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    How Long Should I Work Before Retirement?

    Fantasy Finance

    Most Americans no longer aspire to retire early. Workers are increasingly pushing back their desired retirement age and wondering if they will be able to retire at all.

    The age workers expect to retire has increased from an average of 60 in 1995 to 66 in 2011, according to a Gallup poll. The proportion of people aiming to retire early has plummeted from 50 percent in 1995 to 28 percent in 2011. Most Americans now expect to retire at age 65 or later.

    [See The 10 Best Places to Retire in 2012.]

    "It's just not possible for people to work for 30 or 40 years and support themselves on their assets for another 20 or 30 years," says Alicia Munnell, director of the Center for Retirement Research at Boston College. "Many people saw their 401(k)s decimated by the recession, and many people also saw their house lose value."

    The recession has accelerated the trend of Americans pushing back their retirement date. Almost half (46 percent) of people age 50 and older say they now plan to retire at a later age than they did three years ago, and the reason is often because the value of their 401(k) and other retirement investments has declined, according to a recent Towers Watson survey. Unsurprisingly, workers depending on their 401(k)s to finance retirement are planning longer delays than people with a traditional pension.

    More time to save. Saving enough to fund a 30-year retirement is extremely difficult. Postponing retirement allows you to reduce the number of years you'll need to finance and gives your assets more time to grow. "Many people at the end of their work life are making the best money they ever have," says David Weir, director of the University of Michigan's Health and Retirement Study. "In those last few years, once their kids are out of college and they have paid off their mortgage, for many people, this is when they really have the ability to save."

    [See 8 New Retirement Rules.]

    There are many tax advantages to delaying retirement. Workers age 50 and older can contribute up to $22,500 to a 401(k), $5,500 more than younger workers can defer paying tax on. Older workers can also contribute $1,000 more to an IRA than people under 50. If you are still working, you can also delay required minimum distributions from your 401(k). Traditional 401(k) withdrawals are generally required after age 70 1/2. But if you are still employed and don't own 5 percent or more of the company sponsoring the retirement plan, you can continue to delay withdrawals from your 401(k) and the resulting income tax bill. However, distributions from traditional IRAs are required even if you are still working.

    Bigger Social Security checks. Social Security benefits are calculated based on your 35 highest-earning years in the workforce. If you continue to work and currently earn more than you did earlier in your career, you can boost the size of your Social Security payments.

    Delaying the date you sign up for Social Security also results in bigger monthly checks. While you are eligible to claim your payments beginning at age 62, your payout will be reduced unless you wait until your full retirement age, which for most baby boomers is 66. Your payments will further increase for each year you delay claiming up until age 70. "For people who have average to above-average health, many of them would do better by delaying claiming Social Security to get a better benefit," says Weir. These higher payments continue for the rest of your life and are indexed for inflation.

    [See How to Finance Life Until 100.]

    Health benefits. Purchasing an individual health insurance policy in your 50s or early 60s can be difficult and extremely expensive. Waiting until at least age 65 to retire eliminates a potentially huge retirement expense: retiree health insurance. Most workers (65 percent) base their retirement date on their eligibility for Medicare at age 65, Towers Watson found. Continuing to work for a company that provides benefits is one of the most cost-effective ways to find health insurance before age 65. There's also some evidence that delaying retirement has health benefits. "People have a social network at work, and they have friends and activities through the workplace that help keep their mind nimble," says Olivia Mitchell, director of the Pension Research Council at the University of Pennsylvania. "In countries with early retirement, there are much greater rates of mental and physical decline."

    But when you retire isn't always a choice. Some people find themselves pushed into retirement ahead of schedule by job loss, health problems, or the need to care for family members. Almost half (45 percent) of retirees say they left the workforce earlier than planned, often due to circumstances beyond their control, according to a 2011 Employee Benefit Research Institute survey.

    Second careers. Retirement is no longer a one-time, permanent event. "People are less likely today to move directly from full-time employment to full-time retirement," says Richard Johnson, a senior fellow and director of the program on retirement policy at the Urban Institute. Instead, exiting the workforce is becoming more gradual, with many employees moving to another job before leaving the workforce completely. "The baby boomers are completely reinventing the idea of retirement," says Mitchell. "They were starting to mull over this whole creative set of ideas, including working longer, changing careers, going to part-time work, having a bridge job, and becoming consultants before the financial crisis hit."

    [See The Growing Challenge of Funding Retirement.]

    But delaying retirement can be difficult at a time when there aren't enough jobs to go around and older workers are at the top of the pay scale. "If you want to keep working, it is a good idea to have a job lined up before you quit your current job. It can be very risky to assume you will leave this job and find another one," says Johnson. "You're probably getting paid more with your current job than you would at a new job. Most people who change jobs at older ages get a pretty significant pay cut."

    Workers who need to fund their retirement years with personal savings have three choices: "You have to either save more, work longer, or cut your standard of living in retirement," says Munnell. "The best thing is to try to keep working full time as long as you can."

    Twitter: @aiming2retire



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    9 comments

    • Bud  •  Tampa, Florida  •  3 months ago
      Retired at age 66. If you like your job, wait to retire. Life will be much better!
    • johhnny come lately  •  3 months ago
      learn to vote for a guy that will help the country first then hope things change by the time your 60s roll around.
      • WhtsUrPt 3 months ago
        Exactly right--anyone but the GOP. They are only for the rich,
      • charles r 3 months ago
        I soon will be 62 I am going to quit We wont have a ton of money but will draw from all sourses 50k per year I have no debt I think I can make out just fine They all want you to keep working so they can pay you less or make more money on you.
        Not me folks
    • JustTheFactsPlease  •  Spokane, Washington  •  3 months ago
      Oh and Umm keep contributing to your 401K or whatever plan, so these financial wizards can benefit from you working longer. I'm retired at 59 and loving it, diminished stress, leisure activities abound, go where I want when I want, stay as long as I want. Life doesn't get any better than this. Life isn't all about money guys, some day you will figure that out. Simple equation, do you want to retire while you are fit and healthy enough to enjoy it, or work until your health dictates you quit. You decide......
    • !  •  3 months ago
      The answer would be simple if you knew when you would die. The greatest problem today with the collapse of the economy and so many people losing their nest eggs is people outliving their money. It is happening more and more frequently and there is little or no help for them. The days of long term financial stability are over so retirement is much more risky and once you retire the prospects of further employment are dim other than being a greeter at Walmart.
    • azdharma  •  3 months ago
      No longer than absolutely necessary
      .. life’s short then you die.
    • a US taxpayer  •  Indianapolis, Indiana  •  3 months ago
      Yep thank GW Bush, it was all planned with him and his shotgun vp. But it was planned way before that in the Ragan era,and GW is bringing it to an end. The Republicians dont want people to have a life,just look back
    • Otto Pilot  •  Spring Branch, Texas  •  3 months ago
      The answer to that question is amazingly simple -- Until you die.
    • TheTerminatorFan  •  Port St Lucie, Florida  •  3 months ago
      "Keep working full time as long as you can." #$%$ Someone who made sense. Retirement is a slow death. Do exercising every day and keep your body healthy, happy, strong.
    • alan  •  Sunnyvale, California  •  3 months ago
      all thanks to the dmocrapic party, redistrobution of wealth, supporters of the irresponcible, welfare unions illegals and goverment workers, we could do with out any of them

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