Retirement plan with calculator pen and glasses, personal finance planning
Your financial retirement plan may work great if everything goes accordingly. But, if there’s one great certainty about life, it’s that nothing is certain. Stuff happens—stuff we didn’t expect or prepare for.
That’s why resilience is so important. Simply put, resilience is the ability to recover from adversity. It’s important in every aspect of life, including your finances – and especially during retirement. While you can’t control all the circumstances that might compromise your financial stability, you can take steps to make sure you have a financial strategy that gives you the resiliency you need in today’s uncertain world.
Why Resilience is So Important
Before we talk about those steps, let’s look at a few of the biggest reasons why resiliency is so important for retirees.
Healthcare: Topping the list are healthcare costs and medical emergencies. It’s no secret that as you get older, your healthcare needs increase. What some people don’t realize is that healthcare inflation outpaces the general inflation rate by a huge margin. What’s more, if a major medical emergency hits you during retirement, it can rapidly drain your savings by hundreds of thousands of dollars. If you’re not prepared, you may end up recovering physically, but not financially.
Family: Another common cause of financial stress during retirement is family. An emergency involving a grown child or aging parent can quickly undercut your financial stability when you need it most.
Poor Planning: Other issues that can test your resilience involve poor planning around things like Social Security and Required Minimum Distributions. Also, a financial emergency could hit you in retirement if you haven’t protected your assets legally through proper estate planning.
How to Start Building Resilience
The good news is there’s no reason to wait until you’re retired to start improving your financial resilience. There are, in fact, steps you can take at any age, such as the following:
How to Ensure Resilience in Retirement
Expounding on that last point, let’s talk about two additional steps you can take just before retirement to better ensure your long-term financial resilience.
Well, just ask yourself, when are you financially most vulnerable? Is it:
A) When you have little or no savings?
B) When you’re carrying a lot of debt?
C) When you have little or no income?
The obvious answer is C. But, of course, you don’t need just income to be resilient in retirement. You need enough income, and you need the right strategies in place to generate that income for as long as you need it and regardless of market conditions.
Those are exactly the goals an Income Specialist specializes in helping you achieve, better ensuring that you have a retirement strategy that is reliable, right for you, and resilient!