A large part of retirement planning involves guesswork.
And I, for one, am stressed about whether I’m guessing right.
Take Social Security. Experts advise waiting as long as possible, until 70 if you can, to start collecting your benefits. Do this and you’ll get more money. This choice makes sense if you guess correctly and live into your 90s. But what if you don’t live that long? You’ll leave significant money on the table. When you pay into a system your entire working career, the possibility of not collecting what you put in leaves you feeling cheated.
Since the elderly today are living longer, Social Security checks can make a world of difference. Health care is often the biggest expense on a senior’s budget, and even the best insurance plan can leave a gap. Should you become medically incapacitated and unable to feed yourself, bathe or do other normal activities of life, you’ll need help. You may be blessed enough to have children who can pitch in, but at some point, they may need help assisting you. Seeing the cost of a nursing home, assisted-living facility or long-term care aide is enough to make you feel like you’ve been punched in the gut.
This is the reality of growing old in America.
So, to try and make sure you have enough money to stretch throughout retirement, you have to guess if you’re going to get sick enough to need long term care. You have to guess when you’re going to die.
In my weekly Washington Post newsletter, I recently mentioned a discussion that my husband and I have been having. In seven years, I’ll be faced with the decision, and it’s six years for my husband: Do we take Social Security benefits early or wait? Our age for full retirement is 67. There is no point waiting longer than 70 because benefits stop growing.