7 top retirement tips: Retirement advice for every age

Feel more confident about living the retirement you want, no matter what age or life stage you’re in.

Retirement planning isn't only for the retired. Rather, it’s a long game that requires consistent saving and intentional investing — at every life stage.

Wherever you are in your retirement journey, your Ameriprise financial advisor is prepared to help you stay on track to reach your retirement goals and provide personalized retirement advice specific to your age and unique situation.

Here are seven essential retirement tips by age that can help you prepare right now.

In this article:

Under age 50

1. Envision your ideal retirement

It’s challenging to plan for retirement unless you know your ideal retirement lifestyle. So, think about how you want to enjoy your days. Maybe you want to continue working. Or do you want to travel, volunteer or become a professional grandparent? Perhaps you’ll build a cabin on a lake?

You can’t start thinking about your retirement too soon or obtain advice for retirement too early. Even if you think your goals might shift in the years ahead, thinking about them today gets the conversation started and helps you plan.

2. Identify your retirement numbers

Once you know what you want to be doing in your retirement years, you can figure out a rough estimation of how much you may need to save. To figure out your retirement numbers, use our retirement planner calculator to help identify specific savings targets.

For example, let’s say you’re 35 years old, earn $100,000 a year and have $200,000 in your 401(k). You might determine you need $2 million saved by the time you’re 65. To get there, you may only need to invest $550 per month, assuming a 7% annual rate of return.

For illustrative purposes only. This example is not meant to represent any specific investment and does not consider fees or other expenses.

Advice spotlight

Even if you don’t know exactly what you want to do in retirement, starting early with investing is key. The longer the time horizon, the more you can benefit from the power of compounding returns.

3. Save money at every opportunity

With rising retirement costs and longer life expectancies, you may need more money than you think. So, save as much as you can during your earning years. Workplace-sponsored 401(k) plans let employees invest a percentage of their income for retirement on an after and tax-deferred basis. Plus, your employer may match a percentage of your contribution. Aim to save at least 15% of your gross pay, if possible. If you’re not there yet, consider increasing your retirement savings contribution with every pay raise.

4. Go beyond the workplace with a Roth IRA

Beyond a 401(k), there are other tax-advantaged ways to save for retirement that aren’t tied to an employer. Consider opening a Roth IRA, which allows for after-tax savings and tax-free income in retirement, when certain conditions are met. This may help you hedge against the possibility of future tax increases.

However, Roth IRAs do have income limits and if you earn too much to contribute directly to one, there are alternate options. You could simply contribute to a traditional IRA, which does not have income limits, or consider a strategy such as a backdoor Roth IRA. Consult with your tax professional to determine if this strategy is appropriate for you.

5. Keep your asset allocation in check by regularly rebalancing

Asset allocation is the strategic apportioning of different assets types — including stocksbonds, alternatives and cash — in your portfolio, based on your financial goals, risk tolerance and time horizon. The general goal is to help diversify your portfolio, keep you invested and soften the effects of big market fluctuations.

However, over time, market swings can throw your portfolio’s asset allocation out of balance. That’s why it’s important to regularly rebalance your portfolio. Rebalancing brings your investments back into alignment with your risk tolerance and long-term strategy, helping you stay on track toward your goals.

6. Steer clear of emotional investing

As investors, our emotions tend to follow market cycles. When markets rise, our outlook improves, and we are inclined to invest more. When markets turn down, our outlook becomes more pessimistic, and we are inclined to invest less. Some investors may even pull out of the stock market just as it reaches its low, missing out on potential gains as it rises again.

Bottom line: Emotions can cause us to do the opposite of what we should do. That’s why regularly investing, and staying invested, over the long-term is a smart approach for most investors.

Advice spotlight

Dollar-cost averaging can help you avoid making emotional decisions based on market turbulence. With this strategy, you automatically invest a set amount of money at regular intervals, regardless of what the market is doing. This systematic investing approach can help you resist the impulse to sideline money when markets become challenging.

7. Consider insurance to help reduce your worries

Even with a smart saving and investing strategy, unexpected events can occur. You could experience an illness that prevents you from working and earning an income. Or your home could be damaged in a storm. To protect yourself against these risks, consider how insurance — whether it's life insurance, disability income insurancelong-term care coverage or auto, home and umbrella life policies — can help. With sufficient protection, you can focus on planning for the future, without worrying too much about life’s uncertainties.

Age 50 - 62

1. Add details to your goals

Start planning for the retirement lifestyle you've long strived for. You may have decided to spend your retirement years traveling, volunteering or becoming a professional grandparent. Now that you're a little bit closer to retirement, get more specific and start to refine your retirement vision.

2. Catch up if you need to

Prioritize saving as you near retirement. Max out contributions to your retirement accounts as much as you can. If you’re between 50 and 64 years old, you’re eligible to make extra “catch-up” contributions to your 401(k) and IRA to help you meet your retirement goals.

3. Consider consolidating retirement accounts

By this point, you may be juggling multiple retirement accounts, making it difficult for you to manage your money and have a full financial picture. Consider the pros and cons of consolidating these accounts before retirement so you can easily and effectively tap into your money when you need it.

4. Plan for health care expenses

Health care expenses are an often-overlooked expenditure in retirement planning, but these costs can be significant. Medicare wasn’t designed to cover health care expenses in full and retirees are responsible for paying for deductibles and copayments, as well as dental and vision care.

As such, start thinking about how you'll cover health costs in retirement, and consider funding a health savings account (HSA), if you’re enrolled in a high-deductible health plan. An HSA is a tax-advantaged account that enables you to use pre-tax money to cover eligible, out-of-pocket medical expenses. However, any distributions taken prior to age 65 that are not used for eligible medical expenses are subject to income tax and a penalty.

5. Start planning for retirement income

Your retirement can last for decades, and you’ll want to have multiple income streams to help ensure your retirement savings endures. At this point in your journey, you may want to consider strategies like tax diversification or purchasing an annuity, which can provide a steady income stream throughout your lifetime, or adding dividend-paying stocks to your portfolio.

6. Investigate long-term care

Medicare does not cover extended stays in nursing homes and other long-term care facilities. However, about 70% of Americans who reach age 65 will need long-term care at some point, according to the Department of Health and Human Services.1 In your 50s and early 60s, consider purchasing coverage that could help pay for the cost of a long stay in a facility or in-home care. It's typically more cost-effective to lock in premiums while you're younger.

7. Reevaluate how you invest

How you invested when you were 40 is not necessarily how you should invest at 50 or 60. Your risk tolerance changes over time, and as you get closer to your retirement, it’s smart to focus on preserving your wealth, as much as growing it. At this point, you may want to revisit your portfolio’s asset allocation and consider how your shorter time horizon may affect your risk tolerance and investment mix. For example, as retirement draws closer, it’s not uncommon for retirees to shift from a more aggressive allocation to a more conservative one.

Age 62+

1. Be strategic with your Medicare and Social Security benefits

As you enter your retirement years, continue to review your progress and assess your position. You will not only want to consider strategic adjustments to your portfolio, but also think about the big upcoming retirement milestones, such as enrolling in Medicare and deciding when to file for Social Security.

2. Establish a spending plan

In the year leading up to retirement, consider tracking your expenses so you can better understand how much income you’ll need to withdraw in retirement. For many retirees, the transition from earning income to withdrawing income can be an adjustment, so creating a spending plan can be helpful for managing expenses.

3. Create a sustainable withdrawal strategy

Once you know the amount of income you’ll need, create a withdrawal strategy that accounts for your different income sources, your required minimum distributions (RMDs) at the appropriate age and your financial goals. While a general rule for withdrawing money from retirement savings is to take out up to 4% each year, everyone’s situation is unique. After years of accumulating assets in your retirement accounts, it may feel strange to switch to this phase, but it’s important to remember that you’ve worked hard to get to this point. 

4. Take advantage of tax diversification

How you withdraw from your various taxable and tax-deferred accounts in retirement — and which you tap first, second and so on — determines the taxes you owe and may help your assets last longer. It's generally wise to tap taxable savings before tax-advantaged retirement accounts, but every person’s situation is unique. For example, there may be tax benefits to withdrawing from several different types of retirement savings accounts at the same time. Consult with your tax professional to determine the strategy that is appropriate for you.

5. Make your retirement savings last

A common mistake retirees make is shifting a big portion of their retirement assets to cash and fixed-income investments. Since you have less time to recover from market downturns, investing more conservatively in retirement can be wise. However, you don’t want the purchasing power of your investment portfolio to be eroded by inflation. Retirement can last more than 30 years, so it's important to take steps to help your retirement savings last longer.

6. Prepare for the long run

Planning for your later years is crucial. People often only plan for their early retirement years when they can travel the world or enjoy their favorite activities. But those activities may not be as realistic as you age. Think through how you hope to spend your later retirement years and work through some unexpected scenarios. Then you can take steps to prepare, such as securing long-term care coverage to help pay for any services you may need or making modifications to your home to make it more accessible as you age.

7. Keep checking in with your goals and finances

Don't leave your retirement on autopilot. Priorities often change over the course of retirement for many reasons. Reviewing your goals periodically can help you feel more confident that you can continue to live the retirement you want.

Prepare for retirement — at every life stage

Your Ameriprise financial advisor is prepared to provide you with retirement advice by age and recommend strategies to help you stay on track — so you can enjoy the retirement you’ve always envisioned.

Am I on track to reach my retirement goals? What unique steps should I take, given my age and life stage? How can I boost my retirement savings/income?

When you’re ready to reach out to an Ameriprise financial advisor for an initial complimentary consultation, consider bringing these questions to your meeting.

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Stay on track to your retirement goals with the help of an Ameriprise financial advisor.

Or, request an appointment online to speak with an advisor.

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At Ameriprise, the financial advice we give each of our clients is personalized, based on your goals and no one else's. 

If you know someone who could benefit from a conversation, please refer me.

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1How Much Care Will You Need?, LongTermCare.gov, February 18, 2020, retrieved from https://acl.gov/ltc/basic-needs/how-much-care-will-you-need
This information is being provided only as a general source of information and is not a solicitation to buy or sell any securities, accounts or strategies mentioned.  The information is not intended to be used as the primary basis for investment decisions, nor should it be construed as a recommendation or advice designed to meet the particular needs of an individual investor.  Please seek the advice of a financial advisor regarding your particular financial situation.
A Roth IRA is tax free as long as investors leave the money in the account for at least 5 years and are 59 1/2 or older when they take distributions or meet another qualifying event, such as death, disability or purchase of a first home.
Asset allocation and dollar cost averaging do not assure a profit or protect against loss.
Before you purchase an insurance policy or annuity contract, be sure to ask your financial advisor to explain the features, benefits, risks and fees, and whether the product is appropriate for you based upon your financial situation and objectives. Annuities are long-term insurance products.
Dividend payments are not guaranteed and the amount, if any, can vary over time.
There are risks associated with fixed-income investments, including credit risk, interest rate risk, and prepayment and extension risk. In general, bond prices rise when interest rates fall and vice versa. This effect is usually more pronounced for longer term securities.
Stock investments involve risk, including loss of principal. High-quality stocks may be appropriate for some investment strategies. Ensure that your investment objectives, time horizon and risk tolerance are aligned with investing in stocks, as they can lose value.
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