Showing posts with label retirement savings. Show all posts
Showing posts with label retirement savings. Show all posts

Friday, August 26, 2016

Saving for Retirement can Equal a Lower Tax Bill

English: ceramic piggy bank
Saving for retirement is something that everyone should do, for their own sake. If you need an extra little push to get started on your retirement savings- and remember it’s never too late to start- or to up your savings, then you should know that saving for retirement can actually lower your tax bill!

Contribute to Your 401(k)

To start out with, if you don’t already have a 401(k) through your workplace and one is available, take advantage of it immediately! Otherwise, you are missing out on easy and even free money that could be put toward your retirement.

Then, when possible, put the maximum amount allowed in your 401(k). If you’re lucky, this could even put you into a lower and, thus, lower-taxed income bracket, but either way,  since contributions to your 401(k) are tax-deductible, you’ll lower the amount of taxed income you have and, thus, how much you have to pay.

Plus, of course, you actually WILL be saving for retirement in the process, which is always a good thing.

Contribute to Your SEP-IRA

Working for yourself absolutely does not mean that you can’t save for the future while also saving in the present. If you own your own business or are otherwise self-employed, you can usually open an SEP-IRA and then contribute to it tax-free, thus lowering your taxable income, even without the help of a standard employer.


These are just a couple of options you have for saving for retirement while also giving yourself a nice little tax break. If you want to discover more ways to lower your tax bill and plan for your future, be sure to talk with your accountant about your options.

Monday, November 26, 2012

How to set (and achieve) financial goals

Without money
Without money (Photo credit: Toban Black)

With all the demands on your money—the needs of your kids and those of your parents, not to mention your own ambitions—it often seems like there’s not enough cash to go around. The solution: Set priorities that are flexible, but not too flexible.
By George Mannes 

You know what your financial priorities are supposed to be: Max out retirement savings. Build a cash cushion for emergencies. Get rid of any credit-card debt. Save for your kids’ college education. Pay off the mortgage before you retire. Problem is, for most of us there doesn’t seem to be enough money to fully fund all those purposes and put dinner on the table. Complicating matters are the legitimate demands of everyday existence—your kid needs a computer, your parents need help with bills, your car needs tires—as well as your aspirations. In light of all the pressures on your money, it’s understandable that you can’t always follow the standard advice to the letter. Balancing reality against the conventional wisdom requires tough choices and compromises, as well as insight into the forces that deter you from hitting your marks. Follow the steps here to set high but achievable goals while giving yourself flexibility to handle the intrusions known as real life.
 

Master the Musts

The starting point for addressing infinite desires with finite funds is knowing what advice you really can’t ignore. Although financial planners have exhaustive ideas for allocating your resources, they can chop down the list quite a bit in a tight spot. Marjorie Fox, a Reston, Va. financial adviser, tells her clients there are three non negotiables: Contribute enough to a 401(k) to get the employer match (typically a quick 50% to 100% return on your money, depending on your company’s plan), accelerate pay-down on credit-card debt so that high finance charges don’t drain your resources, and work on building adequate emergency savings. “Everything else,” Fox says, “becomes ‘Well, it depends.’ ”
 

Sort Out the Rest
It’s no small task ordering the rest of life’s priorities. (The world’s great religions have spent thousands of years on the effort.) But start by writing down everything you want that requires money you don’t have—anything from retiring at 60 to taking a two-week European vacation. Next step: Pare down the list. Pittsburgh financial planner Kathryn Nusbaum advises pursuing no more than five financial goals at one time; as she says, “once you go beyond that, it’s too much to get your head around.” That means adding two or three goals to your nonnegotiables, depending on whether you have credit-card debt or adequate emergency savings.
 

Put the Plan Into Action

Once you’ve trimmed your list, decide the amount you’ll stash each month. Jill Gianola, a financial planner in Columbus, Ohio, suggests structuring your savings plan in increments of three to five years. “It isn’t instant gratification, but it’s see-able,” she says. So instead of intimidating yourself with the big number you’ll need for retirement, you might aim to have added, say, $50,000 between now and 2015.

Put those savings on autopilot: Have the money automatically transferred each month from checking to dedicated accounts. That way, inertia works in your favor—you’ll have to take action to undo your plan. You might also link your ho-hum long-term goal (socking away extra money in an IRA, say) to a pulse-pounding short-term one (such as a ski vacation). Set a rule that for every dollar you put into the vacation, you have to put 50¢ into the IRA. Because more of your money is going to something immediate and fun, you’re making saving for retirement more pleasurable, says Carnegie Mellon economics and psychology professor George Loewenstein.
 

Prepare for Interruptions
No matter how well laid your plans are, you can be sure that life will intervene. You may have imagined a world in which once your kids graduated from college, you’d be off the hook financially. And until the day arises when your folks need help, you probably won’t have listed “providing parental aid” as one of your long-term goals. That’s not to say that it’s always other people who screw up the priorities: Sometimes your own circumstances or desires change.

So what’s the solution when something arises that calls your priorities into question? Well, it’s not to drive a dangerous clunker or to cut off your relatives (for financial reasons, at least). It’s to remember that your plan, however firmly set, is also organic. Although you have up to three goals that are nonnegotiable, the others are meant to be flexible to the intrusions of real life.

Of course, you shouldn’t rush to amend your plan the second a new demand presents itself. Get some perspective first. Towson, Md. financial planner Phil Dyer finds it helpful to ask clients this question: Why is this goal important to you? Knowing the story you’re telling yourself about the goal—“and there’s always a story,” Dyer says—can shed some light on whether it’s truly worth pursuing.
 

Attach $$$ to Diversions

The assessment doesn’t just end there, however. You’ll also want to figure out the true cost of changing your plans, and not just in current dollars and cents, but also in terms of what you’ll have to give up. Can you live with the tradeoffs?

Another way to assess the costs of a diversion is to look to the money you’re currently directing to your goals—starting with the lowest on your list and working your way up—to see how many of them would have to be scratched if you chose to do the new thing. Put a mental picture to whatever you’d have to give up. If you would have to put off buying a new car, imagine yourself driving your current one in 2015. This exercise will help you fairly compare the new—and very vivid—demand to the other things on your list, which may not be so clear to you. Attaching a picture to a goal “gives the money concreteness,” says University of Toronto marketing professor Dilip Soman, who has done research on this topic.
 

Learn the Art of Compromise

Okay, but what if these exercises make you realize that you can’t afford to pay for a home health aide to take care of Dad without doing serious damage to your own retirement plans? Rather than letting guilt subsume you, think about whether you can “massage your goal, and fulfill your need in a more creative way,” Nusbaum suggests.

Is there another way to get to the same end result? If the goal is to get Dad the care he needs, you might look into whether he’s eligible for government programs that would defray the costs; you might ask siblings to share the burden with you; or you might help him arrange a reverse mortgage.

Alternately, is there another solution that won’t cost as much? Return to the story behind whatever it is you want to spend money on, and see if there’s a different way to satisfy your motivation. You may also find that a halfway measure will do. After all, real life and compromise go hand in hand.
 

From the August 2010 issue of Money


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