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How Long Is Retirement? Nobody Knows for Sure

Also: For the First Time Since Summer 2020, a Majority of Homes Are Selling Below List Price
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January 24, 2023
Retire with Money

Nearly every plan needs a timeline, and retirement is no different. In your early 20s, your plan to furnish an apartment probably factors in the likelihood that you’ll move in the not-to-distant future. So you buy a cheap coffee table; you don't need it to last for years.

Planning retirement would be so much easier if we knew how long it was going to last. You’d know the precise number of years you’d need to save for, and from that, you could calculate a pretty accurate amount. Of course that would also mean knowing the date of your last day on earth, and a lot of people probably would choose not to know — putting them right back in the same position of not knowing how long retirement will be.

What happens when you act as if it’s an unknowable amount of time? People tend to underestimate how many years they’ll need to fund without income from a job. That’s according to a survey from TIAA, a financial services firm that provides annuities and insurance to employees of nonprofit organizations.

TIAA calls this “longevity literacy,” and most of us aren’t exactly literate when it comes to a realistic understanding of how long we could live. And that lack of a grip on lifespan means you don’t have one of the most important foundations of any plan.

For more, read our reporter Pete Grieve’s story on skewed retirement perceptions.

— Jill Cornfield, deputy editor

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More Insights and Advice from Money

 

A new report found that, for the first time since July 2020’s pandemic home-buying mania started, market conditions led to more than half of homes being sold below their list price in November.

 

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Investing with Money
Mallika Mitra
Investing with Money provides a quick breakdown of what you need to know about stocks, bonds, crypto and more. Whether you closely track the S&P 500 or haven’t looked at your 401(k) in years, we’ll give you the tools to be a confident long-term investor.

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Retirement 1, 2, 3

 

  • This couple didn’t see the point of retirement. Instead, they used their retirement funds to start a school to close the achievement gap between Black and White students. Twenty-five years later, it’s a success.
  • Retirement accounts are usually protected from lawsuits and restitution. Unless you’re convicted of securities fraud.
  • If you’re falling short on income replacement for retirement, any or all of these strategies could help put you in a better place.
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