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4 Retirement Questions and Answers

debt podcast retirement planning Apr 08, 2025

Retirement planning is one of the most important financial journeys you’ll take. Yet, it often comes with uncertainty, confusion, and a lot of questions. How much do you need to retire? Should you pay off debt before saving? How much should you save each month? When should you start taking Social Security? These are all crucial considerations, and in this blog post, we’ll break them down to help you gain clarity and confidence in your retirement plan.

How Much Money Do You Need to Retire?

One of the most common questions about retirement is: How much do I need to retire comfortably? The answer varies depending on your lifestyle, expected expenses, and sources of income.

A general rule of thumb is the 25x Rule, which suggests you should aim to have 25 times your annual expenses saved before retiring. For example, if you plan to spend $50,000 per year in retirement, you’d need around $1.25 million saved.

Another approach is the 4% Rule, which suggests that you can safely withdraw 4% of your savings each year without running out of money. However, this rule is a guideline, not a guarantee. It’s important to adjust for factors like inflation, unexpected expenses, and market fluctuations.

Key Steps to Determine Your Retirement Number:

  1. Estimate your annual retirement expenses, including housing, healthcare, travel, and hobbies.
  2. Calculate your expected income from Social Security, pensions, or rental properties.
  3. Subtract your expected income from your total expenses to determine how much you need to withdraw from savings each year.
  4. Multiply that number by 25 to estimate your total retirement savings goal.

Should You Pay Off Debt Before Saving for Retirement?

Balancing debt repayment and retirement savings can be challenging. While it’s important to reduce debt, you also don’t want to delay your retirement savings for too long. Here’s how to approach it:

  • High-Interest Debt First: If you have high-interest debt (credit cards, personal loans), prioritize paying it off as quickly as possible. Interest rates on these debts often outweigh investment returns.
  • Employer 401(k) Match: If your employer offers a 401(k) match, contribute at least enough to get the full match. This is essentially free money.
  • Moderate-Interest Debt: If you have moderate-interest debt (5-7% interest, such as student loans or car loans), balance your payments with saving for retirement.
  • Low-Interest Debt: If your debt has a low interest rate (such as a mortgage), you may be better off focusing on growing your retirement savings while making regular payments on the debt.

The key is finding the right balance between paying off debt and investing for the future. The sooner you start saving, the more you benefit from compound interest.

How Much Should You Save Each Month for Retirement?

The amount you should save each month depends on your age, retirement goals, and current savings. A common recommendation is to save at least 15% of your income for retirement. However, if you’re starting later, you may need to save more.

Here’s a general savings guide based on age:

  • In Your 20s: Save 10-15% of your income.
  • In Your 30s: Aim for 15-20%.
  • In Your 40s and 50s: If you’re behind, focus on maxing out retirement accounts like a 401(k) and IRA, and aim for 20-25% savings.

If you’re unsure where to start, prioritize contributing to a 401(k) (especially if there’s an employer match), then an IRA, and finally, a taxable brokerage account if you want to save beyond tax-advantaged accounts.

When Should You Start Taking Social Security Benefits?

Deciding when to start taking Social Security benefits is a critical part of retirement planning. Here are your options:

  • Early Retirement (Age 62): You can start collecting Social Security at 62, but your monthly benefit will be permanently reduced (by about 25-30%).
  • Full Retirement Age (66-67): Your full retirement age (FRA) depends on your birth year. Waiting until FRA means you’ll receive 100% of your benefit amount.
  • Delaying Benefits (Up to Age 70): For each year you delay Social Security past your FRA (up to age 70), your benefit increases by about 8% per year. If you don’t need the money immediately, delaying can result in significantly higher lifetime benefits.

Factors to consider when deciding include your health, expected lifespan, financial needs, and whether you plan to continue working.

Final Thoughts: Take Control of Your Retirement Future

Retirement planning doesn’t have to be overwhelming. By answering these key questions—how much you need to retire, how to balance debt and savings, how much to save each month, and when to take Social Security—you can create a clear, confident path to financial independence.

Do you have more retirement questions? Email them to [email protected] subject line: retirement questions. These questions will be used for a future blog post or podcast episode, as well as my response back to you. Need a personalized strategy? Book a free Q&A call, and let’s find your retirement answers together!

 

Listen to the episode where I share personalized stories and examples to help you reflect on these answers for yourself.

 

 
 
If you found this conversation helpful and want guidance on how to plan in other key areas for your retirement, download your free copy of the Retirement Readiness Checklist today or schedule your Free Q&A Call to learn more about coaching.
 
 

 

 

 

 

Click HERE for Full Transcript of Episode

Today's episode is q and a, answering all of your questions. I plan on making these types of episodes a regular every three to four months. So if you have a question, use the link in the show notes if you feel like your question might be more specific or personalized. It can't be covered in this type of an episode. Please jump on a free q and a call. Let's answer that question for you, and also what it would look like to work together. Diving into the questions for this episode. The first one is. One that is very commonly asked. I'm sure you've asked it, you've heard somebody ask it. It's, how much money do I need to retire? This question comes with a lot of different answers and I, I'm gonna vaguely give what financial planners do. I think it's great and fine. Kind of alleviates, but it gives you no control on. Manipulating that number. Typically a financial planner will say you need 70 to 80% of your current expenses, of your current income. I think they use a couple of both of those in calculating that. If you take your annual, your times it by 70 or times it by 80, this is how much you need every year. Times that by 25, that gives you your fi number. What does FI stand for? It is financial independence, which means that is when your investments are creating enough to support you in what they have determined a safe withdrawal rate is. And that's 4%. I know there's different discussions about that now, but this 4% has been out and about for a long time. To give you a my answer. For how much money do you need to retire today? If you are five to 10 years away, even if you're 15, think about yourself now as opposed to a 20 or 30-year-old. If the 20 or 30-year-old is answering that same question, I would definitely go with the financial planner idea. We're just gonna do a quick, simple formula. And you know, that would depend on if they have all of those, you know, assets and things, you know, supporting family, whatever it might be. But that's where it gets kind of sticky, because the closer we are to retirement, the better we understand our spending and our expenses. Or I hope you do once you are able to understand what it takes to run your household. Times that as an annual expense and then times that by 25 that gives you your number. Now, if you've not done any work on your expense, you know your spending, your expenses, that gives you a lever to press. You know, how can I work with that? How can I move that? Do I need to be spending on all of these things? But also the other consideration is you are closer to retirement. You know what your health is like. You know what your desires are going to be in retirement, a little more specific, and then understanding how those are going to impact your budget. That becomes an annual expense. We need to factor those in. Why should I send you to retirement? With just what you're spending now, if you really want to go. Travel abroad for, you know, three, six months. If you have something that it, it just becomes the idea. You've gotta really got, get into what our expenses are. I'm, you know, am I going to have, so being able to, number one, understand your co, your expenses, what it takes to run your household today, what new expenses will you have in retirement? Creating that into an annual income. How do you do that? Well, you figure out your monthly expenses times it by 12, and then to get your FI number, we're gonna times it by 25. That gives you a starting point. Gives you a starting point. In next week's episode, I'm gonna dive into more specifics about all of the levers to pull all of the things that you have control in manipulating. Instead of just looking at this really huge savings amount and you're nowhere close, well, how am I supposed to close that gap? That's exactly what I do in my VIP session as we start outlining what you've got going on and how to close that gap, so that gives you the power. While a financial planner is not wrong, I just think there is a more. Dialed in way to give you a number and then help you manipulate that. Not about just going out and making more money, not about just saving more money into your retirement accounts. We can be a little bit more specific on doing these three things, plan these three things for retirement, you know, and it helps us close the gap. It gives us power, it gives us a lot more control. All right, next question. How do I pay off debt and save for retirement? Also asked should I pay off debt before saving for retirement? Okay, that second question, should I pay off debt before saving for retirement? I'm gonna give you a hard no, I'm gonna give you a hard no. So to the first question of how do I pay off debt and save for retirement, it comes to a balance. We've got to be able to cover both of these and exploring number one, the first question we just talked about, and recognizing that debt is a monthly expense. If we reduce debt and we don't carry that forward into retirement, that's less we need to quote, have saved for. There is a caveat to that, that we do need to manage debt as we move into retirement and have a plan for that debt in retirement, but I'm not gonna go in that today. Recognizing that getting rid of debt, paying off debt, decreases our monthly expenses, therefore decreases that FI number now, saving for retirement. Markets typically return on average, for the long haul whether it's 10, 20, or 30 years, roughly, it's about 10%. You know, some years you're gonna see 20%, but other years you're probably gonna see less than that. When you're in the market, you're in it for the long haul. And then strategically, you'll have to look at how to pull that back as you're headed to retirement. But of course, that's another subject. Recognizing that you're going to earn roughly 10% on your income in a given quote year, sometimes it's higher, sometimes it's lower. But on average, that's all we've got to work with. I would think about paying off debt that is higher than that and maybe kind of figuring out the balance of debt that is 10% or less and increasing that savings number at the same time. So kind of that balance. Overall. To simplify this answer, I would structure a debt payoff plan. What are you paying off first? How much does that free up when that's gone? When that frees up that amount, and it might be a small amount of a hundred dollars, you wanna just keep going. If it's gonna free up like three, four, $500, consider having a plan to 50 50, 75, 25, create this, what I love to call boundaries rules that I love to already have in place before it happens when I pay off this debt. The what is going forward in the debt snowball is not a hundred percent, only 75 of it is, or only 50% of it is the other is going to go into my savings. Still not choosing to just spend it, I think that is the best choice. How you manage that is up to you, but really you need to exploring your relationship with debt. And how that is going to move forward into retirement. Go back and listen to episode 1 0 2. About that debt relationship and dive into that just to, you know, help you begin learning how to quote, manage debt. I don't think debt management is talked about enough in private, you know, personal finances. It's something they do in business. There's a lot we can learn from business that we could apply, but I think having a plan for debt as you're headed into retirement. Understanding how that's going to serve you is really, really an important component. All right, next question. How much should I be saving each month for retirement? Well, if you Google they're going to tell you 15% to retirement, and then 5% should be going to your, what I call sinking fund savings buckets. I don't think that's a bad number. That's 20%. That's usually the guide, but if you feel like you don't have 15% to give right now, I'm going to say, you know, save as much as you can. Definitely, we should be saving for retirement every single month at this point in our life. If you are over 40 and you don't have an amount taken out of your paycheck. For whether you choose a traditional 4 0 1, a traditional Roth or a regular Roth, you know, after taxes, those types of things. But choose an amount to be coming out of your check. And as you are doing that plan on increasing that as often as you can. With every pay increase that hopefully you'll see pay increases. Most of us at this point in time, we might be topped out. So again, we gotta go back to looking at our expenses, looking at our spending. Saving is only money that is set aside for us to spend in the future. And being able to think about that in that sense of, I want. My 65, my 80-year-old self to be able to have something to do, some money to spend. Maybe that will help you understand more easily why this number is crucial. How much should I be saving each month for retirement as much as possible, upwards of up to 15%, if not more. Make that a goal to increase that. Even by maybe 2% this year. See what you can squeak out. I promise. A percent of your income, you won't fill it. Do a two, you might three, and so on and so on. I've talked about that before. All right, the last question in this episode. When should I start taking Social Security benefits? To answer this question, it's really. Something for you to, number one, educate yourself and learn to then make the best decision for yourself. Most individuals do not understand there are different times you can elect to take Social Security, 62 is quote, early 65 is usually on point, and then. 70 is like the latest. But if you log onto the social security website, get into your account, it will tell you how much you qualify for those different ages. And if those ages aren't pertinent, because you know, we know they change that age, it's not grandfathered in, but it's futuristic. So log in, it'll tell you right there. You should have three options. Look at the difference. How much for waiting three years or five years will you get per month? More? That difference times 12 gives you a different annual income that will help you start answering this question of when should you start taking Social security benefits? I've heard people say, well, they like you to be taking Social Security when you get on Medicare, so they have something to deduct. Heck, I can send them a, you know, I can send them a check. They can debit my account. Some of those things that you've heard people say disregard those. Jump onto the website. Look at those three numbers, see about how that makes you feel. There's different things that impact each one of us personally, individually. Health-wise, ability to continue working, the amount of money we have saved, those types of things, and we can explore when taking these benefits would benefit us the most. Hopefully they, that made sense for that one. Really, I just want you to learn about social security benefits I want you to go listen to episode 83 with my guest, Christopher Hensley. He is an expert for social security. Go listen to the discussion we have. I ask a lot of the questions I know people have had, you know, have been asking. Considering all of those things, add that in part of your knowledge wheelhouse of when you should start taking Social security benefits. We've covered some deep questions today. If you want help with a different question, more specific and not have to wait for the next episode to jump out, please schedule that free q and a call. Also, anytime you have a question, that link for those questions is always there. Drop it in there. I will put them in the next episode. We're airing in April for this episode. The next one will come out probably midsummer. So please, please, please drop your questions, and if you have found a benefit from this podcast, please take a moment to leave a review on your favorite podcast player. This will help everyone be able to find us that are, you know, over 40 trying to figure this out and covering all of those things that are concerning us about making it to retirement. Thank you for listening. I'll see you next week.

 

 

 

 

Resources mentioned in episode:

Episode 102 Redefining Your Debt Relationship

Episode 83 Navigating Social Security with Christopher Hensley

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