- Make sure you can afford it: Don’t stop working until you can afford to – as long as you are healthy.
- Work until full retirement age: Aim to work at least until your full retirement age (66-67). This produces many benefits, including:
- Larger monthly Social Security payment: By delaying taking Social Security, you will receive a larger monthly payment, and all Social Security retirement benefits are adjusted for inflation.
- Increased savings:You can keep adding to your retirement nest egg instead of depleting it too quickly.
- Health care:You will keep your employee health care and other benefits
- Plan ahead:Assume you may have to spend less once you retire. Some costs will be higher and your disposable income may decrease due to inflation.
- Phased retirement: If you are considering phased retirement,know what impact scaling back will have on your retirement income, retirement benefits, health care coverage, job security and other life situations.
- Work part time: Consider part-time workas a good way to supplement your retirement income.
- Be cautious of buy-outs: Viewbuy-outs with caution and evaluate lump sums carefully: A lump-sum payment may be attractive, but ongoing payments could have more advantages in the long run. Income taxes are spread out over time and payments provide an ongoing “paycheck.”