Moving might give you the chance to live closer to your support system,” she says. “Makes it easier on them, makes it easier on you.”

Certified financial planner Melissa Brennan of Plano, Texas, says she and her husband are at least a decade away from retirement and still have two teenagers at home. But they recently traded a twostory, four-bedroom, four-bath home on an oversized lot for a smaller, one-story house with tiled floors and a wheelchair­accessible bathroom.

Brennan said they were mindful of the problems their parents had navigating their houses as they aged, and the bigger house was already seeming like more of a burden than a blessing.

“We don’t want to spend the rest of our lives maintainin­g this ginormous house that we don’t need,” Brennan says.

 ?? ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States