{"appState":{"pageLoadApiCallsStatus":true},"categoryState":{"relatedCategories":{"headers":{"timestamp":"2025-04-17T16:01:16+00:00"},"categoryId":34308,"data":{"title":"Retirement","slug":"retirement","image":{"src":null,"width":0,"height":0},"breadcrumbs":[{"name":"Business, Careers, & Money","_links":{"self":"https://dummies-api.dummies.com/v2/categories/34224"},"slug":"business-careers-money","categoryId":34224},{"name":"Personal Finance","_links":{"self":"https://dummies-api.dummies.com/v2/categories/34273"},"slug":"personal-finance","categoryId":34273},{"name":"Retirement","_links":{"self":"https://dummies-api.dummies.com/v2/categories/34308"},"slug":"retirement","categoryId":34308}],"parentCategory":{"categoryId":34273,"title":"Personal Finance","slug":"personal-finance","_links":{"self":"https://dummies-api.dummies.com/v2/categories/34273"}},"childCategories":[],"description":"When you're retired, you don't work, and yet you still need money. We're here to help you unravel that paradox, with all the info on retirement accounts, financial planning, and making ends meet.","relatedArticles":{"self":"https://dummies-api.dummies.com/v2/articles?category=34308&offset=0&size=5"},"hasArticle":true,"hasBook":true,"articleCount":33,"bookCount":5},"_links":{"self":"https://dummies-api.dummies.com/v2/categories/34308"}},"relatedCategoriesLoadedStatus":"success"},"listState":{"list":{"count":10,"total":33,"items":[{"headers":{"creationTime":"2020-01-12T23:34:15+00:00","modifiedTime":"2024-08-12T18:38:03+00:00","timestamp":"2024-08-12T21:01:08+00:00"},"data":{"breadcrumbs":[{"name":"Business, Careers, & Money","_links":{"self":"https://dummies-api.dummies.com/v2/categories/34224"},"slug":"business-careers-money","categoryId":34224},{"name":"Personal Finance","_links":{"self":"https://dummies-api.dummies.com/v2/categories/34273"},"slug":"personal-finance","categoryId":34273},{"name":"Retirement","_links":{"self":"https://dummies-api.dummies.com/v2/categories/34308"},"slug":"retirement","categoryId":34308}],"title":"Retirement Planning For Dummies Cheat Sheet","strippedTitle":"retirement planning for dummies cheat sheet","slug":"retirement-planning-for-dummies-cheat-sheet","canonicalUrl":"","seo":{"metaDescription":"Retirement planning got you confused? Need a million dollars? Want to retire early? Learn how to start a basic retirement plan in 15 minutes.","noIndex":0,"noFollow":0},"content":"No two retirement plans are completely alike. You may have heard that you’ll have a comfortable retirement if you save a certain amount of money by a certain age. “Just save a million bucks and you’re good,” such advice goes. But how long a million dollars will last in retirement is up to you, which you can figure out pretty easily.\r\n\r\nOthers say all you need to do is max out your <a href=\"https://www.dummies.com/article/business-careers-money/personal-finance/retirement/401ks-for-dummies-cheat-sheet-208743/\">401(k)</a>. And for most people, that’s good advice. But if your goal is to retire really early, you’ll need to get more aggressive in saving money.\r\n\r\nPerhaps you’re starting to fear retirement planning because you’re not doing something that the experts say you must do to retire. Don’t let the endless retirement advice you read and hear paralyze you. You can start a basic retirement plan in 15 minutes.","description":"No two retirement plans are completely alike. You may have heard that you’ll have a comfortable retirement if you save a certain amount of money by a certain age. “Just save a million bucks and you’re good,” such advice goes. But how long a million dollars will last in retirement is up to you, which you can figure out pretty easily.\r\n\r\nOthers say all you need to do is max out your <a href=\"https://www.dummies.com/article/business-careers-money/personal-finance/retirement/401ks-for-dummies-cheat-sheet-208743/\">401(k)</a>. And for most people, that’s good advice. But if your goal is to retire really early, you’ll need to get more aggressive in saving money.\r\n\r\nPerhaps you’re starting to fear retirement planning because you’re not doing something that the experts say you must do to retire. Don’t let the endless retirement advice you read and hear paralyze you. You can start a basic retirement plan in 15 minutes.","blurb":"","authors":[{"authorId":33279,"name":"Matthew Krantz","slug":"matthew-krantz","description":" <p><b>Matt Krantz</b> is a nationally known financial journalist who specializes in investing topics. He&#39;s personal finance and management editor at <i>Investor&#39;s Business Daily.</i> He&#39;s also worked in the financial industry and covered markets and investing for <i>USA TODAY.</i> His writing on financial topics has also appeared in <i>Money</i> magazine, <i> Kiplinger&#39;s</i>, and <i>Men&#39;s Health</i>. Krantz is the author of <i>Fundamental Analysis For Dummies</i> and co&#45;author of <i>Investment Banking For Dummies.</i> ","hasArticle":false,"_links":{"self":"https://dummies-api.dummies.com/v2/authors/33279"}}],"primaryCategoryTaxonomy":{"categoryId":34308,"title":"Retirement","slug":"retirement","_links":{"self":"https://dummies-api.dummies.com/v2/categories/34308"}},"secondaryCategoryTaxonomy":{"categoryId":0,"title":null,"slug":null,"_links":null},"tertiaryCategoryTaxonomy":{"categoryId":0,"title":null,"slug":null,"_links":null},"trendingArticles":[{"articleId":192609,"title":"How to Pray the Rosary: A Comprehensive Guide","slug":"how-to-pray-the-rosary","categoryList":["body-mind-spirit","religion-spirituality","christianity","catholicism"],"_links":{"self":"/articles/192609"}},{"articleId":208741,"title":"Kabbalah For Dummies Cheat 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Planning For Dummies","testBankPinActivationLink":"","bookOutOfPrint":true,"authorsInfo":"<p><p><b>Matt Krantz</b> is a nationally known financial journalist who specializes in investing topics. He&#39;s personal finance and management editor at <i>Investor&#39;s Business Daily.</i> He&#39;s also worked in the financial industry and covered markets and investing for <i>USA TODAY.</i> His writing on financial topics has also appeared in <i>Money</i> magazine, <i> Kiplinger&#39;s</i>, and <i>Men&#39;s Health</i>. Krantz is the author of <i>Fundamental Analysis For Dummies</i> and co&#45;author of <i>Investment Banking For Dummies.</i></p>","authors":[{"authorId":33279,"name":"Matthew Krantz","slug":"matthew-krantz","description":" <p><b>Matt Krantz</b> is a nationally known financial journalist who specializes in investing topics. He&#39;s personal finance and management editor at <i>Investor&#39;s Business Daily.</i> He&#39;s also worked in the financial industry and covered markets and investing for <i>USA TODAY.</i> His writing on financial topics has also appeared in <i>Money</i> magazine, <i> Kiplinger&#39;s</i>, and <i>Men&#39;s Health</i>. Krantz is the author of <i>Fundamental Analysis For Dummies</i> and co&#45;author of <i>Investment Banking For Dummies.</i> ","hasArticle":false,"_links":{"self":"https://dummies-api.dummies.com/v2/authors/33279"}}],"_links":{"self":"https://dummies-api.dummies.com/v2/books/"}},"collections":[],"articleAds":{"footerAd":"<div class=\"du-ad-region row\" id=\"article_page_adhesion_ad\"><div class=\"du-ad-unit col-md-12\" data-slot-id=\"article_page_adhesion_ad\" data-refreshed=\"false\" \r\n data-target = \"[{&quot;key&quot;:&quot;cat&quot;,&quot;values&quot;:[&quot;business-careers-money&quot;,&quot;personal-finance&quot;,&quot;retirement&quot;]},{&quot;key&quot;:&quot;isbn&quot;,&quot;values&quot;:[&quot;9781119627579&quot;]}]\" id=\"du-slot-66ba7814b91d6\"></div></div>","rightAd":"<div class=\"du-ad-region row\" id=\"article_page_right_ad\"><div class=\"du-ad-unit col-md-12\" data-slot-id=\"article_page_right_ad\" data-refreshed=\"false\" \r\n data-target = \"[{&quot;key&quot;:&quot;cat&quot;,&quot;values&quot;:[&quot;business-careers-money&quot;,&quot;personal-finance&quot;,&quot;retirement&quot;]},{&quot;key&quot;:&quot;isbn&quot;,&quot;values&quot;:[&quot;9781119627579&quot;]}]\" id=\"du-slot-66ba7814b9ea7\"></div></div>"},"articleType":{"articleType":"Cheat Sheet","articleList":[{"articleId":0,"title":"","slug":null,"categoryList":[],"_links":{"self":"https://dummies-api.dummies.com/v2/articles/"}}],"content":[{"title":"How long $1 million will last in retirement","thumb":null,"image":null,"content":"<p>Hitting $1 million in retirement savings is a lofty goal. And having a million saved for retirement is a target many people share. Why? A million dollars is an impressively large round number. And a million seems like it should be enough to sustain you a long time in retirement.</p>\n<p>But is hitting a million bucks enough for your retirement? Well, that depends on a few factors only you can determine.</p>\n<h3>Measuring how much you spend</h3>\n<p>Knowing how long a million will last starts with understanding how much you spend a year. You can measure your spending habits in several ways. Quicken software is good at measuring your spending, but you need to pay for it and install the software on your computer. Another option, which is much easier and won’t cost you anything, is Mint.com:</p>\n<ol>\n<li><strong> Go to the Mint website at <a href=\"https://mint.intuit.com/\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\">https://mint.intuit.com/</a>.</strong></li>\n<li><strong> Click the Sign Up button to open an account.</strong></li>\n<li><strong> If you don’t already have an account, create an ID. </strong>Use your email address and a unique password.</li>\n<li><strong> Sign into the Mint account.</strong></li>\n<li><strong> Click the + Add Accounts tab at the top of the page.</strong></li>\n<li><strong> Look up and enter all your spending accounts, such as your credit card accounts.</strong></li>\n<li><strong> Go to the Trends tab.</strong></li>\n<li><strong> Choose the Over Time option under the Spending category.</strong></li>\n<li><strong> Make sure the During option is set to Last 12 months. </strong>Mint.com tells you how much you spent in all the major categories.</li>\n</ol>\n<p>Think about costs you may incur when retired. It’s generally thought that most retired people spend 90 percent of what they spent while they were working. But make adjustments as needed. For example, do you expect to travel more? Also consider your healthcare costs. If your employer was paying for some of your medical expenses, you’ll need to factor in more medical spending.</p>\n<h3>Measuring how long $1 million will last</h3>\n<p>Now that you know how much you spend, it’s time to look at the other part of the equation: How long will the money last? One way to measure how long your million dollars may last is to use the FIRECalc online calculator:</p>\n<ol>\n<li><strong> Go to the FIREcalc website at <a href=\"https://firecalc.com/\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\">https://firecalc.com/</a>.</strong></li>\n<li><strong> In the Start Here box, enter the following:</strong></li>\n<li><strong> Enter your annual spending. </strong>The spending number you calculated using Mint goes into the Spending blank.</li>\n<li><strong> Enter your portfolio size. </strong>Add up all the money you saved. For our example, it’s a million dollars, or 1000000 (don’t use commas).</li>\n<li><strong> Enter the years you’d like your money to last.</strong></li>\n<li><strong> Click the Submit button.</strong></li>\n<li><strong> Look at the results. </strong>FIREcalc runs more than 100 possible scenarios to see whether your money will last as long as you’d like. For example, if you spend $30,000 a year and want it to last 40 years, the million dollars lasted long enough in all the scenarios tested.</li>\n<li><strong> Revise your assumptions. </strong>FIREcalc is customizable. For example, change the years variable and see how your million dollars holds up. You can also make your investment portfolios more aggressive (include more stocks) or more conservative (by including more bonds) and see how the results change.</li>\n</ol>\n"},{"title":"Tips for retiring early","thumb":null,"image":null,"content":"<p>If you love what you do for a living, retirement isn’t something you probably think much about. But if you hate your job, are burning to do something else with your life, or are just tired of the nine-to-five, walking off the job well before you turn 65 probably sounds appealing.</p>\n<p>Join the <a href=\"https://www.dummies.com/article/business-careers-money/personal-finance/general-personal-finance/f-i-r-e-for-dummies-cheat-sheet-301858/\">FIRE movement</a>. FIRE, or <em>F</em>inancial <em>I</em>ndependence <em>R</em>etire <em>E</em>arly, is spreading like fire. You don’t have to wait until you’re 65 to call it quits with a job you hate or to make more time to do activities you enjoy (some of which may also make you money).</p>\n<p>Building a retirement plan that lets you exit the workforce in your 40s or early 50s requires some extra considerations.</p>\n<h3>Scrutinize your spending</h3>\n<p>The easiest way to retire sooner is simply needing less money. This may sound obvious, but the less you need to spend means the less you need to save for retirement. And your spending is mostly under your control. Here are some tips to help you spend less so you can retire sooner.</p>\n<ul>\n<li><strong>Know your run rate.</strong> If you don’t know how much you’re spending a year, this is the first place to start. For a quick estimate, use the spending-tracking capabilities on the Mint website. (<strong><a href=\"https://mint.intuit.com/\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\">https://mint.intuit.com/</a></strong><strong>)</strong></li>\n<li><strong>Boost your savings rate.</strong> Saving 20 percent of your pay is the minimum for those who want to retire in their mid-60s. If you want to retire sooner, you’ll need to save more. Much more. Think 50 percent or more saved from your pay.</li>\n<li><strong>Banish wasteful spending.</strong> If you’re looking to retire early, you need to think creatively to save more money. Be especially mindful of monthly subscriptions; these seemingly small charges add up. Only you know what you consider wasteful spending.</li>\n<li><strong>Monitor your housing costs.</strong> Some people who retire early spend much of their effort holding down housing costs. But do you need a $2 million home in the trendy part of town? Consider a smaller home or buy in a less costly area.</li>\n<li><strong>Amp up your earning power.</strong> If your ultimate goal is to retire early, you may be willing to do a job you’re not crazy about in exchange for a bigger paycheck. It’s best to maximize your earnings early in your career and get that money invested. The sooner you invest, the longer the money has to grow. Then later in your career, you can afford to take a lower-paying job in a field that’s you find more interesting.</li>\n</ul>\n<h3>Invest wisely</h3>\n<p>Retiring early is one part aggressive saving, and another part smart investing. After you saved enough for your money to work for you, you likely won’t have to work as hard yourself:</p>\n<ul>\n<li><strong>Sign up for all the retirement accounts you can.</strong> Holding off the taxman and letting your nest egg grow will be a huge help in letting you retire early. Get to know your 401(k) plan and max it out. If you can run a Roth IRA, do that, too. And if you have a side gig, look into opening an SEP-IRA. The more you can shield from taxes while you’re saving and working, the better.</li>\n<li><strong>Keep investment costs down.</strong> When you’re looking to retire early, every little bit counts. If you can choose between a low-fee investment and a more expensive one, go for the lower cost one. No one can predict investment returns, but fees are disclosed and have a huge impact on how much money you make from investments.</li>\n<li><strong>Stay diversified but don’t be overly cautious.</strong> You need to balance your exposure to riskier stocks with safer bonds with great care. Going overboard on stocks may cause you to flip out during a bear market and sell in panic. One mistake like this can dash your early retirement dreams. On the other hand, if you play it too safe and go overboard on bonds, your portfolio will be doomed with inadequate returns. Find the right balance.</li>\n<li><strong>Maintain an emergency fund.</strong> Cash isn’t going to help you reach your retirement goals. Returns on cash are very low. But making sure you have enough cash to get you through a tough path in your life helps you avoid selling stocks at a bad time to raise cash. A healthy cash cushion also helps prevent you from going into debt if your income is disrupted or you face a large and unexpected cost. It’s widely recommended you have at least six months’ worth of expenses in cash. More is better.</li>\n</ul>\n<h3>Set your financial target</h3>\n<p>All the saving and investing in the world isn’t going to help you if you don’t have a retirement goal. Know what you need to save in order to retire early. Some retirement savings goals that may help you include:</p>\n<ul>\n<li><strong>Follow the 4 percent rule (with a twist).</strong> The 4 percent rule says that you can take out four percent of your portfolio for 30 years and have reasonable confidence your money will last at least 30 years. Some early retirees are turning the 4 percent rule on its head. The same math says if you save at least 25 times the amount of money you need a year, you’ll have enough to take out four percent annually. A basic early retirement financial goal is to save at least 25 times as much as you spend a year.</li>\n<li><strong>Think about saving more.</strong> The 4 percent rule applies to a 30-year retirement span. If you plan on retiring early, you’ll need money for a longer period of time. Plus, who knows if the market’s historical returns will continue. You may also face some unexpected costs such as a leaky roof or a car that needs major repairs. Think about saving more than 25 times your annual spending. If you’re in your late 40s, you’ll want to shoot to save 35 times your annual spending or more.</li>\n<li><strong>Get to know online retirement calculators.</strong> No one online retirement calculator is perfect. But using several of them can help you get a good understanding of how much you’ll need to retire when you want to. Check and cross-check the results you get from several of these calculators to make sure you’re on target.</li>\n</ul>\n<p>If it turns out that you can’t save enough to retire as early as you want to (or you decide you don’t want to retire early), following FIRE techniques will help you waste less money, save more, and at least make financial independence a strong possibility. It’s better for your money to work for you, rather than you having to work only for money.</p>\n"},{"title":"Build a retirement plan in 15 minutes or less","thumb":null,"image":null,"content":"<p>Building a retirement plan is important. But that doesn’t mean building a retirement plan needs to be time consuming. If you’re just looking to get a retirement plan set up in the shortest amount of time possible, there’s a strategy for that.</p>\n<h3>Start with your employer plan</h3>\n<p>If you’re looking for an easy way to start your retirement plan and you are an employee, retirement options at work are your best bet:</p>\n<ul>\n<li>Check with the human resources department to find out what retirement savings options are available.</li>\n<li>See if your employee offers a 401(k) and, if so, how much of your contributions the employee matches.</li>\n<li>Sign up for the 401(k) and contribute at least as much as needed to get the maximum matching contribution from your employer.</li>\n<li>Choose the target-date fund option closest to the year you plan to retire.</li>\n<li>If you can afford to save more for your retirement:\n<ul>\n<li>See if you’re eligible for a health savings account (HSA). You need to have a high-deductible medical plan.</li>\n<li>If you’re eligible, in 2020 you can contribute up to $3,550 for individuals and $7,100 for families. If you are older than 55, you can contribute an additional $1000.</li>\n</ul>\n</li>\n<li>Have money left over? Increase your contribution to your 401(k).\n<ul>\n<li>In 2020, you can put up to $19,500 in your 401(k). If you’re 50 years or older, you can put in an additional $6,500.</li>\n</ul>\n</li>\n<li>Can you still contribute more and have time? Think about opening a Roth IRA.\n<ul>\n<li>You can open a Roth IRA with most online brokers or mutual fund companies. If you’re eligible to open a Roth (you’re not in what the IRS considers a high-income bracket), you can contribute $6,000 a year ($7,000 if you’re 50 or older).</li>\n</ul>\n</li>\n</ul>\n<h3>If you don’t have access to a retirement plan at work</h3>\n<p>Not everyone has a 401(k) or other retirement plan at work. If that’s the case, you still have option:</p>\n<ul>\n<li><strong>Commit to saving for your own retirement. </strong>If you don’t have a retirement plan at work, the responsibility to save falls on you. You need to have the discipline to save on your own. It’s important to realize that retirement planning is your responsibility.</li>\n<li><strong>Set your budget.</strong> Look at your monthly spending and carve out what you can save for retirement. Earmarking money you can save can help you determine how much you can afford for other expenses.</li>\n<li><strong>Choose a Roth IRA or traditional IRA.</strong> As an employee with no retirement plan at work, your best option will be an Individual Retirement Account, or IRA. You can choose between a traditional IRA and a Roth IRA. You can contribute up to $6,000 a year ($7,000 if you’re 50 years old or older) to either IRA.</li>\n</ul>\n<p>Traditional IRAs give you a tax break now, and you pay tax when you take money out later. With Roth IRAs, you don’t get a tax break now, but your withdrawals are tax free when you take them out in retirement. In general, a Roth IRA is best if you think you tax bracket will be higher in the future. Roth contributions are phased out if your income is $122,000 to $137,000 as a single taxpayer and $193,000 to $203,000 if you’re married.</p>\n<p>Traditional IRAs are best if you have a high income or think your tax bracket will fall in the future.</p>\n<ul>\n<li><strong>Open your IRA. </strong>Nearly all online brokers or mutual fund companies can happily open an IRA for you. If you already have an online broker, you can quickly open an online account.</li>\n<li><strong>Invest.</strong> Put your money in a target-date fund closest to your retirement date. If a target-date fund isn’t available, look into a robo-advisor option. If that’s not available, split your money between a low-cost stock index fund and a low-cost index bond fund. If you’re young or bold (or both), hold 85 percent in stocks and 15 percent in bonds. Note that 60 percent in stocks and 40 percent in bonds is more prudent.</li>\n</ul>\n<h3>You’re the boss</h3>\n<p>If you work for yourself, you have even more retirement planning options. Depending on the size of your business, it may take more than 15 minutes to set up a retirement plan. But if you’re a one-person business, or a gig economy worker, you can get up and running quickly.</p>\n<ul>\n<li><strong>Choose your retirement plan.</strong> As a self-employed person, you have three main retirement plan options: a SEP-IRA, an individual 401(k), and a SIMPLE IRA. If you own the company and want to put away the most money possible, an individual 401(k) is tough to beat. If you’re a gig economy worker and already have a 401(k) plan in place, the SEP-IRA is a great option. Vanguard provides an easy-to-understand comparison of the three plans to help you decide which is best for you.</li>\n<li><strong>Open the account.</strong> If you already have a relationship with an online broker, the same firm can quickly open an employer plan for you. If not, all major online brokers and mutual funds companies will be happy to open one for you.</li>\n<li>It’s up to you to make the contributions. You’ll need the discipline to hold back some of your annual profits to contribute.</li>\n<li><strong>Invest.</strong> Put your money in a target-date fund closest to your retirement date. If a target-date fund isn’t available, look into a robo-advisor. If that’s not available, split your money between a low-cost stock index fund and a low-cost index bond fund. If you’re young or bold (or both), hold 85 percent in stocks and 15 percent in bonds. If you’re more cautious, hold 60 percent in stocks and 40 percent in bonds.</li>\n</ul>\n"}],"videoInfo":{"videoId":null,"name":null,"accountId":null,"playerId":null,"thumbnailUrl":null,"description":null,"uploadDate":null}},"sponsorship":{"sponsorshipPage":false,"backgroundImage":{"src":null,"width":0,"height":0},"brandingLine":"","brandingLink":"","brandingLogo":{"src":null,"width":0,"height":0},"sponsorAd":"","sponsorEbookTitle":"","sponsorEbookLink":"","sponsorEbookImage":{"src":null,"width":0,"height":0}},"primaryLearningPath":"Advance","lifeExpectancy":"Two years","lifeExpectancySetFrom":"2024-08-12T00:00:00+00:00","dummiesForKids":"no","sponsoredContent":"no","adInfo":"","adPairKey":[]},"status":"publish","visibility":"public","articleId":267342},{"headers":{"creationTime":"2020-03-04T02:44:22+00:00","modifiedTime":"2023-08-31T20:19:17+00:00","timestamp":"2023-08-31T21:01:02+00:00"},"data":{"breadcrumbs":[{"name":"Business, Careers, & Money","_links":{"self":"https://dummies-api.dummies.com/v2/categories/34224"},"slug":"business-careers-money","categoryId":34224},{"name":"Personal Finance","_links":{"self":"https://dummies-api.dummies.com/v2/categories/34273"},"slug":"personal-finance","categoryId":34273},{"name":"Retirement","_links":{"self":"https://dummies-api.dummies.com/v2/categories/34308"},"slug":"retirement","categoryId":34308}],"title":"How to Protect Your Retirement Money with Insurance","strippedTitle":"how to protect your retirement money with insurance","slug":"how-to-protect-your-retirement-money-with-insurance","canonicalUrl":"","seo":{"metaDescription":"Protecting your retirement funds from disaster is part of retirement planning. Use insurance to make sure your plan can withstand unexpected events.","noIndex":0,"noFollow":0},"content":"Protecting your retirement funds from disaster is a critical part of retirement planning. That’s where insurance comes in. You want to make sure your plan can withstand an unexpected event. Typically, health scares are the culprits in disrupting a plan, but home and auto accidents can be major expenses, too.\r\n<p class=\"article-tips tip\">Find your insurance declaration pages. These documents will tell you how much coverage you have, which you’ll need to evaluate your plan and make certain you’re protected.</p>\r\n\r\n<h2 id=\"tab1\" >Check property and casualty coverages</h2>\r\nIf you’re <a href=\"https://www.dummies.com/article/business-careers-money/personal-finance/retirement/retirement-planning-for-dummies-cheat-sheet-267342/\">planning for retirement</a>, it’s important that you have in place the right amount of automobile and homeowner's (or renter's) insurance coverage, in addition to healthcare coverage:\r\n<ul>\r\n \t<li><strong>Automobile insurance:</strong> Your car can be the source of enormous financial losses, not only to your vehicle but to someone else's vehicle and other personal property. Additionally, the financial hit from injuries can wipe out a financial plan overnight. If you’re nearing retirement age, you likely have significant assets to protect. Simply accepting the minimum coverage required by your state is likely not enough.</li>\r\n \t<li><strong>Homeowner's (or renter's) insurance:</strong> If you own your home, it might be one of the pieces of bedrock in your financial plan. If you don’t have rent or a mortgage, you’re well ahead of those who spend 30 percent of their budget for housing. Protecting your home from a devastating fire or other catastrophe is important. Don’t count on the insurance company to verify that you have enough coverage. Renters insurance can help safeguard your personal belongings.</li>\r\n</ul>\r\n<p class=\"article-tips tip\">Insurance needs remain fairly unchanged as you near retirement—you need to protect your home whether you’re 34 or 64. But one factor that you might want to modify as you age is your deductible.</p>\r\nYour <em>deductible</em> is how much of a loss you’re responsible for in an accident. Let’s say your car sustains $1,500 in damage. If you’re young, you might not have the financial resources to handle a large hit and so you opt for a lower $250 deductible. The lower deductible comes at a cost, in the form of a higher monthly payment.\r\n\r\nAs you age, however, you probably have a larger financial reserve. One easy way to save money on insurance is to push up your deductible to $1,000 and save on your monthly premiums.\r\n\r\nLog into your insurance provider’s site, as shown, to see whether a higher deductible is available. You’ll also want to double-check that the limits are appropriate.\r\n\r\n[caption id=\"attachment_268818\" align=\"alignnone\" width=\"556\"]<img class=\"size-full wp-image-268818\" src=\"https://www.dummies.com/wp-content/uploads/retirement-insurance-policy-limits.jpg\" alt=\"insurance policy limits\" width=\"556\" height=\"313\" /> Check your homeowner's and auto policy limits to see if you can boost your deductible to lower your premiums.[/caption]\r\n<h2 id=\"tab2\" >Get ready for a rainy day: Umbrella insurance</h2>\r\nKnowing your coverage limits on your automotive and homeowner’s insurance policies unlocks the next phase of insurance. As you age and amass more money, you have more at risk from a big accident. Not only do you have more money to lose, you have less time to recover from a financial blow.\r\n\r\nAfter looking at your limits on your homeowner’s and automotive plans, you might see a disconnect. If your net worth exceeds your insurance limits, that’s a red flag. If you’ve accumulated a big nest egg, you don’t want to see it evaporate if you’re caught in a massive car pileup on the freeway. Similarly, if someone gets seriously hurt on your property, lawsuit damages can be enormous.\r\n\r\nHow do you protect yourself other than never leaving the house or never inviting someone over to visit? Enter <em>umbrella insurance,</em> which unlocks millions of dollars of extra coverage beyond what your homeowner’s and auto policies cover.\r\n<p class=\"article-tips tip\">Umbrella policies don’t kick in until the limits of your homeowner’s and automotive policies are exceeded. Because the umbrella policy doesn’t pay anything until your homeowner's or auto policy’s limit is topped, the rates on umbrella policies tend to be reasonable. It’s common to buy $1 million of coverage for $100 or $200 a year. It’s a small price to pay for such a large amount of protection and peace of mind.</p>\r\nHow much umbrella coverage to you need? You could figure it out yourself, but I like <a href=\"http://www.kiplinger.com/tool/insurance/T028-S002-how-much-umbrella-insurance-do-i-need/index.php\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\">Kiplinger’s How Much Umbrella Insurance Do I Need? calculator</a>. The calculator, which is shown here, helps you buy just enough umbrella insurance to safeguard you from a major financial shock.\r\n\r\n[caption id=\"attachment_268817\" align=\"alignnone\" width=\"556\"]<img class=\"size-full wp-image-268817\" src=\"https://www.dummies.com/wp-content/uploads/retirement-umbrella-insurance.jpg\" alt=\"umbrella insurance\" width=\"556\" height=\"350\" /> Kiplinger’s umbrella insurance tool helps you protect yourself without paying too much.[/caption]\r\n\r\nTo use the calculator, start with your net worth and work backwards:\r\n<ol>\r\n \t<li><strong> Enter your net worth.\r\n</strong>Your <em>net worth</em> is the value of what you own minus what you owe.\r\n<p class=\"article-tips tip\">To err on the side of safety, consider buying an umbrella policy valued at your net worth. Yes, some of your money is protected against creditors, as you’ll see in Steps 2 and 3. But when you take the money out of protected accounts, such as retirement accounts, it’s exposed. This approach isn’t necessarily recommended, but it's a conservative way to go.</p>\r\n</li>\r\n \t<li><strong> Enter your home equity value.\r\n</strong>The <em>equity value</em> is the market value of your home minus mortgages or loans. Most states protect at least some of your home equity. The Kiplinger calculator can tabulate how much of your home equity is at risk.</li>\r\n \t<li><strong> Enter your retirement plan balances.</strong>\r\nEnter the value of your retirement plans, including 401(k), IRA, Roth IRA, SIMPLE IRA, and SEP IRA. Assets held in these accounts are protected from creditors.</li>\r\n \t<li><strong> Set a limit to your homeowner's and auto policies.\r\n</strong>Remember that your auto and homeowner’s liability coverage pays injury claims first. Most umbrella policy insurers will require your homeowner's liability limit to be $250,000 or higher. And you’ll likely need to have a per-person liability limit on your auto policy of $250,000 or more and $500,000 per accident.</li>\r\n</ol>\r\n<p class=\"article-tips tip\">You’ll usually get the most bang from your insurance buck if you raise your auto and homeowner's liability limits to the lowest required by your umbrella policy provider. Because you buy umbrella coverage in giant $1 million chunks, you can usually boost your total protection at a lower cost with an umbrella than with homeowner's or auto policy limits. Also, to save money on premiums, see if you can get your umbrella policy from the same company that provides your auto and homeowner’s policies. It’s also easier to coordinate payments from a single company.</p>\r\n\r\n<h2 id=\"tab3\" >Protect your family with life insurance</h2>\r\nThinking about all the things that can go wrong in life is no fun. That’s why I left the chapter on insurance for the end of the book. Planning for retirement should be fun. It gets you thinking about what’s most important in life and how to enjoy what you have for as long as possible.\r\n\r\nBut you need to prepare for unhappy events, too.\r\n<h3>Understanding the benefits of life insurance</h3>\r\nLife insurance isn’t for you. It’s for your beneficiaries. You buy a life insurance policy on your life with the idea that it will cover your financial role if you pass away. Life insurance is especially critical when you’re starting a family. If you’re the primary breadwinner and you die, imagine the financial hardship your family would suffer.\r\n\r\nTo combat this potentially cataclysmic crisis, you can buy a <em>term-life insurance</em> policy. By agreeing to pay an annual premium, if you were to die in a certain amount of time (or term), the insurance company agrees to pay out a pre-determined sum of money. The premium is the fee you pay to keep the policy active.\r\n<p class=\"article-tips tip\">Life insurance is there only to take care of people who count on you financially, after you die. If you’re not supporting anyone financially, you probably don’t need life insurance. Also, other forms of life insurance wrap savings and investment plans in with the death benefit. These plans are called whole-life plans. Whole-life plans might make sense for a subset of people, but they’re so complicated and potentially expensive that you should consult with an expert before buying one. Or you could just buy a term-life insurance policy and keep it simple.</p>\r\n\r\n<h3>Estimating how much life insurance you need</h3>\r\nIf you decide that you need life insurance, the next question is how much coverage you require. Some excellent online calculators, such as the following, can help you make the calculations:\r\n<ul>\r\n \t<li><a href=\"https://lifehappens.org/insurance-overview/life-insurance/calculate-your-needs\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\"><strong>LifeHappens Calculate Your Needs calculator</strong></a><strong>: </strong>Steps you through the important questions you need to answer to decide how much life insurance coverage you need. As you can see in Figure 16-8, the site shows you the two variables that determine how much money your dependents would need if you died and in the future. The site helps you measure both.</li>\r\n</ul>\r\n[caption id=\"attachment_268816\" align=\"alignnone\" width=\"556\"]<img class=\"size-full wp-image-268816\" src=\"https://www.dummies.com/wp-content/uploads/retirement-lifehappens.jpg\" alt=\"life insurance tool\" width=\"556\" height=\"449\" /> LifeHappens provides many useful tools to help you see how much life insurance you need.[/caption]\r\n<ul>\r\n \t<li><a href=\"https://lifehappens.org/insurance-calculators/calculate-human-life-value/\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\"><strong>LifeHappens Human Life Calculator</strong></a><strong>:</strong> Puts a price tag on your existence by showing how much of a financial blow your family would suffer if you died today. Putting a price tag on your life is another way to think about your life insurance needs, as you can see in the sidebar, “What’s a Life Worth?” The calculator is an eye-opening tabulation of what a human life is worth.</li>\r\n \t<li><a href=\"http://www.bankrate.com/calculators/insurance/life-insurance-calculator.aspx\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\"><strong>Bankrate Life Insurance Calculator</strong></a><strong>: </strong>Looks at the question of how much life insurance you need in a slightly different way. Most life insurance calculators differ in their approach, so it’s a good idea to run your numbers through a few.</li>\r\n</ul>\r\n<p class=\"article-tips tip\">Don’t fixate too much on how much life insurance you need. The biggest question is whether or not you need it. And if you do need it, don’t waste any time. Just buy it. An easy rule-of-thumb on how much you and your spouse collectively need is to buy? You’ll want a policy with a payout that’s 10 times your combined household income.</p>\r\n\r\n<h3>Buying life insurance</h3>\r\nTalk about a tough sell. How would you like to buy something that costs you money every year, doesn't benefit you personally, and pays out only if you die? Not exactly uplifting.\r\n\r\nThat’s why the moment someone hears that you’re interested in buying life insurance, sellers will come out of the woodwork to sell you a policy. Just search for <em>life insurance</em> online and you'll get life insurance ads on your screen for months.\r\n\r\nIf you do decide that you’re ready to buy a policy, first check with the carrier that provides your auto, homeowner’s, or umbrella coverage. Most also sell life insurance and provide a multi-policy discount. In addition, online insurance forums, such as LendingTree.com and SelectQuote, will shop your insurance needs against a network of bidders. You can then compare coverage and prices to get the best combination for you.","description":"Protecting your retirement funds from disaster is a critical part of retirement planning. That’s where insurance comes in. You want to make sure your plan can withstand an unexpected event. Typically, health scares are the culprits in disrupting a plan, but home and auto accidents can be major expenses, too.\r\n<p class=\"article-tips tip\">Find your insurance declaration pages. These documents will tell you how much coverage you have, which you’ll need to evaluate your plan and make certain you’re protected.</p>\r\n\r\n<h2 id=\"tab1\" >Check property and casualty coverages</h2>\r\nIf you’re <a href=\"https://www.dummies.com/article/business-careers-money/personal-finance/retirement/retirement-planning-for-dummies-cheat-sheet-267342/\">planning for retirement</a>, it’s important that you have in place the right amount of automobile and homeowner's (or renter's) insurance coverage, in addition to healthcare coverage:\r\n<ul>\r\n \t<li><strong>Automobile insurance:</strong> Your car can be the source of enormous financial losses, not only to your vehicle but to someone else's vehicle and other personal property. Additionally, the financial hit from injuries can wipe out a financial plan overnight. If you’re nearing retirement age, you likely have significant assets to protect. Simply accepting the minimum coverage required by your state is likely not enough.</li>\r\n \t<li><strong>Homeowner's (or renter's) insurance:</strong> If you own your home, it might be one of the pieces of bedrock in your financial plan. If you don’t have rent or a mortgage, you’re well ahead of those who spend 30 percent of their budget for housing. Protecting your home from a devastating fire or other catastrophe is important. Don’t count on the insurance company to verify that you have enough coverage. Renters insurance can help safeguard your personal belongings.</li>\r\n</ul>\r\n<p class=\"article-tips tip\">Insurance needs remain fairly unchanged as you near retirement—you need to protect your home whether you’re 34 or 64. But one factor that you might want to modify as you age is your deductible.</p>\r\nYour <em>deductible</em> is how much of a loss you’re responsible for in an accident. Let’s say your car sustains $1,500 in damage. If you’re young, you might not have the financial resources to handle a large hit and so you opt for a lower $250 deductible. The lower deductible comes at a cost, in the form of a higher monthly payment.\r\n\r\nAs you age, however, you probably have a larger financial reserve. One easy way to save money on insurance is to push up your deductible to $1,000 and save on your monthly premiums.\r\n\r\nLog into your insurance provider’s site, as shown, to see whether a higher deductible is available. You’ll also want to double-check that the limits are appropriate.\r\n\r\n[caption id=\"attachment_268818\" align=\"alignnone\" width=\"556\"]<img class=\"size-full wp-image-268818\" src=\"https://www.dummies.com/wp-content/uploads/retirement-insurance-policy-limits.jpg\" alt=\"insurance policy limits\" width=\"556\" height=\"313\" /> Check your homeowner's and auto policy limits to see if you can boost your deductible to lower your premiums.[/caption]\r\n<h2 id=\"tab2\" >Get ready for a rainy day: Umbrella insurance</h2>\r\nKnowing your coverage limits on your automotive and homeowner’s insurance policies unlocks the next phase of insurance. As you age and amass more money, you have more at risk from a big accident. Not only do you have more money to lose, you have less time to recover from a financial blow.\r\n\r\nAfter looking at your limits on your homeowner’s and automotive plans, you might see a disconnect. If your net worth exceeds your insurance limits, that’s a red flag. If you’ve accumulated a big nest egg, you don’t want to see it evaporate if you’re caught in a massive car pileup on the freeway. Similarly, if someone gets seriously hurt on your property, lawsuit damages can be enormous.\r\n\r\nHow do you protect yourself other than never leaving the house or never inviting someone over to visit? Enter <em>umbrella insurance,</em> which unlocks millions of dollars of extra coverage beyond what your homeowner’s and auto policies cover.\r\n<p class=\"article-tips tip\">Umbrella policies don’t kick in until the limits of your homeowner’s and automotive policies are exceeded. Because the umbrella policy doesn’t pay anything until your homeowner's or auto policy’s limit is topped, the rates on umbrella policies tend to be reasonable. It’s common to buy $1 million of coverage for $100 or $200 a year. It’s a small price to pay for such a large amount of protection and peace of mind.</p>\r\nHow much umbrella coverage to you need? You could figure it out yourself, but I like <a href=\"http://www.kiplinger.com/tool/insurance/T028-S002-how-much-umbrella-insurance-do-i-need/index.php\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\">Kiplinger’s How Much Umbrella Insurance Do I Need? calculator</a>. The calculator, which is shown here, helps you buy just enough umbrella insurance to safeguard you from a major financial shock.\r\n\r\n[caption id=\"attachment_268817\" align=\"alignnone\" width=\"556\"]<img class=\"size-full wp-image-268817\" src=\"https://www.dummies.com/wp-content/uploads/retirement-umbrella-insurance.jpg\" alt=\"umbrella insurance\" width=\"556\" height=\"350\" /> Kiplinger’s umbrella insurance tool helps you protect yourself without paying too much.[/caption]\r\n\r\nTo use the calculator, start with your net worth and work backwards:\r\n<ol>\r\n \t<li><strong> Enter your net worth.\r\n</strong>Your <em>net worth</em> is the value of what you own minus what you owe.\r\n<p class=\"article-tips tip\">To err on the side of safety, consider buying an umbrella policy valued at your net worth. Yes, some of your money is protected against creditors, as you’ll see in Steps 2 and 3. But when you take the money out of protected accounts, such as retirement accounts, it’s exposed. This approach isn’t necessarily recommended, but it's a conservative way to go.</p>\r\n</li>\r\n \t<li><strong> Enter your home equity value.\r\n</strong>The <em>equity value</em> is the market value of your home minus mortgages or loans. Most states protect at least some of your home equity. The Kiplinger calculator can tabulate how much of your home equity is at risk.</li>\r\n \t<li><strong> Enter your retirement plan balances.</strong>\r\nEnter the value of your retirement plans, including 401(k), IRA, Roth IRA, SIMPLE IRA, and SEP IRA. Assets held in these accounts are protected from creditors.</li>\r\n \t<li><strong> Set a limit to your homeowner's and auto policies.\r\n</strong>Remember that your auto and homeowner’s liability coverage pays injury claims first. Most umbrella policy insurers will require your homeowner's liability limit to be $250,000 or higher. And you’ll likely need to have a per-person liability limit on your auto policy of $250,000 or more and $500,000 per accident.</li>\r\n</ol>\r\n<p class=\"article-tips tip\">You’ll usually get the most bang from your insurance buck if you raise your auto and homeowner's liability limits to the lowest required by your umbrella policy provider. Because you buy umbrella coverage in giant $1 million chunks, you can usually boost your total protection at a lower cost with an umbrella than with homeowner's or auto policy limits. Also, to save money on premiums, see if you can get your umbrella policy from the same company that provides your auto and homeowner’s policies. It’s also easier to coordinate payments from a single company.</p>\r\n\r\n<h2 id=\"tab3\" >Protect your family with life insurance</h2>\r\nThinking about all the things that can go wrong in life is no fun. That’s why I left the chapter on insurance for the end of the book. Planning for retirement should be fun. It gets you thinking about what’s most important in life and how to enjoy what you have for as long as possible.\r\n\r\nBut you need to prepare for unhappy events, too.\r\n<h3>Understanding the benefits of life insurance</h3>\r\nLife insurance isn’t for you. It’s for your beneficiaries. You buy a life insurance policy on your life with the idea that it will cover your financial role if you pass away. Life insurance is especially critical when you’re starting a family. If you’re the primary breadwinner and you die, imagine the financial hardship your family would suffer.\r\n\r\nTo combat this potentially cataclysmic crisis, you can buy a <em>term-life insurance</em> policy. By agreeing to pay an annual premium, if you were to die in a certain amount of time (or term), the insurance company agrees to pay out a pre-determined sum of money. The premium is the fee you pay to keep the policy active.\r\n<p class=\"article-tips tip\">Life insurance is there only to take care of people who count on you financially, after you die. If you’re not supporting anyone financially, you probably don’t need life insurance. Also, other forms of life insurance wrap savings and investment plans in with the death benefit. These plans are called whole-life plans. Whole-life plans might make sense for a subset of people, but they’re so complicated and potentially expensive that you should consult with an expert before buying one. Or you could just buy a term-life insurance policy and keep it simple.</p>\r\n\r\n<h3>Estimating how much life insurance you need</h3>\r\nIf you decide that you need life insurance, the next question is how much coverage you require. Some excellent online calculators, such as the following, can help you make the calculations:\r\n<ul>\r\n \t<li><a href=\"https://lifehappens.org/insurance-overview/life-insurance/calculate-your-needs\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\"><strong>LifeHappens Calculate Your Needs calculator</strong></a><strong>: </strong>Steps you through the important questions you need to answer to decide how much life insurance coverage you need. As you can see in Figure 16-8, the site shows you the two variables that determine how much money your dependents would need if you died and in the future. The site helps you measure both.</li>\r\n</ul>\r\n[caption id=\"attachment_268816\" align=\"alignnone\" width=\"556\"]<img class=\"size-full wp-image-268816\" src=\"https://www.dummies.com/wp-content/uploads/retirement-lifehappens.jpg\" alt=\"life insurance tool\" width=\"556\" height=\"449\" /> LifeHappens provides many useful tools to help you see how much life insurance you need.[/caption]\r\n<ul>\r\n \t<li><a href=\"https://lifehappens.org/insurance-calculators/calculate-human-life-value/\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\"><strong>LifeHappens Human Life Calculator</strong></a><strong>:</strong> Puts a price tag on your existence by showing how much of a financial blow your family would suffer if you died today. Putting a price tag on your life is another way to think about your life insurance needs, as you can see in the sidebar, “What’s a Life Worth?” The calculator is an eye-opening tabulation of what a human life is worth.</li>\r\n \t<li><a href=\"http://www.bankrate.com/calculators/insurance/life-insurance-calculator.aspx\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\"><strong>Bankrate Life Insurance Calculator</strong></a><strong>: </strong>Looks at the question of how much life insurance you need in a slightly different way. Most life insurance calculators differ in their approach, so it’s a good idea to run your numbers through a few.</li>\r\n</ul>\r\n<p class=\"article-tips tip\">Don’t fixate too much on how much life insurance you need. The biggest question is whether or not you need it. And if you do need it, don’t waste any time. Just buy it. An easy rule-of-thumb on how much you and your spouse collectively need is to buy? You’ll want a policy with a payout that’s 10 times your combined household income.</p>\r\n\r\n<h3>Buying life insurance</h3>\r\nTalk about a tough sell. How would you like to buy something that costs you money every year, doesn't benefit you personally, and pays out only if you die? Not exactly uplifting.\r\n\r\nThat’s why the moment someone hears that you’re interested in buying life insurance, sellers will come out of the woodwork to sell you a policy. Just search for <em>life insurance</em> online and you'll get life insurance ads on your screen for months.\r\n\r\nIf you do decide that you’re ready to buy a policy, first check with the carrier that provides your auto, homeowner’s, or umbrella coverage. Most also sell life insurance and provide a multi-policy discount. In addition, online insurance forums, such as LendingTree.com and SelectQuote, will shop your insurance needs against a network of bidders. You can then compare coverage and prices to get the best combination for you.","blurb":"","authors":[{"authorId":33279,"name":"Matthew Krantz","slug":"matthew-krantz","description":" <p><b>Matt Krantz</b> is a nationally known financial journalist who specializes in investing topics. He&#39;s personal finance and management editor at <i>Investor&#39;s Business Daily.</i> He&#39;s also worked in the financial industry and covered markets and investing for <i>USA TODAY.</i> His writing on financial topics has also appeared in <i>Money</i> magazine, <i> Kiplinger&#39;s</i>, and <i>Men&#39;s Health</i>. Krantz is the author of <i>Fundamental Analysis For Dummies</i> and co&#45;author of <i>Investment Banking For Dummies.</i> ","hasArticle":false,"_links":{"self":"https://dummies-api.dummies.com/v2/authors/33279"}}],"primaryCategoryTaxonomy":{"categoryId":34308,"title":"Retirement","slug":"retirement","_links":{"self":"https://dummies-api.dummies.com/v2/categories/34308"}},"secondaryCategoryTaxonomy":{"categoryId":0,"title":null,"slug":null,"_links":null},"tertiaryCategoryTaxonomy":{"categoryId":0,"title":null,"slug":null,"_links":null},"trendingArticles":[{"articleId":192609,"title":"How to Pray the Rosary: A Comprehensive Guide","slug":"how-to-pray-the-rosary","categoryList":["body-mind-spirit","religion-spirituality","christianity","catholicism"],"_links":{"self":"/articles/192609"}},{"articleId":208741,"title":"Kabbalah For Dummies Cheat 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He&#39;s personal finance and management editor at <i>Investor&#39;s Business Daily.</i> He&#39;s also worked in the financial industry and covered markets and investing for <i>USA TODAY.</i> His writing on financial topics has also appeared in <i>Money</i> magazine, <i> Kiplinger&#39;s</i>, and <i>Men&#39;s Health</i>. Krantz is the author of <i>Fundamental Analysis For Dummies</i> and co&#45;author of <i>Investment Banking For Dummies.</i></p>","authors":[{"authorId":33279,"name":"Matthew Krantz","slug":"matthew-krantz","description":" <p><b>Matt Krantz</b> is a nationally known financial journalist who specializes in investing topics. He&#39;s personal finance and management editor at <i>Investor&#39;s Business Daily.</i> He&#39;s also worked in the financial industry and covered markets and investing for <i>USA TODAY.</i> His writing on financial topics has also appeared in <i>Money</i> magazine, <i> Kiplinger&#39;s</i>, and <i>Men&#39;s Health</i>. Krantz is the author of <i>Fundamental Analysis For Dummies</i> and co&#45;author of <i>Investment Banking For Dummies.</i> ","hasArticle":false,"_links":{"self":"https://dummies-api.dummies.com/v2/authors/33279"}}],"_links":{"self":"https://dummies-api.dummies.com/v2/books/"}},"collections":[],"articleAds":{"footerAd":"<div class=\"du-ad-region row\" id=\"article_page_adhesion_ad\"><div class=\"du-ad-unit col-md-12\" data-slot-id=\"article_page_adhesion_ad\" data-refreshed=\"false\" \r\n data-target = \"[{&quot;key&quot;:&quot;cat&quot;,&quot;values&quot;:[&quot;business-careers-money&quot;,&quot;personal-finance&quot;,&quot;retirement&quot;]},{&quot;key&quot;:&quot;isbn&quot;,&quot;values&quot;:[&quot;9781119627579&quot;]}]\" id=\"du-slot-64f0ff8ef34ac\"></div></div>","rightAd":"<div class=\"du-ad-region row\" id=\"article_page_right_ad\"><div class=\"du-ad-unit col-md-12\" data-slot-id=\"article_page_right_ad\" data-refreshed=\"false\" \r\n data-target = \"[{&quot;key&quot;:&quot;cat&quot;,&quot;values&quot;:[&quot;business-careers-money&quot;,&quot;personal-finance&quot;,&quot;retirement&quot;]},{&quot;key&quot;:&quot;isbn&quot;,&quot;values&quot;:[&quot;9781119627579&quot;]}]\" id=\"du-slot-64f0ff8ef3d46\"></div></div>"},"articleType":{"articleType":"Articles","articleList":null,"content":null,"videoInfo":{"videoId":null,"name":null,"accountId":null,"playerId":null,"thumbnailUrl":null,"description":null,"uploadDate":null}},"sponsorship":{"sponsorshipPage":false,"backgroundImage":{"src":null,"width":0,"height":0},"brandingLine":"","brandingLink":"","brandingLogo":{"src":null,"width":0,"height":0},"sponsorAd":"","sponsorEbookTitle":"","sponsorEbookLink":"","sponsorEbookImage":{"src":null,"width":0,"height":0}},"primaryLearningPath":"Explore","lifeExpectancy":"One year","lifeExpectancySetFrom":"2023-08-31T00:00:00+00:00","dummiesForKids":"no","sponsoredContent":"no","adInfo":"","adPairKey":[]},"status":"publish","visibility":"public","articleId":268815},{"headers":{"creationTime":"2023-04-13T17:07:15+00:00","modifiedTime":"2023-04-14T14:32:44+00:00","timestamp":"2023-04-14T15:01:02+00:00"},"data":{"breadcrumbs":[{"name":"Business, Careers, & Money","_links":{"self":"https://dummies-api.dummies.com/v2/categories/34224"},"slug":"business-careers-money","categoryId":34224},{"name":"Personal Finance","_links":{"self":"https://dummies-api.dummies.com/v2/categories/34273"},"slug":"personal-finance","categoryId":34273},{"name":"Retirement","_links":{"self":"https://dummies-api.dummies.com/v2/categories/34308"},"slug":"retirement","categoryId":34308}],"title":"RRSPs & TFSAs For Canadians For Dummies Cheat Sheet","strippedTitle":"rrsps & tfsas for canadians for dummies cheat sheet","slug":"rrsps-tfsas-for-canadians-for-dummies-cheat-sheet","canonicalUrl":"","seo":{"metaDescription":"This Cheat Sheet summarizes some key factors to consider as you're looking into retirement plans like RRSPs and TFSAs.","noIndex":0,"noFollow":0},"content":"Inflation has become a big part of our lives lately. You need help to quickly determine just how much of a bite inflation takes out of, or will take out of, your hard-earned money, especially when you need precise and tailored calculations.\r\n\r\nThis Cheat Sheet summarizes some important factors to keep in mind when you're considering retirement plans like Registered Retirement Savings Plans (RRSPs) and Tax-Free Savings Accounts (TFSAs).","description":"Inflation has become a big part of our lives lately. You need help to quickly determine just how much of a bite inflation takes out of, or will take out of, your hard-earned money, especially when you need precise and tailored calculations.\r\n\r\nThis Cheat Sheet summarizes some important factors to keep in mind when you're considering retirement plans like Registered Retirement Savings Plans (RRSPs) and Tax-Free Savings Accounts (TFSAs).","blurb":"","authors":[{"authorId":34409,"name":"Andrew Dagys","slug":"andrew-dagys","description":"<b>Andrew Dagys</b> is a professional accountant and the bestselling author of over a dozen books on investing, financial planning, and technology.","hasArticle":false,"_links":{"self":"https://dummies-api.dummies.com/v2/authors/34409"}}],"primaryCategoryTaxonomy":{"categoryId":34308,"title":"Retirement","slug":"retirement","_links":{"self":"https://dummies-api.dummies.com/v2/categories/34308"}},"secondaryCategoryTaxonomy":{"categoryId":0,"title":null,"slug":null,"_links":null},"tertiaryCategoryTaxonomy":{"categoryId":0,"title":null,"slug":null,"_links":null},"trendingArticles":[{"articleId":192609,"title":"How to Pray the Rosary: A Comprehensive Guide","slug":"how-to-pray-the-rosary","categoryList":["body-mind-spirit","religion-spirituality","christianity","catholicism"],"_links":{"self":"/articles/192609"}},{"articleId":208741,"title":"Kabbalah For Dummies Cheat Sheet","slug":"kabbalah-for-dummies-cheat-sheet","categoryList":["body-mind-spirit","religion-spirituality","kabbalah"],"_links":{"self":"/articles/208741"}},{"articleId":230957,"title":"Nikon D3400 For Dummies Cheat 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Provider","slug":"how-to-get-online-with-your-ira-provider","categoryList":["business-careers-money","personal-finance","retirement"],"_links":{"self":"https://dummies-api.dummies.com/v2/articles/268838"}}]},"hasRelatedBookFromSearch":false,"relatedBook":{"bookId":298225,"slug":"rrsps-tfsas-for-canadians-for-dummies","isbn":"9781119912736","categoryList":["business-careers-money","personal-finance","retirement"],"amazon":{"default":"https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/1119912733/ref=as_li_tl?ie=UTF8&tag=wiley01-20","ca":"https://www.amazon.ca/gp/product/1119912733/ref=as_li_tl?ie=UTF8&tag=wiley01-20","indigo_ca":"http://www.tkqlhce.com/click-9208661-13710633?url=https://www.chapters.indigo.ca/en-ca/books/product/1119912733-item.html&cjsku=978111945484","gb":"https://www.amazon.co.uk/gp/product/1119912733/ref=as_li_tl?ie=UTF8&tag=wiley01-20","de":"https://www.amazon.de/gp/product/1119912733/ref=as_li_tl?ie=UTF8&tag=wiley01-20"},"image":{"src":"https://www.dummies.com/wp-content/uploads/rrsps-and-tfsas-for-canadians-for-dummies-cover-9781119912736-203x255.jpg","width":203,"height":255},"title":"RRSPs & TFSAs For Canadians For Dummies","testBankPinActivationLink":"","bookOutOfPrint":true,"authorsInfo":"<p><b><b data-author-id=\"34409\">Andrew Dagys</b></b> is a professional accountant and the bestselling author of over a dozen books on investing, financial planning, and technology.</p>","authors":[{"authorId":34409,"name":"Andrew Dagys","slug":"andrew-dagys","description":"<b>Andrew Dagys</b> is a professional accountant and the bestselling author of over a dozen books on investing, financial planning, and technology.","hasArticle":false,"_links":{"self":"https://dummies-api.dummies.com/v2/authors/34409"}}],"_links":{"self":"https://dummies-api.dummies.com/v2/books/"}},"collections":[],"articleAds":{"footerAd":"<div class=\"du-ad-region row\" id=\"article_page_adhesion_ad\"><div class=\"du-ad-unit col-md-12\" data-slot-id=\"article_page_adhesion_ad\" data-refreshed=\"false\" \r\n data-target = \"[{&quot;key&quot;:&quot;cat&quot;,&quot;values&quot;:[&quot;business-careers-money&quot;,&quot;personal-finance&quot;,&quot;retirement&quot;]},{&quot;key&quot;:&quot;isbn&quot;,&quot;values&quot;:[&quot;9781119912736&quot;]}]\" id=\"du-slot-64396aaef1ede\"></div></div>","rightAd":"<div class=\"du-ad-region row\" id=\"article_page_right_ad\"><div class=\"du-ad-unit col-md-12\" data-slot-id=\"article_page_right_ad\" data-refreshed=\"false\" \r\n data-target = \"[{&quot;key&quot;:&quot;cat&quot;,&quot;values&quot;:[&quot;business-careers-money&quot;,&quot;personal-finance&quot;,&quot;retirement&quot;]},{&quot;key&quot;:&quot;isbn&quot;,&quot;values&quot;:[&quot;9781119912736&quot;]}]\" id=\"du-slot-64396aaef25cb\"></div></div>"},"articleType":{"articleType":"Cheat Sheet","articleList":[{"articleId":0,"title":"","slug":null,"categoryList":[],"_links":{"self":"https://dummies-api.dummies.com/v2/articles/"}}],"content":[{"title":"Plan for inflation if you're retiring soon","thumb":null,"image":null,"content":"<p>A large cohort of Canadians are approaching or already in the 50+ age group. Most people in this group are beginning to think even longer and harder about retirement preparedness. If they’ve read this book, they likely already though about it!</p>\n<p>While most Canadians retire from their last full-time job somewhere in their 60s, many need or want to take on part-time work after that. Regardless of what scenario you fall into, if you’re retiring in your 50s, 60s, or even beyond, you need to visualize and plan for the nasty little bug called inflation. (Okay, it’s a big bug!)</p>\n<p>Assume that you’re retiring at the end of this year, you’re in your late 50s or early 60s, and your salary for this year is, for argument’s sake, $50,000. I keep it simple here.</p>\n<p>According to an industry-embraced, albeit crude, 10:1 benchmark for retirement at a later stage in life, you should save $500,000 to hit the 10-times goal. Sound like a lot of money? It is, but it would provide approximately $30,000 a year of inflation-adjusted income over 25 years, which assumes:</p>\n<ul>\n<li>The average rate of inflation over the long-term is 3 percent.</li>\n<li>Only a small cushion will remain at the end of 25 years.</li>\n<li>You invest 50 percent of your nest egg in stocks and 50 percent in bonds during this period.</li>\n</ul>\n<p>A yearly income of $30,000 may not sound like much or even be realistic to your situation but remember that your taxes will be lower when you retire, and you won’t need to save for retirement anymore. Your expenses will likely be less than when you were working.</p>\n<p>Your income should also be supplemented by other savings, as well as any CPP and OAS benefits you receive from the federal government of Canada. Altogether, this could add up to provide you with an adequate or minimum level of retirement income.</p>\n"},{"title":"What goes up — or inflation-adjusted income","thumb":null,"image":null,"content":"<p>What is inflation-adjusted income? Inflation is the rate at which prices increase over time. When you plan for your future, you have to plan for prices to go up; otherwise, you’ll run out of money too soon.</p>\n<p>Inflation-adjusted income essentially refers to the purchasing power of your money &#8212; what your loonies can buy. If you achieved the $500,000 savings and $30,000 annual income goals I described above, your quest is not quite over. That’s because if over the next 25 years you want to be able to buy what will cost $30,000 today, you’ll need significantly more than $30,000. Huh?</p>\n<p>You can’t know for sure what the inflation rate will be. Recently, it has spiked above 8 percent in Canada. No one knows how sustained inflation will remain, so you need to make an assumption. I use 3 percent, which is on the low side compared to today but realistic in the context of the last decade or two, and for long-range planning in my opinion.</p>\n<p>The table below shows how much income is needed to keep up the buying power of $10,000 over the years. (Using $10,000 makes it easy to adjust to whatever income you think will be right for your situation.)</p>\n<p>For example, you can calculate that you’ll need $60,984 in the 25th year of your retirement to buy what $30,000 will buy in the first year ($20,328 × 3).</p>\n<table>\n<tbody>\n<tr>\n<td width=\"142\"><strong>Number of Years After You Retire</strong></td>\n<td width=\"180\"><strong>Annual Income Needed</strong></td>\n</tr>\n<tr>\n<td width=\"142\">1</td>\n<td width=\"180\">$10,000</td>\n</tr>\n<tr>\n<td width=\"142\">2</td>\n<td width=\"180\">$10,300</td>\n</tr>\n<tr>\n<td width=\"142\">3</td>\n<td width=\"180\">$10,609</td>\n</tr>\n<tr>\n<td width=\"142\">4</td>\n<td width=\"180\">$10,927</td>\n</tr>\n<tr>\n<td width=\"142\">5</td>\n<td width=\"180\">$11,255</td>\n</tr>\n<tr>\n<td width=\"142\">6</td>\n<td width=\"180\">$11,593</td>\n</tr>\n<tr>\n<td width=\"142\">7</td>\n<td width=\"180\">$11,941</td>\n</tr>\n<tr>\n<td width=\"142\">8</td>\n<td width=\"180\">$12,299</td>\n</tr>\n<tr>\n<td width=\"142\">9</td>\n<td width=\"180\">$12,668</td>\n</tr>\n<tr>\n<td width=\"142\">10</td>\n<td width=\"180\">$13,048</td>\n</tr>\n<tr>\n<td width=\"142\">11</td>\n<td width=\"180\">$13,439</td>\n</tr>\n<tr>\n<td width=\"142\">12</td>\n<td width=\"180\">$13,842</td>\n</tr>\n<tr>\n<td width=\"142\">13</td>\n<td width=\"180\">$14,258</td>\n</tr>\n<tr>\n<td width=\"142\">14</td>\n<td width=\"180\">$14,685</td>\n</tr>\n<tr>\n<td width=\"142\">15</td>\n<td width=\"180\">$15,126</td>\n</tr>\n<tr>\n<td width=\"142\">16</td>\n<td width=\"180\">$15,580</td>\n</tr>\n<tr>\n<td width=\"142\">17</td>\n<td width=\"180\">$16,047</td>\n</tr>\n<tr>\n<td width=\"142\">18</td>\n<td width=\"180\">$16,528</td>\n</tr>\n<tr>\n<td width=\"142\">19</td>\n<td width=\"180\">$17,024</td>\n</tr>\n<tr>\n<td width=\"142\">20</td>\n<td width=\"180\">$17,535</td>\n</tr>\n<tr>\n<td width=\"142\">21</td>\n<td width=\"180\">$18,061</td>\n</tr>\n<tr>\n<td width=\"142\">22</td>\n<td width=\"180\">$18,603</td>\n</tr>\n<tr>\n<td width=\"142\">23</td>\n<td width=\"180\">$19,161</td>\n</tr>\n<tr>\n<td width=\"142\">24</td>\n<td width=\"180\">$19,736</td>\n</tr>\n<tr>\n<td width=\"142\">25</td>\n<td width=\"180\">$20,328</td>\n</tr>\n</tbody>\n</table>\n"},{"title":"Calculating when your retirement is farther off","thumb":null,"image":null,"content":"<p>I can hear you calling, “Hey, a little help over here . . . I’m not retiring tomorrow, so how do I know how much I’ll be earning the year before I retire?” Not to worry. That’s because as with so many things in life, you can find a tool online to develop a workable retirement plan.</p>\n<p>The Internet hosts many financial organizations whose websites provide free retirement calculators and similar online tools. Some calculators figure out what you need to retire money-wise. Others help you budget and figure out future spending needs.</p>\n<p>Remember that each calculator uses different methods and makes different assumptions; so different calculators can produce widely varying results. Check the assumptions each calculator uses to see if they make sense for you and your situation.</p>\n<p>The major benefit of using a retirement calculator is that it gives you an investment reality check. Will the amount you’re saving and the investment mix you choose enable you to accumulate what you need? A good retirement calculator will answer this question and may also help you decide how to close any savings gaps.</p>\n<p>Generally, you can close a gap by increasing your contributions, adjusting your investment mix and risk profile to achieve a higher long-term return, or a combination of the two.</p>\n<p>Rather than listing the best retirement calculators offered by Canadian websites, I suggest that you check out the web sites of the financial companies you do business with or are familiar with.</p>\n<p>I am willing to bet that almost all of them will have a retirement calculator in one way, shape, or form that will work for you. OK, I’ll cave in one time and ask you to check out <a href=\"https://www.wealthsimple.com/en-ca/tool/retirement-calculator\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\">Wealthsimple’s calculator</a>.</p>\n<p class=\"article-tips remember\">The really super-powerful calculators are not free. However, your financial advisor will likely sport one of those so be sure to ask them to run those numbers, as often as you like. Just remember, the financial planner you choose to work with knows your personal situation; a website really doesn’t and never will.</p>\n"}],"videoInfo":{"videoId":null,"name":null,"accountId":null,"playerId":null,"thumbnailUrl":null,"description":null,"uploadDate":null}},"sponsorship":{"sponsorshipPage":false,"backgroundImage":{"src":null,"width":0,"height":0},"brandingLine":"","brandingLink":"","brandingLogo":{"src":null,"width":0,"height":0},"sponsorAd":"","sponsorEbookTitle":"","sponsorEbookLink":"","sponsorEbookImage":{"src":null,"width":0,"height":0}},"primaryLearningPath":"Advance","lifeExpectancy":"Two years","lifeExpectancySetFrom":"2023-04-13T00:00:00+00:00","dummiesForKids":"no","sponsoredContent":"no","adInfo":"","adPairKey":[]},"status":"publish","visibility":"public","articleId":298305},{"headers":{"creationTime":"2016-03-27T16:54:41+00:00","modifiedTime":"2022-12-07T20:09:32+00:00","timestamp":"2022-12-07T21:01:02+00:00"},"data":{"breadcrumbs":[{"name":"Business, Careers, & Money","_links":{"self":"https://dummies-api.dummies.com/v2/categories/34224"},"slug":"business-careers-money","categoryId":34224},{"name":"Personal Finance","_links":{"self":"https://dummies-api.dummies.com/v2/categories/34273"},"slug":"personal-finance","categoryId":34273},{"name":"Retirement","_links":{"self":"https://dummies-api.dummies.com/v2/categories/34308"},"slug":"retirement","categoryId":34308}],"title":"401(k)s For Dummies Cheat Sheet","strippedTitle":"401(k)s for dummies cheat sheet","slug":"401ks-for-dummies-cheat-sheet","canonicalUrl":"","seo":{"metaDescription":"Learn how to build, manage, and make the most out of your 401(k) retirement account with this quick guide.","noIndex":0,"noFollow":0},"content":"Knowing how to build your 401(k) retirement plan, devising investment strategies, and making the most of your plan can all help to financially secure your path to retirement. During economic difficulties, you may be tempted to tap into your 401(k) funds, but most often, you're much better off financially if you can leave the funds alone. And your 401(k) management duties don't end when you retire; you still need to invest and spend wisely.","description":"Knowing how to build your 401(k) retirement plan, devising investment strategies, and making the most of your plan can all help to financially secure your path to retirement. During economic difficulties, you may be tempted to tap into your 401(k) funds, but most often, you're much better off financially if you can leave the funds alone. And your 401(k) management duties don't end when you retire; you still need to invest and spend wisely.","blurb":"","authors":[{"authorId":10237,"name":"Ted Benna","slug":"ted-benna","description":" <p><b>Ted Benna</b> is commonly referred to as the &#8220;father of 401(k)&#8221; because he created and gained IRS approval of the first 401(k) savings plan.</p> <p><b>Brenda Watson Newmann</b> began her career as an Associated Press foreign correspondent and later moved to Silicon Valley as Managing Editor at <i>401k Forum/mPower</i>. ","hasArticle":false,"_links":{"self":"https://dummies-api.dummies.com/v2/authors/10237"}},{"authorId":10238,"name":"Brenda Watson Newmann","slug":"brenda-watson-newmann","description":" <p><b>Ted Benna</b> is commonly referred to as the &#8220;father of 401(k)&#8221; because he created and gained IRS approval of the first 401(k) savings plan.</p> <p><b>Brenda Watson Newmann</b> began her career as an Associated Press foreign correspondent and later moved to Silicon Valley as Managing Editor at <i>401k Forum/mPower</i>. ","hasArticle":false,"_links":{"self":"https://dummies-api.dummies.com/v2/authors/10238"}}],"primaryCategoryTaxonomy":{"categoryId":34308,"title":"Retirement","slug":"retirement","_links":{"self":"https://dummies-api.dummies.com/v2/categories/34308"}},"secondaryCategoryTaxonomy":{"categoryId":0,"title":null,"slug":null,"_links":null},"tertiaryCategoryTaxonomy":{"categoryId":0,"title":null,"slug":null,"_links":null},"trendingArticles":[{"articleId":192609,"title":"How to Pray the Rosary: A Comprehensive Guide","slug":"how-to-pray-the-rosary","categoryList":["body-mind-spirit","religion-spirituality","christianity","catholicism"],"_links":{"self":"/articles/192609"}},{"articleId":208741,"title":"Kabbalah For Dummies Cheat Sheet","slug":"kabbalah-for-dummies-cheat-sheet","categoryList":["body-mind-spirit","religion-spirituality","kabbalah"],"_links":{"self":"/articles/208741"}},{"articleId":230957,"title":"Nikon D3400 For Dummies Cheat 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Retire","slug":"managing-your-401k-when-you-retire","categoryList":["business-careers-money","personal-finance","retirement"],"_links":{"self":"https://dummies-api.dummies.com/v2/articles/189419"}},{"articleId":189420,"title":"Taking Money Out of Your 401(k) Early","slug":"taking-money-out-of-your-401k-early","categoryList":["business-careers-money","personal-finance","retirement"],"_links":{"self":"https://dummies-api.dummies.com/v2/articles/189420"}},{"articleId":189415,"title":"How to Build Your 401(k)","slug":"how-to-build-your-401k","categoryList":["business-careers-money","personal-finance","retirement"],"_links":{"self":"https://dummies-api.dummies.com/v2/articles/189415"}},{"articleId":189414,"title":"401(k) Investment Strategies","slug":"401k-investment-strategies","categoryList":["business-careers-money","personal-finance","retirement"],"_links":{"self":"https://dummies-api.dummies.com/v2/articles/189414"}}],"fromCategory":[{"articleId":288529,"title":"401(k)s and IRAs For Dummies Cheat Sheet","slug":"401ks-and-iras-for-dummies-cheat-sheet","categoryList":["business-careers-money","personal-finance","retirement"],"_links":{"self":"https://dummies-api.dummies.com/v2/articles/288529"}},{"articleId":268853,"title":"How to Manage Your Pension","slug":"how-to-manage-your-pension","categoryList":["business-careers-money","personal-finance","retirement"],"_links":{"self":"https://dummies-api.dummies.com/v2/articles/268853"}},{"articleId":268848,"title":"How to Take Money Out of Your IRA","slug":"how-to-take-money-out-of-your-ira","categoryList":["business-careers-money","personal-finance","retirement"],"_links":{"self":"https://dummies-api.dummies.com/v2/articles/268848"}},{"articleId":268843,"title":"How to Manage Your IRA Contributions","slug":"how-to-manage-your-ira-contributions","categoryList":["business-careers-money","personal-finance","retirement"],"_links":{"self":"https://dummies-api.dummies.com/v2/articles/268843"}},{"articleId":268838,"title":"How to Get Online with Your IRA Provider","slug":"how-to-get-online-with-your-ira-provider","categoryList":["business-careers-money","personal-finance","retirement"],"_links":{"self":"https://dummies-api.dummies.com/v2/articles/268838"}}]},"hasRelatedBookFromSearch":false,"relatedBook":{"bookId":281919,"slug":"401ks-for-dummies","isbn":"9780764554681","categoryList":["business-careers-money","personal-finance","retirement"],"amazon":{"default":"https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/0764554689/ref=as_li_tl?ie=UTF8&tag=wiley01-20","ca":"https://www.amazon.ca/gp/product/0764554689/ref=as_li_tl?ie=UTF8&tag=wiley01-20","indigo_ca":"http://www.tkqlhce.com/click-9208661-13710633?url=https://www.chapters.indigo.ca/en-ca/books/product/0764554689-item.html&cjsku=978111945484","gb":"https://www.amazon.co.uk/gp/product/0764554689/ref=as_li_tl?ie=UTF8&tag=wiley01-20","de":"https://www.amazon.de/gp/product/0764554689/ref=as_li_tl?ie=UTF8&tag=wiley01-20"},"image":{"src":"https://www.dummies.com/wp-content/uploads/401ks-for-dummies-cover-9780764554681-169x255.jpg","width":169,"height":255},"title":"401(k)s For Dummies","testBankPinActivationLink":"","bookOutOfPrint":false,"authorsInfo":"<b data-author-id=\"10237\">Ted Benna</b>, creator of the first 401(k) plan, has more than 30 years of experience as an employee benefits consultant.<br><br><b data-author-id=\"10238\">Brenda Watson Newmann</b> is Managing Editor at mPower.com, which provides investment advice for retirement and wealth management.","authors":[{"authorId":10237,"name":"Ted Benna","slug":"ted-benna","description":" <p><b>Ted Benna</b> is commonly referred to as the &#8220;father of 401(k)&#8221; because he created and gained IRS approval of the first 401(k) savings plan.</p> <p><b>Brenda Watson Newmann</b> began her career as an Associated Press foreign correspondent and later moved to Silicon Valley as Managing Editor at <i>401k Forum/mPower</i>. ","hasArticle":false,"_links":{"self":"https://dummies-api.dummies.com/v2/authors/10237"}},{"authorId":10238,"name":"Brenda Watson Newmann","slug":"brenda-watson-newmann","description":" <p><b>Ted Benna</b> is commonly referred to as the &#8220;father of 401(k)&#8221; because he created and gained IRS approval of the first 401(k) savings plan.</p> <p><b>Brenda Watson Newmann</b> began her career as an Associated Press foreign correspondent and later moved to Silicon Valley as Managing Editor at <i>401k Forum/mPower</i>. ","hasArticle":false,"_links":{"self":"https://dummies-api.dummies.com/v2/authors/10238"}}],"_links":{"self":"https://dummies-api.dummies.com/v2/books/"}},"collections":[],"articleAds":{"footerAd":"<div class=\"du-ad-region row\" id=\"article_page_adhesion_ad\"><div class=\"du-ad-unit col-md-12\" data-slot-id=\"article_page_adhesion_ad\" data-refreshed=\"false\" \r\n data-target = \"[{&quot;key&quot;:&quot;cat&quot;,&quot;values&quot;:[&quot;business-careers-money&quot;,&quot;personal-finance&quot;,&quot;retirement&quot;]},{&quot;key&quot;:&quot;isbn&quot;,&quot;values&quot;:[&quot;9780764554681&quot;]}]\" id=\"du-slot-6390ff0e89e7d\"></div></div>","rightAd":"<div class=\"du-ad-region row\" id=\"article_page_right_ad\"><div class=\"du-ad-unit col-md-12\" data-slot-id=\"article_page_right_ad\" data-refreshed=\"false\" \r\n data-target = \"[{&quot;key&quot;:&quot;cat&quot;,&quot;values&quot;:[&quot;business-careers-money&quot;,&quot;personal-finance&quot;,&quot;retirement&quot;]},{&quot;key&quot;:&quot;isbn&quot;,&quot;values&quot;:[&quot;9780764554681&quot;]}]\" id=\"du-slot-6390ff0e8b11c\"></div></div>"},"articleType":{"articleType":"Cheat Sheet","articleList":[{"articleId":189415,"title":"How to Build Your 401(k)","slug":"how-to-build-your-401k","categoryList":["business-careers-money","personal-finance","retirement"],"_links":{"self":"https://dummies-api.dummies.com/v2/articles/189415"}},{"articleId":189414,"title":"401(k) Investment Strategies","slug":"401k-investment-strategies","categoryList":["business-careers-money","personal-finance","retirement"],"_links":{"self":"https://dummies-api.dummies.com/v2/articles/189414"}},{"articleId":189421,"title":"Get the Most Out of Your 401(k) Retirement Plan","slug":"get-the-most-out-of-your-401k-retirement-plan","categoryList":["business-careers-money","personal-finance","retirement"],"_links":{"self":"https://dummies-api.dummies.com/v2/articles/189421"}},{"articleId":189420,"title":"Taking Money Out of Your 401(k) Early","slug":"taking-money-out-of-your-401k-early","categoryList":["business-careers-money","personal-finance","retirement"],"_links":{"self":"https://dummies-api.dummies.com/v2/articles/189420"}},{"articleId":189419,"title":"Managing Your 401(k) When You Retire","slug":"managing-your-401k-when-you-retire","categoryList":["business-careers-money","personal-finance","retirement"],"_links":{"self":"https://dummies-api.dummies.com/v2/articles/189419"}}],"content":[{"title":"How to build your 401(k)","thumb":null,"image":null,"content":"<p class=\"Tip\">You want the money in your 401(k) retirement account to grow; so, to build a comfortable nest egg, you need a smart strategy. Use the tips in the following list to guide you as you make decisions about your 401(k):</p>\n<ul class=\"level-one\">\n<li>\n<p class=\"first-para\">Save in a tax-deferred retirement account as soon as you can, to get more bang for your investment buck.</p>\n</li>\n<li>\n<p class=\"first-para\">Start by saving just 1 percent of your pay if that&#8217;s all you can afford.</p>\n</li>\n<li>\n<p class=\"first-para\">Save for retirement even if you think it&#8217;s too late. It&#8217;s never too late.</p>\n</li>\n<li>\n<p class=\"first-para\">Save at least the amount your employer matches, otherwise, you&#8217;re throwing money away.</p>\n</li>\n<li>\n<p class=\"first-para\">Aim to put away 10 percent of your income for retirement each year; increase your savings rate each time you get a raise.</p>\n</li>\n<li>\n<p class=\"first-para\">Aim to build a nest egg that&#8217;s at least 10 times your annual pay when you retire.</p>\n</li>\n<li>\n<p class=\"first-para\">Remember that Social Security won&#8217;t be enough to finance your retirement. Even with a traditional company pension, you&#8217;ll likely have a gap to fill with your own savings.</p>\n</li>\n</ul>\n"},{"title":"401(k) investment strategies","thumb":null,"image":null,"content":"<p>You usually have some say in how the money in your 401(k) retirement account is invested, even if your employer manages the 401(k) account. If you&#8217;re the sole decision-maker, the following tips on how to invest your funds are even more important:</p>\n<ul class=\"level-one\">\n<li>\n<p class=\"first-para\">Come up with a plan. Know what you&#8217;re doing and why: Don&#8217;t invest blindly, hoping that it&#8217;ll all come out well in the end.</p>\n</li>\n<li>\n<p class=\"first-para\">Establish realistic expectations, and then pick funds that have the potential to meet your goals. Learn from others, but build the portfolio that&#8217;s right for you.</p>\n</li>\n<li>\n<p class=\"first-para\">Remember that a higher risk doesn&#8217;t guarantee a higher return.</p>\n</li>\n<li>\n<p class=\"first-para\">Avoid funds that have dramatic up-and-down swings, particularly if you&#8217;re nearing retirement.</p>\n</li>\n<li>\n<p class=\"first-para\">Invest in a mix of asset types, because no one knows which investments will be hot at any point in time.</p>\n</li>\n<li>\n<p class=\"first-para\">Find a professional to help you choose the best investments.</p>\n</li>\n</ul>\n"},{"title":"Get the most out of your 401(k) retirement plan","thumb":null,"image":null,"content":"<p>If your employer offers a 401(k) retirement plan and makes contributions to it on your behalf, you have a leg up in retirement investing. The suggestions in the following list can help you get the most from your 401(k) plan:</p>\n<ul class=\"level-one\">\n<li>\n<p class=\"first-para\">Contribute enough to get the full employer matching contribution.</p>\n</li>\n<li>\n<p class=\"first-para\">Use education tools and retirement planning aids from your employer or plan provider to help develop and track your retirement plan.</p>\n</li>\n<li>\n<p class=\"first-para\">Plan jointly with your spouse to get the maximum advantage from both your retirement plans.</p>\n</li>\n<li>\n<p class=\"first-para\">Take any company stock your employer gives you, but don&#8217;t invest your own money in it. Remember Enron.</p>\n</li>\n<li>\n<p class=\"first-para\">Roll your retirement money directly into a new tax-deferred account when you change jobs. Don&#8217;t cash it out.</p>\n</li>\n<li>\n<p class=\"first-para\">Don&#8217;t take a hardship withdrawal or loan unless absolutely necessary.</p>\n</li>\n</ul>\n"},{"title":"Taking money out of your 401(k) early","thumb":null,"image":null,"content":"<p class=\"Remember\">Make taking money out of your 401(k) retirement account your last option. The consequences of early withdrawals from your 401(k) hurt your current tax situation and your future investment potential. Keep the points in the following list in mind as you contemplate dipping into your 401(k):</p>\n<ul class=\"level-one\">\n<li>\n<p class=\"first-para\">Calculate how much tax you&#8217;ll owe on a hardship withdrawal before you withdraw the money. You&#8217;ll owe income tax, plus, likely, a 10 percent early withdrawal penalty if you&#8217;re under 59 1/2. Your employer withholds some taxes, but you need to make up the rest.</p>\n</li>\n<li>\n<p class=\"first-para\">Remember that a $10,000 withdrawal at age 35 will result in a loss of more than $210,000 by age 65, assuming a 9 percent investment return.</p>\n</li>\n<li>\n<p class=\"first-para\">Withdrawing money to help buy your first home can be a good investment decision, particularly if you do it early in the year when the tax break from homeownership helps offset the additional tax you pay on the distribution.</p>\n</li>\n<li>\n<p class=\"first-para\">If you borrow from your 401(k), try to continue making new contributions while repaying the loan, to limit damage to your final nest egg.</p>\n</li>\n<li>\n<p class=\"first-para\">Don&#8217;t take a loan if you&#8217;re likely to leave your employer before repaying it. Any unpaid loan balance will likely be taxable when you leave.</p>\n</li>\n</ul>\n"},{"title":"Managing your 401(k) when you retire","thumb":null,"image":null,"content":"<p class=\"Tip\">Finally you&#8217;re reaping the benefits of contributing to your 401(k) for all those years. As you start taking money out instead of putting it in, use the advice in the following list to keep your nest egg healthy:</p>\n<ul class=\"level-one\">\n<li>\n<p class=\"first-para\">Develop a strategy to deal with the taxman, because you will have to pay taxes when you take money out of the plan.</p>\n</li>\n<li>\n<p class=\"first-para\">Consider keeping at least one-third of your money in stocks during your retirement years. Converting everything into fixed-income investments leaves your money vulnerable to inflation.</p>\n</li>\n<li>\n<p class=\"first-para\">Don&#8217;t ignore inflation. What costs $10,000 the first year you retire will cost $20,328 in your 25th year of retirement, assuming a modest 3 percent inflation rate.</p>\n</li>\n<li>\n<p class=\"first-para\">Establish realistic investment return expectations (such as no more than 6 to 8 percent) during your retirement years. Don&#8217;t be lured into high-octane stocks that may fizzle.</p>\n</li>\n<li>\n<p class=\"first-para\">Plan to withdraw no more than 6 to 7 percent of your retirement account each year to reduce the potential of running out of money.</p>\n</li>\n<li>\n<p class=\"first-para\">Consider selling your home and investing the proceeds, thus converting your home from an income consumer into an income generator. (You can rent a smaller place.)</p>\n</li>\n<li>\n<p class=\"first-para\">Get professional advice, because you can&#8217;t afford to make big mistakes at this stage of your life.</p>\n</li>\n</ul>\n"}],"videoInfo":{"videoId":null,"name":null,"accountId":null,"playerId":null,"thumbnailUrl":null,"description":null,"uploadDate":null}},"sponsorship":{"sponsorshipPage":false,"backgroundImage":{"src":null,"width":0,"height":0},"brandingLine":"","brandingLink":"","brandingLogo":{"src":null,"width":0,"height":0},"sponsorAd":"","sponsorEbookTitle":"","sponsorEbookLink":"","sponsorEbookImage":{"src":null,"width":0,"height":0}},"primaryLearningPath":"Explore","lifeExpectancy":"Five years","lifeExpectancySetFrom":"2021-07-06T00:00:00+00:00","dummiesForKids":"no","sponsoredContent":"no","adInfo":"","adPairKey":[]},"status":"publish","visibility":"public","articleId":208743},{"headers":{"creationTime":"2021-10-01T15:15:15+00:00","modifiedTime":"2021-10-01T15:15:15+00:00","timestamp":"2022-09-14T18:18:39+00:00"},"data":{"breadcrumbs":[{"name":"Business, Careers, & Money","_links":{"self":"https://dummies-api.dummies.com/v2/categories/34224"},"slug":"business-careers-money","categoryId":34224},{"name":"Personal Finance","_links":{"self":"https://dummies-api.dummies.com/v2/categories/34273"},"slug":"personal-finance","categoryId":34273},{"name":"Retirement","_links":{"self":"https://dummies-api.dummies.com/v2/categories/34308"},"slug":"retirement","categoryId":34308}],"title":"401(k)s and IRAs For Dummies Cheat Sheet","strippedTitle":"401(k)s and iras for dummies cheat sheet","slug":"401ks-and-iras-for-dummies-cheat-sheet","canonicalUrl":"","seo":{"metaDescription":"Both 401(k)s and IRAs have valuable tax benefits. Learn how to manage your accounts and maximize your returns.","noIndex":0,"noFollow":0},"content":"When you’re ready to start setting aside (or withdrawing) money for your retirement — whenever that might be — take a look at the valuable benefits of each of these types of retirement plans. Consider investment recommendations including bundling, pre-tax contributions, and how life circumstances may change your opportunities.","description":"When you’re ready to start setting aside (or withdrawing) money for your retirement — whenever that might be — take a look at the valuable benefits of each of these types of retirement plans. Consider investment recommendations including bundling, pre-tax contributions, and how life circumstances may change your opportunities.","blurb":"","authors":[{"authorId":10237,"name":"Ted Benna","slug":"ted-benna","description":" <p><b>Ted Benna</b> is commonly referred to as the &#8220;father of 401(k)&#8221; because he created and gained IRS approval of the first 401(k) savings plan.</p> <p><b>Brenda Watson Newmann</b> began her career as an Associated Press foreign correspondent and later moved to Silicon Valley as Managing Editor at <i>401k Forum/mPower</i>. ","hasArticle":false,"_links":{"self":"https://dummies-api.dummies.com/v2/authors/10237"}}],"primaryCategoryTaxonomy":{"categoryId":34308,"title":"Retirement","slug":"retirement","_links":{"self":"https://dummies-api.dummies.com/v2/categories/34308"}},"secondaryCategoryTaxonomy":{"categoryId":0,"title":null,"slug":null,"_links":null},"tertiaryCategoryTaxonomy":{"categoryId":0,"title":null,"slug":null,"_links":null},"trendingArticles":[{"articleId":192609,"title":"How to Pray the Rosary: A Comprehensive Guide","slug":"how-to-pray-the-rosary","categoryList":["body-mind-spirit","religion-spirituality","christianity","catholicism"],"_links":{"self":"/articles/192609"}},{"articleId":208741,"title":"Kabbalah For Dummies Cheat Sheet","slug":"kabbalah-for-dummies-cheat-sheet","categoryList":["body-mind-spirit","religion-spirituality","kabbalah"],"_links":{"self":"/articles/208741"}},{"articleId":230957,"title":"Nikon D3400 For Dummies Cheat Sheet","slug":"nikon-d3400-dummies-cheat-sheet","categoryList":["home-auto-hobbies","photography"],"_links":{"self":"/articles/230957"}},{"articleId":235851,"title":"Praying the Rosary and Meditating on the Mysteries","slug":"praying-rosary-meditating-mysteries","categoryList":["body-mind-spirit","religion-spirituality","christianity","catholicism"],"_links":{"self":"/articles/235851"}},{"articleId":284787,"title":"What Your Society Says About You","slug":"what-your-society-says-about-you","categoryList":["academics-the-arts","humanities"],"_links":{"self":"/articles/284787"}}],"inThisArticle":[],"relatedArticles":{"fromBook":[],"fromCategory":[{"articleId":268853,"title":"How to Manage Your Pension","slug":"how-to-manage-your-pension","categoryList":["business-careers-money","personal-finance","retirement"],"_links":{"self":"https://dummies-api.dummies.com/v2/articles/268853"}},{"articleId":268848,"title":"How to Take Money Out of Your IRA","slug":"how-to-take-money-out-of-your-ira","categoryList":["business-careers-money","personal-finance","retirement"],"_links":{"self":"https://dummies-api.dummies.com/v2/articles/268848"}},{"articleId":268843,"title":"How to Manage Your IRA Contributions","slug":"how-to-manage-your-ira-contributions","categoryList":["business-careers-money","personal-finance","retirement"],"_links":{"self":"https://dummies-api.dummies.com/v2/articles/268843"}},{"articleId":268838,"title":"How to Get Online with Your IRA Provider","slug":"how-to-get-online-with-your-ira-provider","categoryList":["business-careers-money","personal-finance","retirement"],"_links":{"self":"https://dummies-api.dummies.com/v2/articles/268838"}},{"articleId":268829,"title":"How to Get Online Access to Your 401(k)","slug":"how-to-get-online-access-to-your-401k","categoryList":["business-careers-money","personal-finance","retirement"],"_links":{"self":"https://dummies-api.dummies.com/v2/articles/268829"}}]},"hasRelatedBookFromSearch":false,"relatedBook":{"bookId":288152,"slug":"401ks-iras-for-dummies","isbn":"9781119817246","categoryList":["business-careers-money","personal-finance","retirement"],"amazon":{"default":"https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/1119817242/ref=as_li_tl?ie=UTF8&tag=wiley01-20","ca":"https://www.amazon.ca/gp/product/1119817242/ref=as_li_tl?ie=UTF8&tag=wiley01-20","indigo_ca":"http://www.tkqlhce.com/click-9208661-13710633?url=https://www.chapters.indigo.ca/en-ca/books/product/1119817242-item.html&cjsku=978111945484","gb":"https://www.amazon.co.uk/gp/product/1119817242/ref=as_li_tl?ie=UTF8&tag=wiley01-20","de":"https://www.amazon.de/gp/product/1119817242/ref=as_li_tl?ie=UTF8&tag=wiley01-20"},"image":{"src":"https://www.dummies.com/wp-content/uploads/401ks-and-iras-for-dummies-cover-9781119817246-203x255.jpg","width":203,"height":255},"title":"401(k)s & IRAs For Dummies","testBankPinActivationLink":"","bookOutOfPrint":true,"authorsInfo":"<p><p><b><b data-author-id=\"10237\">Ted Benna</b></b> is commonly referred to as the &#8220;father of 401(k)&#8221; because he created and gained IRS approval of the first 401(k) savings plan.</p> <p><b>Brenda Watson Newmann</b> began her career as an Associated Press foreign correspondent and later moved to Silicon Valley as Managing Editor at <i>401k Forum/mPower</i>. <p><b>Ted Benna</b> is commonly referred to as the &#8220;father of 401(k)&#8221; because he created and gained IRS approval of the first 401(k) savings plan.</p> <p><b><b data-author-id=\"10238\">Brenda Watson Newmann</b></b> began her career as an Associated Press foreign correspondent and later moved to Silicon Valley as Managing Editor at <i>401k Forum/mPower</i>.</p>","authors":[{"authorId":10237,"name":"Ted Benna","slug":"ted-benna","description":" <p><b>Ted Benna</b> is commonly referred to as the &#8220;father of 401(k)&#8221; because he created and gained IRS approval of the first 401(k) savings plan.</p> <p><b>Brenda Watson Newmann</b> began her career as an Associated Press foreign correspondent and later moved to Silicon Valley as Managing Editor at <i>401k Forum/mPower</i>. ","hasArticle":false,"_links":{"self":"https://dummies-api.dummies.com/v2/authors/10237"}},{"authorId":10238,"name":"Brenda Watson Newmann","slug":"brenda-watson-newmann","description":" <p><b>Ted Benna</b> is commonly referred to as the &#8220;father of 401(k)&#8221; because he created and gained IRS approval of the first 401(k) savings plan.</p> <p><b>Brenda Watson Newmann</b> began her career as an Associated Press foreign correspondent and later moved to Silicon Valley as Managing Editor at <i>401k Forum/mPower</i>. ","hasArticle":false,"_links":{"self":"https://dummies-api.dummies.com/v2/authors/10238"}}],"_links":{"self":"https://dummies-api.dummies.com/v2/books/"}},"collections":[],"articleAds":{"footerAd":"<div class=\"du-ad-region row\" id=\"article_page_adhesion_ad\"><div class=\"du-ad-unit col-md-12\" data-slot-id=\"article_page_adhesion_ad\" data-refreshed=\"false\" \r\n data-target = \"[{&quot;key&quot;:&quot;cat&quot;,&quot;values&quot;:[&quot;business-careers-money&quot;,&quot;personal-finance&quot;,&quot;retirement&quot;]},{&quot;key&quot;:&quot;isbn&quot;,&quot;values&quot;:[&quot;9781119817246&quot;]}]\" id=\"du-slot-63221affd511a\"></div></div>","rightAd":"<div class=\"du-ad-region row\" id=\"article_page_right_ad\"><div class=\"du-ad-unit col-md-12\" data-slot-id=\"article_page_right_ad\" data-refreshed=\"false\" \r\n data-target = \"[{&quot;key&quot;:&quot;cat&quot;,&quot;values&quot;:[&quot;business-careers-money&quot;,&quot;personal-finance&quot;,&quot;retirement&quot;]},{&quot;key&quot;:&quot;isbn&quot;,&quot;values&quot;:[&quot;9781119817246&quot;]}]\" id=\"du-slot-63221affd5b22\"></div></div>"},"articleType":{"articleType":"Cheat Sheet","articleList":[{"articleId":0,"title":"","slug":null,"categoryList":[],"_links":{"self":"https://dummies-api.dummies.com/v2/articles/"}}],"content":[{"title":"Planning changes for your retirement years","thumb":null,"image":null,"content":"<p>Reducing your expenses during your retirement years is an important way to reduce financial pressure. Think about ways your life can change and make plans for a smooth transition by considering these points:</p>\n<ul>\n<li><strong>Where to live:</strong> I encourage workers approaching retirement to consider how and where they will live after they retire. Start thinking about where you’ll live a few years before you retire because this can have a significant impact on your future financial needs.My wife and I went through this process in our late 50s. We both grew up in rural south-central Pennsylvania, but we spent the first 37 years of our married lives in the Philadelphia area. We lived in suburban Bucks County for 32 of those years. None of our three married children had settled in that area. We no longer needed our large house, which was highly taxed and was going to get much worse with $100 million of new schools, so we began considering alternatives.\n<p>Our son Steve and his wife Laura were in Potter County in the north-central part of the state without any family within hundreds of miles of them. We decided to move into that area, eventually buying a nice stone ranch home on beautiful Pine Creek. Steve and his wife Laura blessed us with two lovely granddaughters who spent a lot of time with us during their growing-up years. Relocating to a smaller house in a lower cost area enabled us to reduce our expenses by close to 50 percent.</li>\n<li><strong>What to do:</strong> Planning how to spend your time is one of the many things to consider. Not having to work every day earning a paycheck sounds great, but having little or nothing to do can get boring pretty fast, especially when you may live for another 20 to 30 years. Planning some productive activities before retiring can help make this transition easier. I don’t recommend going cold turkey from full-time employment one day to full-time retirement the next day.</li>\n<li><strong>How to get around:</strong> I have done other planning to accomplish getting around efficiently. For example, I buy upscale used cars for a fraction of their original price instead of new ones. I bought my share of new cars when I did a lot of business traveling and image was a more important issue, but I no longer need to do that.</li>\n</ul>\n"},{"title":"Adding advice on your retirement investments with mPower","thumb":null,"image":null,"content":"<p>The first effort to provide actual investment advice to 401(k) participants was an online version offered by mPower. Rather than just educating participants about investments, mPower offered them investment recommendations. I served on their board both as a member and as a consultant.</p>\n<p>One of the main challenges was getting the major 401(k) service providers to integrate investment advice into their services. The head of one of the major service providers told us there wasn’t any way they wanted an independent firm telling participants they serviced how to invest because this could adversely impact the fees they received. But things changed as participant interest in advice grew and when the service providers realized this was a way to make more rather than less in fees. They accomplished this by adding an additional layer of fees — usually in the 0.5 to 1.0 percent range.</p>\n<p>Around this time, I was speaking at a meeting hosted by one of the largest service providers. The audience was a group of financial advisors. A representative of the service provider explained to the advisors how they could receive an additional 0.25 percent in fees by adding investment advice. This is when 401(k) fees for smaller plans pushed into the 2 to 3 percent range.</p>\n<p>The same thing has occurred with IRAs offered by financial advisors who are generally called <em>wealth managers</em> today. Their typical offering is called a managed account. These accounts are generally a prepackaged mix of mutual funds with total fees in the 1.5 to 2.0 percent range. They include a fee on top of the normal mutual fund fees, often called a wrap fee.</p>\n<p>&nbsp;</p>\n"},{"title":"Gaining from Ted Benna Guides","thumb":null,"image":null,"content":"<p>A small employer recently used a guide I have prepared to shift from a 401(k) to an IRA-based plan. The employer eliminated more than $1,500 in annual fees, and annual fees for participants were reduced from 2.75 percent to 0.15 percent. The new plan is also much easier for the employer to administer, and the participants have much broader investment options.</p>\n<p>There are four different guides that contain detailed information about how to set up an IRA-based plan:</p>\n<ul>\n<li><strong>For payroll-deduction IRAs:</strong> The first two are for a small business wanting to set up a payroll-deduction IRA either with or without an employer contribution.\n<ul>\n<li>The guide for the payroll-deduction IRA with an employer contribution explains two different ways for providing an employer matching contribution.</li>\n</ul>\n</li>\n<li><strong>For SEP IRAs: </strong>The third guide explains how to set up a SEP IRA to get the biggest tax advantage. A SEP IRA is of greatest value to solo entrepreneurs and family businesses. A solo entrepreneur recently used this guide to transition from a Solo 401(k) to eliminate a $99 annual fee and to save $2,450 in additional taxes.</li>\n<li><strong>For SIMPLE IRAs:</strong> The fourth guide explains in detail how to set up a SIMPLE IRA and to package it effectively for your employees. SIMPLE stands for Savings Incentive Match Plan for Employees and is a great starter plan for a small business but it is a bit more complicated than the name implies. It requires contributions from employees and employer.</li>\n</ul>\n<p>Learn more about the guides at <a href=\"mailto:[email protected]\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener\">[email protected]</a>.</p>\n<p>&nbsp;</p>\n"},{"title":"Benefitting from bundling for 401(k)s","thumb":null,"image":null,"content":"<p>Bundling wasn’t an option in the early days of 401(k)s. Administration of a typical 401(k) included several different organizations to handle the maintenance of participant accounts and all the other services required to administer the plan. Investments were usually limited to two or three options — an equity mutual fund, a Guaranteed Income Fund (GIC) issued by an insurance company, and employer stock. Participant accounts were updated monthly, quarterly, semi-annually, or only once a year. Participants received paper statements four to six weeks after the accounts were updated.</p>\n<p>Participants had to split their investments between these funds in 25 percent multiples: 100/0, 75/25, 50/50, 25/75 or 0/100. Requests to change investments had to be submitted in writing to the HR department and then submitted to the record keeper. Investment changes occurred only on the valuation dates when participant accounts were updated. This was a slow, cumbersome, error-prone process; however, fees were unbundled. Employers typically paid all recordkeeping and administrative fees and participants paid only the investment fees</p>\n<p>By the mid-1980s, the major mutual fund companies (Fidelity, Vanguard, T. Rowe Price) and some insurance companies (MassMutual, New York Life, Principal Financial) realized 401(k) plans were generating a lot of money to be invested. They began to offer bundled services. A company with a 401(k) plan could select one of these entities to handle all functions — record keeping, investments, and all other administrative procedures. Services weren’t the only things that were bundled. Fees were also bundled and all paid by participants.</p>\n<p>Plans began to expand investment options, update participant accounts daily, and permit investment changes 24/7/365. Participants were also able to access their accounts anytime first via voice response and later via the internet.</p>\n<p>&nbsp;</p>\n<p>&nbsp;</p>\n<p>&nbsp;</p>\n"}],"videoInfo":{"videoId":null,"name":null,"accountId":null,"playerId":null,"thumbnailUrl":null,"description":null,"uploadDate":null}},"sponsorship":{"sponsorshipPage":false,"backgroundImage":{"src":null,"width":0,"height":0},"brandingLine":"","brandingLink":"","brandingLogo":{"src":null,"width":0,"height":0},"sponsorAd":"","sponsorEbookTitle":"","sponsorEbookLink":"","sponsorEbookImage":{"src":null,"width":0,"height":0}},"primaryLearningPath":"Advance","lifeExpectancy":"Two years","lifeExpectancySetFrom":"2021-10-01T00:00:00+00:00","dummiesForKids":"no","sponsoredContent":"no","adInfo":"","adPairKey":[]},"status":"publish","visibility":"public","articleId":288529},{"headers":{"creationTime":"2020-03-04T19:20:39+00:00","modifiedTime":"2020-03-04T19:20:39+00:00","timestamp":"2022-09-14T18:17:34+00:00"},"data":{"breadcrumbs":[{"name":"Business, Careers, & Money","_links":{"self":"https://dummies-api.dummies.com/v2/categories/34224"},"slug":"business-careers-money","categoryId":34224},{"name":"Personal Finance","_links":{"self":"https://dummies-api.dummies.com/v2/categories/34273"},"slug":"personal-finance","categoryId":34273},{"name":"Retirement","_links":{"self":"https://dummies-api.dummies.com/v2/categories/34308"},"slug":"retirement","categoryId":34308}],"title":"How to Manage Your Pension","strippedTitle":"how to manage your pension","slug":"how-to-manage-your-pension","canonicalUrl":"","seo":{"metaDescription":"Learn how to manage your pension—how to use online tools to estimate it, how to calculate the value of a lump sum payment, and how to roll it over.","noIndex":0,"noFollow":0},"content":"Keeping track of your pension, which is important for <a href=\"https://www.dummies.com/personal-finance/investing/retirement/retirement-planning-for-dummies-cheat-sheet/\">planning your retirement</a>, isn’t as easy as logging onto your online brokerage. Most companies are eager to get out of the pension business, so they farm the entire thing out to firms that specialize in pensions, such as Willis Towers Watson.\r\n\r\nIf you need to call for pension help, you'll probably be talking to people who work for the firm your employer hired to handle the pension plan. However, the site operated by the pension firm will usually look like it’s run by your employer.\r\n<h2 id=\"tab1\" >How to use online tools</h2>\r\nGetting logged into your company’s pension plan usually takes a bit of a work. You might need to call your employer’s human resources department. Then, if your employer has outsourced their pension plan management, you'll probably be handed off to the company running the pension plan.\r\n\r\nMost pension systems will allow you to look at the following information:\r\n<ul>\r\n \t<li><strong>Pension estimate:</strong> By entering your dates of employment, age, and beneficiary information, the site will tell you the payment you can expect when you retire, as shown in the following figure. As you can see in this example, the single-life annuity results in the largest monthly payout of $641.39. When you add a 50 percent survivor annuity, you’re looking at a monthly payment of $603.54. The survivor annuity payment is smaller than the single-life payment because the payments are likely to last for a longer period of time. Why? When the pensioner who worked at the company dies, a payout continues to the surviving spouse, who gets only half the payment, just $301.77.</li>\r\n</ul>\r\n[caption id=\"attachment_268857\" align=\"alignnone\" width=\"556\"]<img class=\"size-full wp-image-268857\" src=\"https://www.dummies.com/wp-content/uploads/retirement-pension-estimate.jpg\" alt=\"pension estimate\" width=\"556\" height=\"557\" /> Your pension site calculates your expected monthly payment given various scenarios.[/caption]\r\n<ul>\r\n \t<li><strong>Lump sum calculator:</strong> The pension site should also show your lump sum payment if taken now versus later. This information will help you decide which choice to make.</li>\r\n \t<li><strong>Scenario analysis:</strong> Pensions are complicated, with many variables affecting your payout amount. To help you understand the complexities, most pension sites offer scenario analyzers. You enter different retirement ages and whether or not your spouse will get benefits. The scenario analysis calculator then shows how these different choices affect your payout.</li>\r\n</ul>\r\n<p class=\"article-tips remember\">You don’t have to be retired to take money out of a pension. If you leave a company, you can activate monthly payments or take a lump sum. However, your payments will be reduced if you start taking them before reaching full retirement age. Also know that if you take a lump sum payout and don’t roll it over into another retirement account, you might trigger a nasty tax surprise.</p>\r\n\r\n<h2 id=\"tab2\" >How to calculate the value of a lump sum payment</h2>\r\nOne of the trickier decisions with pensions is whether you should take monthly payments or the lump sum. The pension's website can help you make this decision.\r\n<p class=\"article-tips tip\">Although your decision is final, a workaround exists. You can create your own pension, in a way, by using your lump sum payout to buy an annuity.</p>\r\nBy using both your pension provider’s site and an annuity pricing site, you can easily put some numbers around this complex decision. Here’s how:\r\n\r\n<strong> 1. Use the pension's online tool to get your lump sum payout.</strong>\r\n<p style=\"padding-left: 40px;\">Let’s say a 48-year-old worker left a company and wants to take her pension with her. As shown in the figure, her lump sum payout is $70,897.10. The monthly payout amount is $338.46 for a single-life annuity and $337.62 for a ten-year certain and continuous annuity.</p>\r\n\r\n\r\n[caption id=\"attachment_268856\" align=\"alignnone\" width=\"556\"]<img class=\"size-full wp-image-268856\" src=\"https://www.dummies.com/wp-content/uploads/retirement-lump-sum.jpg\" alt=\"retirement lump sum\" width=\"556\" height=\"555\" /> Our retiree can get $338.46 a month in a single-life payout or $70,897.10 in a lump sum.[/caption]\r\n\r\n<strong> 2. Go to an annuity pricing site, such as </strong><a href=\"https://www.immediateannuities.com/\">www.immediateannuities.com</a><strong> and do the following:</strong>\r\n<p style=\"padding-left: 40px;\"><em>a. Enter the lump sum information.</em></p>\r\n<p style=\"padding-left: 40px;\"><em>b. Enter your pension details and select the immediate payment option.</em> For the amount to invest, enter the lump sum payout from your pension site. I entered $70,897.10.</p>\r\n<strong> 3. Compare the monthly payouts.</strong>\r\n<p style=\"padding-left: 40px;\">As you can see in the following figure, the monthly payout from the pension plan is higher than what our retiree can buy in the open annuity market. Using the lump sum amount, the payout from the privately bought annuity is $280 for a single life, which is 17 percent less than the pension payout. Similarly, the pension payout with the ten-year certain option is $675 a month. But with the annuity provider, it’s 6 percent less, or $637 a month.</p>\r\n\r\n\r\n[caption id=\"attachment_268855\" align=\"alignnone\" width=\"556\"]<img class=\"size-full wp-image-268855\" src=\"https://www.dummies.com/wp-content/uploads/retirement-annuity-calculator.jpg\" alt=\"annuity calculator\" width=\"556\" height=\"436\" /> Schwab’s annuity calculator helps you measure your lump sum payouts.[/caption]\r\n\r\n<strong> 4. Get another estimate.</strong>\r\n<p style=\"padding-left: 40px;\">You wouldn't get only one medical opinion for a serious health condition, would you? The same is true for deciding what to do with a pension. Many online brokerages and mutual fund companies, such as Vanguard and Fidelity, tell you what size payment you’d get in exchange for a lump sum. For information on annuities, go to <a href=\"https://investor.vanguard.com/annuity/checkup\">Vanguard's site</a>, <a href=\"http://www.fidelity.com/annuities/overview\">Fidelity's site</a>, and <a href=\"http://www.schwab.com/public/schwab/investing/accounts_products/investment/annuities/income_annuity/fixed_income_annuity_calculator\">Schwab’s annuity site</a> (see the following figure).</p>\r\n\r\n\r\n[caption id=\"attachment_268854\" align=\"alignnone\" width=\"556\"]<img class=\"size-full wp-image-268854\" src=\"https://www.dummies.com/wp-content/uploads/retirement-annuity-estimator.jpg\" alt=\"annuity estimator\" width=\"556\" height=\"423\" /> Charles Schwab’s Income Annuity Estimator helps you determine the income stream from a lump sum pension.[/caption]\r\n<p class=\"article-tips tip\">It’s typical for the payouts from a pension plan to be higher than what you can buy on your own from an annuity. An annuity has fees whereas an employer-sponsored pension doesn't.</p>\r\nHowever, don’t make your decision solely on the size of the lump sum. If you’re young, you could easily invest the lump sum, and then, years later when you’re looking to retire, buy an annuity with the now-larger amount of money.\r\n<h2 id=\"tab3\" >Rolling over a pension</h2>\r\nNever assume you’re trapped in a pension. And that’s a good thing because many workers tend to not stay at the same job for more than five years. When you leave a job, you can take the pension with you by rolling it over.\r\n<p class=\"article-tips warning\">The rules around rolling over a pension are strict. Even a small mistake can make the lump sum you take from your pension a taxable event. You must rollover the pension into a qualified retirement plan, which for most people means a rollover IRA.</p>\r\nDepending on how long you worked at the company, a rollover is likely a good option. You might consider rolling over your pension if you\r\n<ul>\r\n \t<li><strong>Know the pension won’t grow:</strong> Check the pension's documentation. Many pensions provide only a modest cost-of-living annual adjustment, which is just the inflation rate. If you put the money into a diversified portfolio of stocks and bonds, your portfolio will likely grow much faster than inflation.</li>\r\n \t<li><strong>Don’t expect to retire in many years: </strong>The longer the amount of time you have to put your money to work, the better. If you don’t plan to retire in ten or more years, you still have time to put your portfolio into areas that are likely to grow faster.</li>\r\n \t<li><strong>Have other forms of guaranteed income:</strong> If you have other options for a steady cash flow, it makes sense to try to get a better return from your pension assets. If you don’t have another form of guaranteed income, you can buy one, such as an annuity, by using other savings.</li>\r\n</ul>\r\nHow do you conduct a rollover from your pension to a qualified plan? The steps are straightforward:\r\n\r\n<strong> 1. Set up a rollover IRA.</strong>\r\n<p style=\"padding-left: 40px;\">All the major online brokerages and mutual fund companies can help you with this task.</p>\r\n<strong> 2. Initiate your distribution with your pension provider.</strong>\r\n<p style=\"padding-left: 40px;\">Most pension providers’ sites allow you to begin the distribution process. You’ll need to take the lump sum distribution method. The pension provider will mail you paperwork to fill out.</p>\r\n<strong> 3. Fill out the paperwork from the pension provider.</strong>\r\n<p style=\"padding-left: 40px;\">Your spouse will need to sign a benefit waiver for you to get the lump sum.</p>\r\n<strong> 4. Make sure the check is made out to the company you’re rolling into.</strong>\r\n<p style=\"padding-left: 40px;\">This step is important. The pension lump sum amount must be made out to the financial firm where you have your rollover IRA. The check should not be made out to you.</p>\r\n<p class=\"article-tips warning\">Depositing the lump sum and then immediately writing a check to the rollover IRA provider will not work. The Internal Revenue Service will think you took the money and want to tax it.</p>","description":"Keeping track of your pension, which is important for <a href=\"https://www.dummies.com/personal-finance/investing/retirement/retirement-planning-for-dummies-cheat-sheet/\">planning your retirement</a>, isn’t as easy as logging onto your online brokerage. Most companies are eager to get out of the pension business, so they farm the entire thing out to firms that specialize in pensions, such as Willis Towers Watson.\r\n\r\nIf you need to call for pension help, you'll probably be talking to people who work for the firm your employer hired to handle the pension plan. However, the site operated by the pension firm will usually look like it’s run by your employer.\r\n<h2 id=\"tab1\" >How to use online tools</h2>\r\nGetting logged into your company’s pension plan usually takes a bit of a work. You might need to call your employer’s human resources department. Then, if your employer has outsourced their pension plan management, you'll probably be handed off to the company running the pension plan.\r\n\r\nMost pension systems will allow you to look at the following information:\r\n<ul>\r\n \t<li><strong>Pension estimate:</strong> By entering your dates of employment, age, and beneficiary information, the site will tell you the payment you can expect when you retire, as shown in the following figure. As you can see in this example, the single-life annuity results in the largest monthly payout of $641.39. When you add a 50 percent survivor annuity, you’re looking at a monthly payment of $603.54. The survivor annuity payment is smaller than the single-life payment because the payments are likely to last for a longer period of time. Why? When the pensioner who worked at the company dies, a payout continues to the surviving spouse, who gets only half the payment, just $301.77.</li>\r\n</ul>\r\n[caption id=\"attachment_268857\" align=\"alignnone\" width=\"556\"]<img class=\"size-full wp-image-268857\" src=\"https://www.dummies.com/wp-content/uploads/retirement-pension-estimate.jpg\" alt=\"pension estimate\" width=\"556\" height=\"557\" /> Your pension site calculates your expected monthly payment given various scenarios.[/caption]\r\n<ul>\r\n \t<li><strong>Lump sum calculator:</strong> The pension site should also show your lump sum payment if taken now versus later. This information will help you decide which choice to make.</li>\r\n \t<li><strong>Scenario analysis:</strong> Pensions are complicated, with many variables affecting your payout amount. To help you understand the complexities, most pension sites offer scenario analyzers. You enter different retirement ages and whether or not your spouse will get benefits. The scenario analysis calculator then shows how these different choices affect your payout.</li>\r\n</ul>\r\n<p class=\"article-tips remember\">You don’t have to be retired to take money out of a pension. If you leave a company, you can activate monthly payments or take a lump sum. However, your payments will be reduced if you start taking them before reaching full retirement age. Also know that if you take a lump sum payout and don’t roll it over into another retirement account, you might trigger a nasty tax surprise.</p>\r\n\r\n<h2 id=\"tab2\" >How to calculate the value of a lump sum payment</h2>\r\nOne of the trickier decisions with pensions is whether you should take monthly payments or the lump sum. The pension's website can help you make this decision.\r\n<p class=\"article-tips tip\">Although your decision is final, a workaround exists. You can create your own pension, in a way, by using your lump sum payout to buy an annuity.</p>\r\nBy using both your pension provider’s site and an annuity pricing site, you can easily put some numbers around this complex decision. Here’s how:\r\n\r\n<strong> 1. Use the pension's online tool to get your lump sum payout.</strong>\r\n<p style=\"padding-left: 40px;\">Let’s say a 48-year-old worker left a company and wants to take her pension with her. As shown in the figure, her lump sum payout is $70,897.10. The monthly payout amount is $338.46 for a single-life annuity and $337.62 for a ten-year certain and continuous annuity.</p>\r\n\r\n\r\n[caption id=\"attachment_268856\" align=\"alignnone\" width=\"556\"]<img class=\"size-full wp-image-268856\" src=\"https://www.dummies.com/wp-content/uploads/retirement-lump-sum.jpg\" alt=\"retirement lump sum\" width=\"556\" height=\"555\" /> Our retiree can get $338.46 a month in a single-life payout or $70,897.10 in a lump sum.[/caption]\r\n\r\n<strong> 2. Go to an annuity pricing site, such as </strong><a href=\"https://www.immediateannuities.com/\">www.immediateannuities.com</a><strong> and do the following:</strong>\r\n<p style=\"padding-left: 40px;\"><em>a. Enter the lump sum information.</em></p>\r\n<p style=\"padding-left: 40px;\"><em>b. Enter your pension details and select the immediate payment option.</em> For the amount to invest, enter the lump sum payout from your pension site. I entered $70,897.10.</p>\r\n<strong> 3. Compare the monthly payouts.</strong>\r\n<p style=\"padding-left: 40px;\">As you can see in the following figure, the monthly payout from the pension plan is higher than what our retiree can buy in the open annuity market. Using the lump sum amount, the payout from the privately bought annuity is $280 for a single life, which is 17 percent less than the pension payout. Similarly, the pension payout with the ten-year certain option is $675 a month. But with the annuity provider, it’s 6 percent less, or $637 a month.</p>\r\n\r\n\r\n[caption id=\"attachment_268855\" align=\"alignnone\" width=\"556\"]<img class=\"size-full wp-image-268855\" src=\"https://www.dummies.com/wp-content/uploads/retirement-annuity-calculator.jpg\" alt=\"annuity calculator\" width=\"556\" height=\"436\" /> Schwab’s annuity calculator helps you measure your lump sum payouts.[/caption]\r\n\r\n<strong> 4. Get another estimate.</strong>\r\n<p style=\"padding-left: 40px;\">You wouldn't get only one medical opinion for a serious health condition, would you? The same is true for deciding what to do with a pension. Many online brokerages and mutual fund companies, such as Vanguard and Fidelity, tell you what size payment you’d get in exchange for a lump sum. For information on annuities, go to <a href=\"https://investor.vanguard.com/annuity/checkup\">Vanguard's site</a>, <a href=\"http://www.fidelity.com/annuities/overview\">Fidelity's site</a>, and <a href=\"http://www.schwab.com/public/schwab/investing/accounts_products/investment/annuities/income_annuity/fixed_income_annuity_calculator\">Schwab’s annuity site</a> (see the following figure).</p>\r\n\r\n\r\n[caption id=\"attachment_268854\" align=\"alignnone\" width=\"556\"]<img class=\"size-full wp-image-268854\" src=\"https://www.dummies.com/wp-content/uploads/retirement-annuity-estimator.jpg\" alt=\"annuity estimator\" width=\"556\" height=\"423\" /> Charles Schwab’s Income Annuity Estimator helps you determine the income stream from a lump sum pension.[/caption]\r\n<p class=\"article-tips tip\">It’s typical for the payouts from a pension plan to be higher than what you can buy on your own from an annuity. An annuity has fees whereas an employer-sponsored pension doesn't.</p>\r\nHowever, don’t make your decision solely on the size of the lump sum. If you’re young, you could easily invest the lump sum, and then, years later when you’re looking to retire, buy an annuity with the now-larger amount of money.\r\n<h2 id=\"tab3\" >Rolling over a pension</h2>\r\nNever assume you’re trapped in a pension. And that’s a good thing because many workers tend to not stay at the same job for more than five years. When you leave a job, you can take the pension with you by rolling it over.\r\n<p class=\"article-tips warning\">The rules around rolling over a pension are strict. Even a small mistake can make the lump sum you take from your pension a taxable event. You must rollover the pension into a qualified retirement plan, which for most people means a rollover IRA.</p>\r\nDepending on how long you worked at the company, a rollover is likely a good option. You might consider rolling over your pension if you\r\n<ul>\r\n \t<li><strong>Know the pension won’t grow:</strong> Check the pension's documentation. Many pensions provide only a modest cost-of-living annual adjustment, which is just the inflation rate. If you put the money into a diversified portfolio of stocks and bonds, your portfolio will likely grow much faster than inflation.</li>\r\n \t<li><strong>Don’t expect to retire in many years: </strong>The longer the amount of time you have to put your money to work, the better. If you don’t plan to retire in ten or more years, you still have time to put your portfolio into areas that are likely to grow faster.</li>\r\n \t<li><strong>Have other forms of guaranteed income:</strong> If you have other options for a steady cash flow, it makes sense to try to get a better return from your pension assets. If you don’t have another form of guaranteed income, you can buy one, such as an annuity, by using other savings.</li>\r\n</ul>\r\nHow do you conduct a rollover from your pension to a qualified plan? The steps are straightforward:\r\n\r\n<strong> 1. Set up a rollover IRA.</strong>\r\n<p style=\"padding-left: 40px;\">All the major online brokerages and mutual fund companies can help you with this task.</p>\r\n<strong> 2. Initiate your distribution with your pension provider.</strong>\r\n<p style=\"padding-left: 40px;\">Most pension providers’ sites allow you to begin the distribution process. You’ll need to take the lump sum distribution method. The pension provider will mail you paperwork to fill out.</p>\r\n<strong> 3. Fill out the paperwork from the pension provider.</strong>\r\n<p style=\"padding-left: 40px;\">Your spouse will need to sign a benefit waiver for you to get the lump sum.</p>\r\n<strong> 4. Make sure the check is made out to the company you’re rolling into.</strong>\r\n<p style=\"padding-left: 40px;\">This step is important. The pension lump sum amount must be made out to the financial firm where you have your rollover IRA. The check should not be made out to you.</p>\r\n<p class=\"article-tips warning\">Depositing the lump sum and then immediately writing a check to the rollover IRA provider will not work. The Internal Revenue Service will think you took the money and want to tax it.</p>","blurb":"","authors":[{"authorId":33279,"name":"Matthew Krantz","slug":"matthew-krantz","description":"<b>Matt Krantz</b> is a nationally known financial journalist who specializes in investing topics. He's personal finance and management editor at <i>Investor's Business Daily.</i> He's also worked in the financial industry and covered markets and investing for <i>USA TODAY.</i> His writing on financial topics has also appeared in <i>Money</i> magazine, <i> Kiplinger's</i>, and <i>Men's Health</i>. Krantz is the author of <i>Fundamental Analysis For Dummies</i> and co-author of <i>Investment Banking For Dummies.</i>","hasArticle":false,"_links":{"self":"https://dummies-api.dummies.com/v2/authors/33279"}}],"primaryCategoryTaxonomy":{"categoryId":34308,"title":"Retirement","slug":"retirement","_links":{"self":"https://dummies-api.dummies.com/v2/categories/34308"}},"secondaryCategoryTaxonomy":{"categoryId":0,"title":null,"slug":null,"_links":null},"tertiaryCategoryTaxonomy":{"categoryId":0,"title":null,"slug":null,"_links":null},"trendingArticles":[{"articleId":192609,"title":"How to Pray the Rosary: A Comprehensive Guide","slug":"how-to-pray-the-rosary","categoryList":["body-mind-spirit","religion-spirituality","christianity","catholicism"],"_links":{"self":"/articles/192609"}},{"articleId":208741,"title":"Kabbalah For Dummies Cheat 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pension","target":"#tab3"}],"relatedArticles":{"fromBook":[{"articleId":268848,"title":"How to Take Money Out of Your IRA","slug":"how-to-take-money-out-of-your-ira","categoryList":["business-careers-money","personal-finance","retirement"],"_links":{"self":"https://dummies-api.dummies.com/v2/articles/268848"}},{"articleId":268843,"title":"How to Manage Your IRA Contributions","slug":"how-to-manage-your-ira-contributions","categoryList":["business-careers-money","personal-finance","retirement"],"_links":{"self":"https://dummies-api.dummies.com/v2/articles/268843"}},{"articleId":268838,"title":"How to Get Online with Your IRA Provider","slug":"how-to-get-online-with-your-ira-provider","categoryList":["business-careers-money","personal-finance","retirement"],"_links":{"self":"https://dummies-api.dummies.com/v2/articles/268838"}},{"articleId":268829,"title":"How to Get Online Access to Your 401(k)","slug":"how-to-get-online-access-to-your-401k","categoryList":["business-careers-money","personal-finance","retirement"],"_links":{"self":"https://dummies-api.dummies.com/v2/articles/268829"}},{"articleId":268822,"title":"How to Manage Your IRA","slug":"how-to-manage-your-ira","categoryList":["business-careers-money","personal-finance","retirement"],"_links":{"self":"https://dummies-api.dummies.com/v2/articles/268822"}}],"fromCategory":[{"articleId":288529,"title":"401(k)s and IRAs For Dummies Cheat Sheet","slug":"401ks-and-iras-for-dummies-cheat-sheet","categoryList":["business-careers-money","personal-finance","retirement"],"_links":{"self":"https://dummies-api.dummies.com/v2/articles/288529"}},{"articleId":268848,"title":"How to Take Money Out of Your IRA","slug":"how-to-take-money-out-of-your-ira","categoryList":["business-careers-money","personal-finance","retirement"],"_links":{"self":"https://dummies-api.dummies.com/v2/articles/268848"}},{"articleId":268843,"title":"How to Manage Your IRA Contributions","slug":"how-to-manage-your-ira-contributions","categoryList":["business-careers-money","personal-finance","retirement"],"_links":{"self":"https://dummies-api.dummies.com/v2/articles/268843"}},{"articleId":268838,"title":"How to Get Online with Your IRA Provider","slug":"how-to-get-online-with-your-ira-provider","categoryList":["business-careers-money","personal-finance","retirement"],"_links":{"self":"https://dummies-api.dummies.com/v2/articles/268838"}},{"articleId":268829,"title":"How to Get Online Access to Your 401(k)","slug":"how-to-get-online-access-to-your-401k","categoryList":["business-careers-money","personal-finance","retirement"],"_links":{"self":"https://dummies-api.dummies.com/v2/articles/268829"}}]},"hasRelatedBookFromSearch":false,"relatedBook":{"bookId":281850,"slug":"retirement-planning-for-dummies","isbn":"9781119627579","categoryList":["business-careers-money","personal-finance","retirement"],"amazon":{"default":"https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/1119627575/ref=as_li_tl?ie=UTF8&tag=wiley01-20","ca":"https://www.amazon.ca/gp/product/1119627575/ref=as_li_tl?ie=UTF8&tag=wiley01-20","indigo_ca":"http://www.tkqlhce.com/click-9208661-13710633?url=https://www.chapters.indigo.ca/en-ca/books/product/1119627575-item.html&cjsku=978111945484","gb":"https://www.amazon.co.uk/gp/product/1119627575/ref=as_li_tl?ie=UTF8&tag=wiley01-20","de":"https://www.amazon.de/gp/product/1119627575/ref=as_li_tl?ie=UTF8&tag=wiley01-20"},"image":{"src":"https://www.dummies.com/wp-content/uploads/retirement-planning-for-dummies-cover-9781119627579-203x255.jpg","width":203,"height":255},"title":"Retirement Planning For Dummies","testBankPinActivationLink":"","bookOutOfPrint":true,"authorsInfo":"<p><b>Matt Krantz</b> is a nationally known financial journalist who specializes in investing topics. He's personal finance and management editor at <i>Investor's Business Daily.</i> He's also worked in the financial industry and covered markets and investing for <i>USA TODAY.</i> His writing on financial topics has also appeared in <i>Money</i> magazine, <i> Kiplinger's</i>, and <i>Men's Health</i>. Krantz is the author of <i>Fundamental Analysis For Dummies</i> and co-author of <i>Investment Banking For Dummies.</i></p>","authors":[{"authorId":33279,"name":"Matthew Krantz","slug":"matthew-krantz","description":"<b>Matt Krantz</b> is a nationally known financial journalist who specializes in investing topics. He's personal finance and management editor at <i>Investor's Business Daily.</i> He's also worked in the financial industry and covered markets and investing for <i>USA TODAY.</i> His writing on financial topics has also appeared in <i>Money</i> magazine, <i> Kiplinger's</i>, and <i>Men's Health</i>. Krantz is the author of <i>Fundamental Analysis For Dummies</i> and co-author of <i>Investment Banking For Dummies.</i>","hasArticle":false,"_links":{"self":"https://dummies-api.dummies.com/v2/authors/33279"}}],"_links":{"self":"https://dummies-api.dummies.com/v2/books/"}},"collections":[],"articleAds":{"footerAd":"<div class=\"du-ad-region row\" id=\"article_page_adhesion_ad\"><div class=\"du-ad-unit col-md-12\" data-slot-id=\"article_page_adhesion_ad\" data-refreshed=\"false\" \r\n data-target = \"[{&quot;key&quot;:&quot;cat&quot;,&quot;values&quot;:[&quot;business-careers-money&quot;,&quot;personal-finance&quot;,&quot;retirement&quot;]},{&quot;key&quot;:&quot;isbn&quot;,&quot;values&quot;:[&quot;9781119627579&quot;]}]\" id=\"du-slot-63221abec3868\"></div></div>","rightAd":"<div class=\"du-ad-region row\" id=\"article_page_right_ad\"><div class=\"du-ad-unit col-md-12\" data-slot-id=\"article_page_right_ad\" data-refreshed=\"false\" \r\n data-target = \"[{&quot;key&quot;:&quot;cat&quot;,&quot;values&quot;:[&quot;business-careers-money&quot;,&quot;personal-finance&quot;,&quot;retirement&quot;]},{&quot;key&quot;:&quot;isbn&quot;,&quot;values&quot;:[&quot;9781119627579&quot;]}]\" id=\"du-slot-63221abec40f2\"></div></div>"},"articleType":{"articleType":"Articles","articleList":null,"content":null,"videoInfo":{"videoId":null,"name":null,"accountId":null,"playerId":null,"thumbnailUrl":null,"description":null,"uploadDate":null}},"sponsorship":{"sponsorshipPage":false,"backgroundImage":{"src":null,"width":0,"height":0},"brandingLine":"","brandingLink":"","brandingLogo":{"src":null,"width":0,"height":0},"sponsorAd":"","sponsorEbookTitle":"","sponsorEbookLink":"","sponsorEbookImage":{"src":null,"width":0,"height":0}},"primaryLearningPath":"Explore","lifeExpectancy":null,"lifeExpectancySetFrom":null,"dummiesForKids":"no","sponsoredContent":"no","adInfo":"","adPairKey":[]},"status":"publish","visibility":"public","articleId":268853},{"headers":{"creationTime":"2020-03-04T18:59:42+00:00","modifiedTime":"2020-03-04T18:59:42+00:00","timestamp":"2022-09-14T18:17:34+00:00"},"data":{"breadcrumbs":[{"name":"Business, Careers, & Money","_links":{"self":"https://dummies-api.dummies.com/v2/categories/34224"},"slug":"business-careers-money","categoryId":34224},{"name":"Personal Finance","_links":{"self":"https://dummies-api.dummies.com/v2/categories/34273"},"slug":"personal-finance","categoryId":34273},{"name":"Retirement","_links":{"self":"https://dummies-api.dummies.com/v2/categories/34308"},"slug":"retirement","categoryId":34308}],"title":"How to Take Money Out of Your IRA","strippedTitle":"how to take money out of your ira","slug":"how-to-take-money-out-of-your-ira","canonicalUrl":"","seo":{"metaDescription":"Learn how to take money out of your IRA. Learn about 72(t) distributions, your required minimum distributions, and selecting a beneficiary.","noIndex":0,"noFollow":0},"content":"When you turn 70-1/2, you’re no longer allowed to <a href=\"https://www.dummies.com/personal-finance/investing/retirement/how-to-manage-your-ira-contributions/\">contribute to a traditional IRA</a>. You can contribute to a Roth IRA at any age as long as you have earned income below limits dictated by the IRS. Remember that <em>earned income</em> is money you make from reportable income-producing activities—in other words, a paying job.\r\n\r\nGearing up to take money out of your IRA requires a change in mindset. Fortunately, your IRA provider can be of help here, too.\r\n<h2 id=\"tab1\" >Getting money out early: 72(t) distributions</h2>\r\nTaking money out of a traditional IRA before you turn 59-1/2 is generally a no-no with retirement accounts because it triggers a bad tax day. You owe not only the taxes on the money you took out but also a 10 percent early withdrawal penalty—unless you know the 72(t) trick. This rule is named after an arcane section of the IRS code that says you can take money out without a 10 percent penalty if you do so in “substantially equal periodic payments.”\r\n<p class=\"article-tips tech\">You must take out the distributions, in equal amounts, for at least five years or until you turn 59-1/2. You can calculate how much money you must take out in three ways: the required minimum distribution method, the fixed amortization method, and the fixed annuitization method. As you can guess from their names, the calculations are complicated. If you’re interested in a <a href=\"http://www.irs.gov/retirement-plans/retirement-plans-faqs-regarding-substantially-equal-periodic-payments\">72(t) withdrawal</a>, your IRA provider can help.</p>\r\n<p class=\"article-tips tip\">You can take money out of an IRA before you turn 59-1/2 without paying the 10 percent penalty in a few other ways, without invoking the 72(t). A big exception for the 10 percent penalty is when you’re permanently or completely disabled. In that case, you can take money out of both a traditional IRA and a Roth IRA. Also, if you die, your beneficiary can take withdrawals.</p>\r\n\r\n<h2 id=\"tab2\" >Taking your required minimum distribution</h2>\r\nWhen you blow out a cake with 70 candles, know that in six months you’ll be in for a big change with your traditional IRA. That’s when Uncle Sam says it’s time for your <em>required minimum distribution (RMD).</em> It must be taken out before April 1 of the year after you turn 70-1/2.\r\n\r\nThe RMD is calculated using a complicated formula based on your life expectancy. You must take your RMD from all of your traditional IRAs. This requirement is another reason to have your retirement money in one place; you’ll deal with just one annual check.\r\n\r\nAs part of their service, most IRA providers will calculate your RMD. Vanguard shows the calculation in its <a href=\"https://personal.vanguard.com/us/insights/retirement/living/estimate-your-rmd-tool\">RMD calculator</a>, shown in the figure and available.\r\n\r\n[caption id=\"attachment_268849\" align=\"alignnone\" width=\"556\"]<img class=\"size-full wp-image-268849\" src=\"https://www.dummies.com/wp-content/uploads/retirement-rmd-calculated.jpg\" alt=\"Vanguard will calculate your RMD.\" width=\"556\" height=\"539\" /> Vanguard will calculate your RMD.[/caption]\r\n<p class=\"article-tips tip\">Don’t ignore the RMD. If you don’t withdraw the RMD and pay the tax, you’ll owe a 50 percent penalty tax on the money you should have withdrawn. Yes, half will be gone in taxes. Most IRA providers calculate your RMD for you and even withhold some of the tax due from what you’re paid. IRA providers will even deposit the money into your account electronically — almost like a paycheck.</p>\r\n\r\n<h2 id=\"tab3\" >Setting up a beneficiary</h2>\r\nYour retirement funds are there for you and your spouse, if you have one, or other beneficiary to enjoy later in life. Make sure that your IRA provider knows who to give the money to if you die before your beneficiary. Yes, you could do this in a will, but it’s a better idea to set up a beneficiary. Your beneficiary instructions will take precedence over a will.\r\n\r\nWhen you die, the IRA provider knows to shift the ownership of the IRA to your beneficiary. Listing beneficiaries on IRA accounts is so important that many IRA providers won’t let you fund an account until you choose a beneficiary.\r\n<p class=\"article-tips tip\">If you have a large or complicated estate or unusual wishes for where your money should go when you die, you might want to create a trust. A trust is a legal entity that can take ownership of assets and follow your instructions in distributing them. Consult with an estate-planning attorney or pick up <a href=\"https://www.dummies.com/store/product/Estate-Trust-Administration-For-Dummies-2nd-Edition.productCd-1119543878.html\"><em>Estate & Trust Administration For Dummies</em></a>, 2nd Edition, by Margaret Munro and Kathyrn Murphy (Wiley).</p>\r\n\r\n<h2 id=\"tab4\" >A word about inherited IRAs</h2>\r\nDon’t keep your IRA a secret from the beneficiary. After you die and your IRA passes to your beneficiary, new rules kick in. The beneficiary will need to contact the IRA provider and let them know you’re dead. Most IRA providers require a death certificate.\r\n\r\nThe rules surrounding inherited IRAs vary based on whether or not the IRA is inherited by a spouse. If spouses inherit an IRA, they have a choice on how to take it over:\r\n<ul>\r\n \t<li><strong>Make it their own:</strong> Spouses can choose to take over the IRA in their own name. This allows spouses to contribute or take distributions as if it were theirs in the first place.</li>\r\n \t<li><strong>Turn it into an inherited IRA:</strong> If you go this route, you’ll need to follow rules set out by the IRS, which have many options.</li>\r\n</ul>\r\nA beneficiary who isn’t a spouse has only one avenue: transferring the IRA into an inherited IRA. Again, your IRA provider will help with the details. If you’d like to read more about how inherited IRAs are handled, check out <a href=\"https://investor.vanguard.com/inherit/ira-rmd\">Vanguard's description</a>. Schwab shows all the <a href=\"http://www.schwab.com/public/schwab/investing/retirement_and_planning/understanding_iras/inherited_ira/withdrawal_rules\">inherited IRA rules</a>, too.","description":"When you turn 70-1/2, you’re no longer allowed to <a href=\"https://www.dummies.com/personal-finance/investing/retirement/how-to-manage-your-ira-contributions/\">contribute to a traditional IRA</a>. You can contribute to a Roth IRA at any age as long as you have earned income below limits dictated by the IRS. Remember that <em>earned income</em> is money you make from reportable income-producing activities—in other words, a paying job.\r\n\r\nGearing up to take money out of your IRA requires a change in mindset. Fortunately, your IRA provider can be of help here, too.\r\n<h2 id=\"tab1\" >Getting money out early: 72(t) distributions</h2>\r\nTaking money out of a traditional IRA before you turn 59-1/2 is generally a no-no with retirement accounts because it triggers a bad tax day. You owe not only the taxes on the money you took out but also a 10 percent early withdrawal penalty—unless you know the 72(t) trick. This rule is named after an arcane section of the IRS code that says you can take money out without a 10 percent penalty if you do so in “substantially equal periodic payments.”\r\n<p class=\"article-tips tech\">You must take out the distributions, in equal amounts, for at least five years or until you turn 59-1/2. You can calculate how much money you must take out in three ways: the required minimum distribution method, the fixed amortization method, and the fixed annuitization method. As you can guess from their names, the calculations are complicated. If you’re interested in a <a href=\"http://www.irs.gov/retirement-plans/retirement-plans-faqs-regarding-substantially-equal-periodic-payments\">72(t) withdrawal</a>, your IRA provider can help.</p>\r\n<p class=\"article-tips tip\">You can take money out of an IRA before you turn 59-1/2 without paying the 10 percent penalty in a few other ways, without invoking the 72(t). A big exception for the 10 percent penalty is when you’re permanently or completely disabled. In that case, you can take money out of both a traditional IRA and a Roth IRA. Also, if you die, your beneficiary can take withdrawals.</p>\r\n\r\n<h2 id=\"tab2\" >Taking your required minimum distribution</h2>\r\nWhen you blow out a cake with 70 candles, know that in six months you’ll be in for a big change with your traditional IRA. That’s when Uncle Sam says it’s time for your <em>required minimum distribution (RMD).</em> It must be taken out before April 1 of the year after you turn 70-1/2.\r\n\r\nThe RMD is calculated using a complicated formula based on your life expectancy. You must take your RMD from all of your traditional IRAs. This requirement is another reason to have your retirement money in one place; you’ll deal with just one annual check.\r\n\r\nAs part of their service, most IRA providers will calculate your RMD. Vanguard shows the calculation in its <a href=\"https://personal.vanguard.com/us/insights/retirement/living/estimate-your-rmd-tool\">RMD calculator</a>, shown in the figure and available.\r\n\r\n[caption id=\"attachment_268849\" align=\"alignnone\" width=\"556\"]<img class=\"size-full wp-image-268849\" src=\"https://www.dummies.com/wp-content/uploads/retirement-rmd-calculated.jpg\" alt=\"Vanguard will calculate your RMD.\" width=\"556\" height=\"539\" /> Vanguard will calculate your RMD.[/caption]\r\n<p class=\"article-tips tip\">Don’t ignore the RMD. If you don’t withdraw the RMD and pay the tax, you’ll owe a 50 percent penalty tax on the money you should have withdrawn. Yes, half will be gone in taxes. Most IRA providers calculate your RMD for you and even withhold some of the tax due from what you’re paid. IRA providers will even deposit the money into your account electronically — almost like a paycheck.</p>\r\n\r\n<h2 id=\"tab3\" >Setting up a beneficiary</h2>\r\nYour retirement funds are there for you and your spouse, if you have one, or other beneficiary to enjoy later in life. Make sure that your IRA provider knows who to give the money to if you die before your beneficiary. Yes, you could do this in a will, but it’s a better idea to set up a beneficiary. Your beneficiary instructions will take precedence over a will.\r\n\r\nWhen you die, the IRA provider knows to shift the ownership of the IRA to your beneficiary. Listing beneficiaries on IRA accounts is so important that many IRA providers won’t let you fund an account until you choose a beneficiary.\r\n<p class=\"article-tips tip\">If you have a large or complicated estate or unusual wishes for where your money should go when you die, you might want to create a trust. A trust is a legal entity that can take ownership of assets and follow your instructions in distributing them. Consult with an estate-planning attorney or pick up <a href=\"https://www.dummies.com/store/product/Estate-Trust-Administration-For-Dummies-2nd-Edition.productCd-1119543878.html\"><em>Estate & Trust Administration For Dummies</em></a>, 2nd Edition, by Margaret Munro and Kathyrn Murphy (Wiley).</p>\r\n\r\n<h2 id=\"tab4\" >A word about inherited IRAs</h2>\r\nDon’t keep your IRA a secret from the beneficiary. After you die and your IRA passes to your beneficiary, new rules kick in. The beneficiary will need to contact the IRA provider and let them know you’re dead. Most IRA providers require a death certificate.\r\n\r\nThe rules surrounding inherited IRAs vary based on whether or not the IRA is inherited by a spouse. If spouses inherit an IRA, they have a choice on how to take it over:\r\n<ul>\r\n \t<li><strong>Make it their own:</strong> Spouses can choose to take over the IRA in their own name. This allows spouses to contribute or take distributions as if it were theirs in the first place.</li>\r\n \t<li><strong>Turn it into an inherited IRA:</strong> If you go this route, you’ll need to follow rules set out by the IRS, which have many options.</li>\r\n</ul>\r\nA beneficiary who isn’t a spouse has only one avenue: transferring the IRA into an inherited IRA. Again, your IRA provider will help with the details. If you’d like to read more about how inherited IRAs are handled, check out <a href=\"https://investor.vanguard.com/inherit/ira-rmd\">Vanguard's description</a>. Schwab shows all the <a href=\"http://www.schwab.com/public/schwab/investing/retirement_and_planning/understanding_iras/inherited_ira/withdrawal_rules\">inherited IRA rules</a>, too.","blurb":"","authors":[{"authorId":33279,"name":"Matthew Krantz","slug":"matthew-krantz","description":"<b>Matt Krantz</b> is a nationally known financial journalist who specializes in investing topics. He's personal finance and management editor at <i>Investor's Business Daily.</i> He's also worked in the financial industry and covered markets and investing for <i>USA TODAY.</i> His writing on financial topics has also appeared in <i>Money</i> magazine, <i> Kiplinger's</i>, and <i>Men's Health</i>. Krantz is the author of <i>Fundamental Analysis For Dummies</i> and co-author of <i>Investment Banking For Dummies.</i>","hasArticle":false,"_links":{"self":"https://dummies-api.dummies.com/v2/authors/33279"}}],"primaryCategoryTaxonomy":{"categoryId":34308,"title":"Retirement","slug":"retirement","_links":{"self":"https://dummies-api.dummies.com/v2/categories/34308"}},"secondaryCategoryTaxonomy":{"categoryId":0,"title":null,"slug":null,"_links":null},"tertiaryCategoryTaxonomy":{"categoryId":0,"title":null,"slug":null,"_links":null},"trendingArticles":[{"articleId":192609,"title":"How to Pray the Rosary: A Comprehensive Guide","slug":"how-to-pray-the-rosary","categoryList":["body-mind-spirit","religion-spirituality","christianity","catholicism"],"_links":{"self":"/articles/192609"}},{"articleId":208741,"title":"Kabbalah For Dummies Cheat Sheet","slug":"kabbalah-for-dummies-cheat-sheet","categoryList":["body-mind-spirit","religion-spirituality","kabbalah"],"_links":{"self":"/articles/208741"}},{"articleId":230957,"title":"Nikon D3400 For Dummies Cheat Sheet","slug":"nikon-d3400-dummies-cheat-sheet","categoryList":["home-auto-hobbies","photography"],"_links":{"self":"/articles/230957"}},{"articleId":235851,"title":"Praying the Rosary and Meditating on the Mysteries","slug":"praying-rosary-meditating-mysteries","categoryList":["body-mind-spirit","religion-spirituality","christianity","catholicism"],"_links":{"self":"/articles/235851"}},{"articleId":284787,"title":"What Your Society Says About You","slug":"what-your-society-says-about-you","categoryList":["academics-the-arts","humanities"],"_links":{"self":"/articles/284787"}}],"inThisArticle":[{"label":"Getting money out early: 72(t) distributions","target":"#tab1"},{"label":"Taking your required minimum distribution","target":"#tab2"},{"label":"Setting up a beneficiary","target":"#tab3"},{"label":"A word about inherited IRAs","target":"#tab4"}],"relatedArticles":{"fromBook":[{"articleId":268853,"title":"How to Manage Your Pension","slug":"how-to-manage-your-pension","categoryList":["business-careers-money","personal-finance","retirement"],"_links":{"self":"https://dummies-api.dummies.com/v2/articles/268853"}},{"articleId":268843,"title":"How to Manage Your IRA Contributions","slug":"how-to-manage-your-ira-contributions","categoryList":["business-careers-money","personal-finance","retirement"],"_links":{"self":"https://dummies-api.dummies.com/v2/articles/268843"}},{"articleId":268838,"title":"How to Get Online with Your IRA Provider","slug":"how-to-get-online-with-your-ira-provider","categoryList":["business-careers-money","personal-finance","retirement"],"_links":{"self":"https://dummies-api.dummies.com/v2/articles/268838"}},{"articleId":268829,"title":"How to Get Online Access to Your 401(k)","slug":"how-to-get-online-access-to-your-401k","categoryList":["business-careers-money","personal-finance","retirement"],"_links":{"self":"https://dummies-api.dummies.com/v2/articles/268829"}},{"articleId":268822,"title":"How to Manage Your IRA","slug":"how-to-manage-your-ira","categoryList":["business-careers-money","personal-finance","retirement"],"_links":{"self":"https://dummies-api.dummies.com/v2/articles/268822"}}],"fromCategory":[{"articleId":288529,"title":"401(k)s and IRAs For Dummies Cheat Sheet","slug":"401ks-and-iras-for-dummies-cheat-sheet","categoryList":["business-careers-money","personal-finance","retirement"],"_links":{"self":"https://dummies-api.dummies.com/v2/articles/288529"}},{"articleId":268853,"title":"How to Manage Your Pension","slug":"how-to-manage-your-pension","categoryList":["business-careers-money","personal-finance","retirement"],"_links":{"self":"https://dummies-api.dummies.com/v2/articles/268853"}},{"articleId":268843,"title":"How to Manage Your IRA Contributions","slug":"how-to-manage-your-ira-contributions","categoryList":["business-careers-money","personal-finance","retirement"],"_links":{"self":"https://dummies-api.dummies.com/v2/articles/268843"}},{"articleId":268838,"title":"How to Get Online with Your IRA Provider","slug":"how-to-get-online-with-your-ira-provider","categoryList":["business-careers-money","personal-finance","retirement"],"_links":{"self":"https://dummies-api.dummies.com/v2/articles/268838"}},{"articleId":268829,"title":"How to Get Online Access to Your 401(k)","slug":"how-to-get-online-access-to-your-401k","categoryList":["business-careers-money","personal-finance","retirement"],"_links":{"self":"https://dummies-api.dummies.com/v2/articles/268829"}}]},"hasRelatedBookFromSearch":false,"relatedBook":{"bookId":281850,"slug":"retirement-planning-for-dummies","isbn":"9781119627579","categoryList":["business-careers-money","personal-finance","retirement"],"amazon":{"default":"https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/1119627575/ref=as_li_tl?ie=UTF8&tag=wiley01-20","ca":"https://www.amazon.ca/gp/product/1119627575/ref=as_li_tl?ie=UTF8&tag=wiley01-20","indigo_ca":"http://www.tkqlhce.com/click-9208661-13710633?url=https://www.chapters.indigo.ca/en-ca/books/product/1119627575-item.html&cjsku=978111945484","gb":"https://www.amazon.co.uk/gp/product/1119627575/ref=as_li_tl?ie=UTF8&tag=wiley01-20","de":"https://www.amazon.de/gp/product/1119627575/ref=as_li_tl?ie=UTF8&tag=wiley01-20"},"image":{"src":"https://www.dummies.com/wp-content/uploads/retirement-planning-for-dummies-cover-9781119627579-203x255.jpg","width":203,"height":255},"title":"Retirement Planning For Dummies","testBankPinActivationLink":"","bookOutOfPrint":true,"authorsInfo":"<p><b>Matt Krantz</b> is a nationally known financial journalist who specializes in investing topics. He's personal finance and management editor at <i>Investor's Business Daily.</i> He's also worked in the financial industry and covered markets and investing for <i>USA TODAY.</i> His writing on financial topics has also appeared in <i>Money</i> magazine, <i> Kiplinger's</i>, and <i>Men's Health</i>. Krantz is the author of <i>Fundamental Analysis For Dummies</i> and co-author of <i>Investment Banking For Dummies.</i></p>","authors":[{"authorId":33279,"name":"Matthew Krantz","slug":"matthew-krantz","description":"<b>Matt Krantz</b> is a nationally known financial journalist who specializes in investing topics. He's personal finance and management editor at <i>Investor's Business Daily.</i> He's also worked in the financial industry and covered markets and investing for <i>USA TODAY.</i> His writing on financial topics has also appeared in <i>Money</i> magazine, <i> Kiplinger's</i>, and <i>Men's Health</i>. Krantz is the author of <i>Fundamental Analysis For Dummies</i> and co-author of <i>Investment Banking For Dummies.</i>","hasArticle":false,"_links":{"self":"https://dummies-api.dummies.com/v2/authors/33279"}}],"_links":{"self":"https://dummies-api.dummies.com/v2/books/"}},"collections":[],"articleAds":{"footerAd":"<div class=\"du-ad-region row\" id=\"article_page_adhesion_ad\"><div class=\"du-ad-unit col-md-12\" data-slot-id=\"article_page_adhesion_ad\" data-refreshed=\"false\" \r\n data-target = \"[{&quot;key&quot;:&quot;cat&quot;,&quot;values&quot;:[&quot;business-careers-money&quot;,&quot;personal-finance&quot;,&quot;retirement&quot;]},{&quot;key&quot;:&quot;isbn&quot;,&quot;values&quot;:[&quot;9781119627579&quot;]}]\" id=\"du-slot-63221abebbaf0\"></div></div>","rightAd":"<div class=\"du-ad-region row\" id=\"article_page_right_ad\"><div class=\"du-ad-unit col-md-12\" data-slot-id=\"article_page_right_ad\" data-refreshed=\"false\" \r\n data-target = \"[{&quot;key&quot;:&quot;cat&quot;,&quot;values&quot;:[&quot;business-careers-money&quot;,&quot;personal-finance&quot;,&quot;retirement&quot;]},{&quot;key&quot;:&quot;isbn&quot;,&quot;values&quot;:[&quot;9781119627579&quot;]}]\" id=\"du-slot-63221abebc35f\"></div></div>"},"articleType":{"articleType":"Articles","articleList":null,"content":null,"videoInfo":{"videoId":null,"name":null,"accountId":null,"playerId":null,"thumbnailUrl":null,"description":null,"uploadDate":null}},"sponsorship":{"sponsorshipPage":false,"backgroundImage":{"src":null,"width":0,"height":0},"brandingLine":"","brandingLink":"","brandingLogo":{"src":null,"width":0,"height":0},"sponsorAd":"","sponsorEbookTitle":"","sponsorEbookLink":"","sponsorEbookImage":{"src":null,"width":0,"height":0}},"primaryLearningPath":"Explore","lifeExpectancy":null,"lifeExpectancySetFrom":null,"dummiesForKids":"no","sponsoredContent":"no","adInfo":"","adPairKey":[]},"status":"publish","visibility":"public","articleId":268848},{"headers":{"creationTime":"2020-03-04T18:52:51+00:00","modifiedTime":"2020-03-04T18:52:51+00:00","timestamp":"2022-09-14T18:17:34+00:00"},"data":{"breadcrumbs":[{"name":"Business, Careers, & Money","_links":{"self":"https://dummies-api.dummies.com/v2/categories/34224"},"slug":"business-careers-money","categoryId":34224},{"name":"Personal Finance","_links":{"self":"https://dummies-api.dummies.com/v2/categories/34273"},"slug":"personal-finance","categoryId":34273},{"name":"Retirement","_links":{"self":"https://dummies-api.dummies.com/v2/categories/34308"},"slug":"retirement","categoryId":34308}],"title":"How to Manage Your IRA Contributions","strippedTitle":"how to manage your ira contributions","slug":"how-to-manage-your-ira-contributions","canonicalUrl":"","seo":{"metaDescription":"Learn how to manage your IRA contributions—whether you want to set up a one-time contribution or automatic contributions or rollover contributions.","noIndex":0,"noFollow":0},"content":"Getting money into your IRA is where the magic begins. You can’t build a portfolio until a source of funds exists. IRAs give you not only big leeway in what investments you buy but also lots of control over how you buy those investments.\r\n<h2 id=\"tab1\" >Set up IRA deposits</h2>\r\nWhen you’re talking about putting money aside that you can’t touch for decades, it’s easy to understand why lots of people put off retirement savings. Let’s face it, blowing $800 on a new smartphone is more immediately satisfying than putting $800 in an <a href=\"https://www.dummies.com/personal-finance/investing/retirement/how-to-get-online-with-your-ira-provider/\">IRA</a>. IRA providers know this, and go out of their way to make it easy for you to get money into your account. You can make ongoing contributions to your IRA in two main ways:\r\n<ul>\r\n \t<li><strong>One-time contribution:</strong> The IRA provider lets you connect multiple checking and savings accounts to your retirement account. You can then tell the provider to digitally pull money from one or more of those accounts as a contribution. Vanguard’s one-time contribution screen, shown in Figure 8-5, asks you to choose the investment you want the money to go into. It also tracks your annual contribution to date.</li>\r\n \t<li><strong>Automatic contribution:</strong> You can also tell your IRA provider to take money from a checking or savings account, say every month or quarter. This method puts your retirement plan on autopilot.</li>\r\n</ul>\r\n[caption id=\"attachment_268844\" align=\"alignnone\" width=\"556\"]<img class=\"size-full wp-image-268844\" src=\"https://www.dummies.com/wp-content/uploads/retirement-ira-contributions.jpg\" alt=\"one-time IRA contribution\" width=\"556\" height=\"536\" /> Vanguard makes it easy to make a one-time contribution to your IRA.[/caption]\r\n<p class=\"article-tips warning\">It’s up to you to make sure your contributions meet the requirements and don’t exceed limits. If you’re covered by a retirement plan at work, the <a href=\"http://www.irs.gov/retirement-plans/2019-ira-deduction-limits-effect-of-modified-agi-on-deduction-if-you-are-covered-by-a-retirement-plan-at-work\">IRS spells out whether you can deduct your IRA contributions</a>. If you make too much money, the deducible amount of your contribution is reduced or eliminated. In a nutshell, if you made more than $74,000 as a single taxpayer or $123,000 married filing jointly and are covered by a plan at work, you can’t deduct IRA contributions.</p>\r\n\r\n<h2 id=\"tab2\" >Roll over Beethoven: IRA rollovers</h2>\r\nAnother way to fund an IRA is a rollover. You might opt to rollover your old 401(k) from a previous place of employment, which can be a good idea if your old 401(k) has high fees or poor investment choices. You can rollover funds also from one IRA to another, although that process is usually called a <em>transfer.</em>\r\n<p class=\"article-tips tip\">Generally, it's best to keep your retirement accounts in as few places as possible. Consolidating your retirement funds with one IRA provider helps you qualify for lower-priced investments and makes it easier to keep track of your money.</p>\r\nA rollover involves three steps:\r\n<ol>\r\n \t<li><strong> Fill out your IRA provider's rollover form.</strong>\r\nThe form is usually short, asking for the account number and the provider holding the funds now. You’ll also be asked if you’d like to roll the funds into a new IRA or an existing one.</li>\r\n \t<li><strong> Notify the 401(k) or IRA provider you’re moving from.</strong>\r\nTell them you’re moving the money and where you're moving it. The provider will cut a check for the money.\r\n<p class=\"article-tips warning\">Make sure the check is made out to the firm where the money is going, not to you. If the money goes to you, the IRS might think you took a distribution and hit you with a tax bill.</p>\r\n</li>\r\n \t<li><strong> Wait.</strong>\r\nA rollover can take a few weeks. Your new IRA provider will let you know when the process has been completed.</li>\r\n</ol>\r\n<h2 id=\"tab3\" >Fund an IRA with a Roth conversion</h2>\r\nWith traditional IRAs, you get a tax break now. With a Roth IRA, you pay now but take out the money later free and clear. Guessing which will be best for you is difficult. In general, a Roth is a good idea if you think your current tax rate is lower than it will be when you’re retired.\r\n\r\nRoth IRAs are preferable also if you think you might need to pull the money out sooner than in retirement, or if you think you won’t need the money and want to leave it for a spouse or an heir. Traditional IRAs require you to take money out when you turn 70-1/2. With a Roth, you can leave the money in.\r\n\r\nGiven all the guesswork in choosing a Roth IRA versus a traditional IRA, you might change your mind about the kind of IRA you want. That’s where a <em>Roth conversion</em> comes in. You can turn a traditional IRA into a Roth IRA if you pay the taxes now.\r\n<p class=\"article-tips warning\">Converting a traditional IRA to a Roth can make sense. It’s also a back door way to open a Roth for people who earn too much to fund a Roth. A Roth conversion has several drawbacks, however. You must wait at least five years after a conversion to take money out of a Roth. The conversion also triggers a tax event — you’ll have a tax bill on those tax-deferred contributions.</p>\r\nDoes a Roth conversion make sense for you? To answer that question, you can use a variety of online tools, including the following:\r\n<ul>\r\n \t<li><strong><a href=\"http://www.schwab.com/public/schwab/investing/retirement_and_planning/understanding_iras/ira_calculators/roth_ira_conversion\">Schwab IRA Conversion Calculator</a>:</strong> This tool helps you think about all the important variables that determine whether or not you should convert to a Roth. These variables include the amount of money you’d like to convert and your taxable income.</li>\r\n \t<li><strong><a href=\"http://www.calcxml.com/calculators/roth-ira-conversion-calculator\">CalcXML’s Roth Conversion Calculator</a>:</strong> This tool does all the math to see whether a Roth conversion makes sense. The calculator considers the size of the conversion as well as your age and income needs.</li>\r\n</ul>","description":"Getting money into your IRA is where the magic begins. You can’t build a portfolio until a source of funds exists. IRAs give you not only big leeway in what investments you buy but also lots of control over how you buy those investments.\r\n<h2 id=\"tab1\" >Set up IRA deposits</h2>\r\nWhen you’re talking about putting money aside that you can’t touch for decades, it’s easy to understand why lots of people put off retirement savings. Let’s face it, blowing $800 on a new smartphone is more immediately satisfying than putting $800 in an <a href=\"https://www.dummies.com/personal-finance/investing/retirement/how-to-get-online-with-your-ira-provider/\">IRA</a>. IRA providers know this, and go out of their way to make it easy for you to get money into your account. You can make ongoing contributions to your IRA in two main ways:\r\n<ul>\r\n \t<li><strong>One-time contribution:</strong> The IRA provider lets you connect multiple checking and savings accounts to your retirement account. You can then tell the provider to digitally pull money from one or more of those accounts as a contribution. Vanguard’s one-time contribution screen, shown in Figure 8-5, asks you to choose the investment you want the money to go into. It also tracks your annual contribution to date.</li>\r\n \t<li><strong>Automatic contribution:</strong> You can also tell your IRA provider to take money from a checking or savings account, say every month or quarter. This method puts your retirement plan on autopilot.</li>\r\n</ul>\r\n[caption id=\"attachment_268844\" align=\"alignnone\" width=\"556\"]<img class=\"size-full wp-image-268844\" src=\"https://www.dummies.com/wp-content/uploads/retirement-ira-contributions.jpg\" alt=\"one-time IRA contribution\" width=\"556\" height=\"536\" /> Vanguard makes it easy to make a one-time contribution to your IRA.[/caption]\r\n<p class=\"article-tips warning\">It’s up to you to make sure your contributions meet the requirements and don’t exceed limits. If you’re covered by a retirement plan at work, the <a href=\"http://www.irs.gov/retirement-plans/2019-ira-deduction-limits-effect-of-modified-agi-on-deduction-if-you-are-covered-by-a-retirement-plan-at-work\">IRS spells out whether you can deduct your IRA contributions</a>. If you make too much money, the deducible amount of your contribution is reduced or eliminated. In a nutshell, if you made more than $74,000 as a single taxpayer or $123,000 married filing jointly and are covered by a plan at work, you can’t deduct IRA contributions.</p>\r\n\r\n<h2 id=\"tab2\" >Roll over Beethoven: IRA rollovers</h2>\r\nAnother way to fund an IRA is a rollover. You might opt to rollover your old 401(k) from a previous place of employment, which can be a good idea if your old 401(k) has high fees or poor investment choices. You can rollover funds also from one IRA to another, although that process is usually called a <em>transfer.</em>\r\n<p class=\"article-tips tip\">Generally, it's best to keep your retirement accounts in as few places as possible. Consolidating your retirement funds with one IRA provider helps you qualify for lower-priced investments and makes it easier to keep track of your money.</p>\r\nA rollover involves three steps:\r\n<ol>\r\n \t<li><strong> Fill out your IRA provider's rollover form.</strong>\r\nThe form is usually short, asking for the account number and the provider holding the funds now. You’ll also be asked if you’d like to roll the funds into a new IRA or an existing one.</li>\r\n \t<li><strong> Notify the 401(k) or IRA provider you’re moving from.</strong>\r\nTell them you’re moving the money and where you're moving it. The provider will cut a check for the money.\r\n<p class=\"article-tips warning\">Make sure the check is made out to the firm where the money is going, not to you. If the money goes to you, the IRS might think you took a distribution and hit you with a tax bill.</p>\r\n</li>\r\n \t<li><strong> Wait.</strong>\r\nA rollover can take a few weeks. Your new IRA provider will let you know when the process has been completed.</li>\r\n</ol>\r\n<h2 id=\"tab3\" >Fund an IRA with a Roth conversion</h2>\r\nWith traditional IRAs, you get a tax break now. With a Roth IRA, you pay now but take out the money later free and clear. Guessing which will be best for you is difficult. In general, a Roth is a good idea if you think your current tax rate is lower than it will be when you’re retired.\r\n\r\nRoth IRAs are preferable also if you think you might need to pull the money out sooner than in retirement, or if you think you won’t need the money and want to leave it for a spouse or an heir. Traditional IRAs require you to take money out when you turn 70-1/2. With a Roth, you can leave the money in.\r\n\r\nGiven all the guesswork in choosing a Roth IRA versus a traditional IRA, you might change your mind about the kind of IRA you want. That’s where a <em>Roth conversion</em> comes in. You can turn a traditional IRA into a Roth IRA if you pay the taxes now.\r\n<p class=\"article-tips warning\">Converting a traditional IRA to a Roth can make sense. It’s also a back door way to open a Roth for people who earn too much to fund a Roth. A Roth conversion has several drawbacks, however. You must wait at least five years after a conversion to take money out of a Roth. The conversion also triggers a tax event — you’ll have a tax bill on those tax-deferred contributions.</p>\r\nDoes a Roth conversion make sense for you? To answer that question, you can use a variety of online tools, including the following:\r\n<ul>\r\n \t<li><strong><a href=\"http://www.schwab.com/public/schwab/investing/retirement_and_planning/understanding_iras/ira_calculators/roth_ira_conversion\">Schwab IRA Conversion Calculator</a>:</strong> This tool helps you think about all the important variables that determine whether or not you should convert to a Roth. These variables include the amount of money you’d like to convert and your taxable income.</li>\r\n \t<li><strong><a href=\"http://www.calcxml.com/calculators/roth-ira-conversion-calculator\">CalcXML’s Roth Conversion Calculator</a>:</strong> This tool does all the math to see whether a Roth conversion makes sense. The calculator considers the size of the conversion as well as your age and income needs.</li>\r\n</ul>","blurb":"","authors":[{"authorId":33279,"name":"Matthew Krantz","slug":"matthew-krantz","description":"<b>Matt Krantz</b> is a nationally known financial journalist who specializes in investing topics. He's personal finance and management editor at <i>Investor's Business Daily.</i> He's also worked in the financial industry and covered markets and investing for <i>USA TODAY.</i> His writing on financial topics has also appeared in <i>Money</i> magazine, <i> Kiplinger's</i>, and <i>Men's Health</i>. Krantz is the author of <i>Fundamental Analysis For Dummies</i> and co-author of <i>Investment Banking For Dummies.</i>","hasArticle":false,"_links":{"self":"https://dummies-api.dummies.com/v2/authors/33279"}}],"primaryCategoryTaxonomy":{"categoryId":34308,"title":"Retirement","slug":"retirement","_links":{"self":"https://dummies-api.dummies.com/v2/categories/34308"}},"secondaryCategoryTaxonomy":{"categoryId":0,"title":null,"slug":null,"_links":null},"tertiaryCategoryTaxonomy":{"categoryId":0,"title":null,"slug":null,"_links":null},"trendingArticles":[{"articleId":192609,"title":"How to Pray the Rosary: A Comprehensive Guide","slug":"how-to-pray-the-rosary","categoryList":["body-mind-spirit","religion-spirituality","christianity","catholicism"],"_links":{"self":"/articles/192609"}},{"articleId":208741,"title":"Kabbalah For Dummies Cheat Sheet","slug":"kabbalah-for-dummies-cheat-sheet","categoryList":["body-mind-spirit","religion-spirituality","kabbalah"],"_links":{"self":"/articles/208741"}},{"articleId":230957,"title":"Nikon D3400 For Dummies Cheat Sheet","slug":"nikon-d3400-dummies-cheat-sheet","categoryList":["home-auto-hobbies","photography"],"_links":{"self":"/articles/230957"}},{"articleId":235851,"title":"Praying the Rosary and Meditating on the Mysteries","slug":"praying-rosary-meditating-mysteries","categoryList":["body-mind-spirit","religion-spirituality","christianity","catholicism"],"_links":{"self":"/articles/235851"}},{"articleId":284787,"title":"What Your Society Says About You","slug":"what-your-society-says-about-you","categoryList":["academics-the-arts","humanities"],"_links":{"self":"/articles/284787"}}],"inThisArticle":[{"label":"Set up IRA deposits","target":"#tab1"},{"label":"Roll over Beethoven: IRA rollovers","target":"#tab2"},{"label":"Fund an IRA with a Roth conversion","target":"#tab3"}],"relatedArticles":{"fromBook":[{"articleId":268853,"title":"How to Manage Your Pension","slug":"how-to-manage-your-pension","categoryList":["business-careers-money","personal-finance","retirement"],"_links":{"self":"https://dummies-api.dummies.com/v2/articles/268853"}},{"articleId":268848,"title":"How to Take Money Out of Your IRA","slug":"how-to-take-money-out-of-your-ira","categoryList":["business-careers-money","personal-finance","retirement"],"_links":{"self":"https://dummies-api.dummies.com/v2/articles/268848"}},{"articleId":268838,"title":"How to Get Online with Your IRA Provider","slug":"how-to-get-online-with-your-ira-provider","categoryList":["business-careers-money","personal-finance","retirement"],"_links":{"self":"https://dummies-api.dummies.com/v2/articles/268838"}},{"articleId":268829,"title":"How to Get Online Access to Your 401(k)","slug":"how-to-get-online-access-to-your-401k","categoryList":["business-careers-money","personal-finance","retirement"],"_links":{"self":"https://dummies-api.dummies.com/v2/articles/268829"}},{"articleId":268822,"title":"How to Manage Your IRA","slug":"how-to-manage-your-ira","categoryList":["business-careers-money","personal-finance","retirement"],"_links":{"self":"https://dummies-api.dummies.com/v2/articles/268822"}}],"fromCategory":[{"articleId":288529,"title":"401(k)s and IRAs For Dummies Cheat Sheet","slug":"401ks-and-iras-for-dummies-cheat-sheet","categoryList":["business-careers-money","personal-finance","retirement"],"_links":{"self":"https://dummies-api.dummies.com/v2/articles/288529"}},{"articleId":268853,"title":"How to Manage Your Pension","slug":"how-to-manage-your-pension","categoryList":["business-careers-money","personal-finance","retirement"],"_links":{"self":"https://dummies-api.dummies.com/v2/articles/268853"}},{"articleId":268848,"title":"How to Take Money Out of Your IRA","slug":"how-to-take-money-out-of-your-ira","categoryList":["business-careers-money","personal-finance","retirement"],"_links":{"self":"https://dummies-api.dummies.com/v2/articles/268848"}},{"articleId":268838,"title":"How to Get Online with Your IRA Provider","slug":"how-to-get-online-with-your-ira-provider","categoryList":["business-careers-money","personal-finance","retirement"],"_links":{"self":"https://dummies-api.dummies.com/v2/articles/268838"}},{"articleId":268829,"title":"How to Get Online Access to Your 401(k)","slug":"how-to-get-online-access-to-your-401k","categoryList":["business-careers-money","personal-finance","retirement"],"_links":{"self":"https://dummies-api.dummies.com/v2/articles/268829"}}]},"hasRelatedBookFromSearch":false,"relatedBook":{"bookId":281850,"slug":"retirement-planning-for-dummies","isbn":"9781119627579","categoryList":["business-careers-money","personal-finance","retirement"],"amazon":{"default":"https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/1119627575/ref=as_li_tl?ie=UTF8&tag=wiley01-20","ca":"https://www.amazon.ca/gp/product/1119627575/ref=as_li_tl?ie=UTF8&tag=wiley01-20","indigo_ca":"http://www.tkqlhce.com/click-9208661-13710633?url=https://www.chapters.indigo.ca/en-ca/books/product/1119627575-item.html&cjsku=978111945484","gb":"https://www.amazon.co.uk/gp/product/1119627575/ref=as_li_tl?ie=UTF8&tag=wiley01-20","de":"https://www.amazon.de/gp/product/1119627575/ref=as_li_tl?ie=UTF8&tag=wiley01-20"},"image":{"src":"https://www.dummies.com/wp-content/uploads/retirement-planning-for-dummies-cover-9781119627579-203x255.jpg","width":203,"height":255},"title":"Retirement Planning For Dummies","testBankPinActivationLink":"","bookOutOfPrint":true,"authorsInfo":"<p><b>Matt Krantz</b> is a nationally known financial journalist who specializes in investing topics. He's personal finance and management editor at <i>Investor's Business Daily.</i> He's also worked in the financial industry and covered markets and investing for <i>USA TODAY.</i> His writing on financial topics has also appeared in <i>Money</i> magazine, <i> Kiplinger's</i>, and <i>Men's Health</i>. Krantz is the author of <i>Fundamental Analysis For Dummies</i> and co-author of <i>Investment Banking For Dummies.</i></p>","authors":[{"authorId":33279,"name":"Matthew Krantz","slug":"matthew-krantz","description":"<b>Matt Krantz</b> is a nationally known financial journalist who specializes in investing topics. He's personal finance and management editor at <i>Investor's Business Daily.</i> He's also worked in the financial industry and covered markets and investing for <i>USA TODAY.</i> His writing on financial topics has also appeared in <i>Money</i> magazine, <i> Kiplinger's</i>, and <i>Men's Health</i>. Krantz is the author of <i>Fundamental Analysis For Dummies</i> and co-author of <i>Investment Banking For Dummies.</i>","hasArticle":false,"_links":{"self":"https://dummies-api.dummies.com/v2/authors/33279"}}],"_links":{"self":"https://dummies-api.dummies.com/v2/books/"}},"collections":[],"articleAds":{"footerAd":"<div class=\"du-ad-region row\" id=\"article_page_adhesion_ad\"><div class=\"du-ad-unit col-md-12\" data-slot-id=\"article_page_adhesion_ad\" data-refreshed=\"false\" \r\n data-target = \"[{&quot;key&quot;:&quot;cat&quot;,&quot;values&quot;:[&quot;business-careers-money&quot;,&quot;personal-finance&quot;,&quot;retirement&quot;]},{&quot;key&quot;:&quot;isbn&quot;,&quot;values&quot;:[&quot;9781119627579&quot;]}]\" id=\"du-slot-63221abeb4899\"></div></div>","rightAd":"<div class=\"du-ad-region row\" id=\"article_page_right_ad\"><div class=\"du-ad-unit col-md-12\" data-slot-id=\"article_page_right_ad\" data-refreshed=\"false\" \r\n data-target = \"[{&quot;key&quot;:&quot;cat&quot;,&quot;values&quot;:[&quot;business-careers-money&quot;,&quot;personal-finance&quot;,&quot;retirement&quot;]},{&quot;key&quot;:&quot;isbn&quot;,&quot;values&quot;:[&quot;9781119627579&quot;]}]\" id=\"du-slot-63221abeb51c3\"></div></div>"},"articleType":{"articleType":"Articles","articleList":null,"content":null,"videoInfo":{"videoId":null,"name":null,"accountId":null,"playerId":null,"thumbnailUrl":null,"description":null,"uploadDate":null}},"sponsorship":{"sponsorshipPage":false,"backgroundImage":{"src":null,"width":0,"height":0},"brandingLine":"","brandingLink":"","brandingLogo":{"src":null,"width":0,"height":0},"sponsorAd":"","sponsorEbookTitle":"","sponsorEbookLink":"","sponsorEbookImage":{"src":null,"width":0,"height":0}},"primaryLearningPath":"Explore","lifeExpectancy":null,"lifeExpectancySetFrom":null,"dummiesForKids":"no","sponsoredContent":"no","adInfo":"","adPairKey":[]},"status":"publish","visibility":"public","articleId":268843},{"headers":{"creationTime":"2020-03-04T18:46:27+00:00","modifiedTime":"2020-03-04T18:46:27+00:00","timestamp":"2022-09-14T18:17:34+00:00"},"data":{"breadcrumbs":[{"name":"Business, Careers, & Money","_links":{"self":"https://dummies-api.dummies.com/v2/categories/34224"},"slug":"business-careers-money","categoryId":34224},{"name":"Personal Finance","_links":{"self":"https://dummies-api.dummies.com/v2/categories/34273"},"slug":"personal-finance","categoryId":34273},{"name":"Retirement","_links":{"self":"https://dummies-api.dummies.com/v2/categories/34308"},"slug":"retirement","categoryId":34308}],"title":"How to Get Online with Your IRA Provider","strippedTitle":"how to get online with your ira provider","slug":"how-to-get-online-with-your-ira-provider","canonicalUrl":"","seo":{"metaDescription":"Learn how to open your IRA account online, how to register your account, log in, look around, and understand your portfolio holdings.","noIndex":0,"noFollow":0},"content":"If you’re not online with your IRA provider, it’s time you were. If your IRA provider is keeping up with industry trends, you’ll be amazed at the digital resources available to you. You just need to know what to look for.\r\n<p class=\"article-tips tip\">It might seem tempting to skip the process of registering for online access of your IRA account. If you do that, though, you’ll seriously miss out. Yes, you could manage your IRA over the phone and through the mail. But even if you’re a hands-off investor, you’re much better off doing everything online.</p>\r\n<p class=\"article-tips tip\">Be sure you know how to get <a href=\"https://www.dummies.com/personal-finance/investing/retirement/how-to-get-online-access-to-your-401k/\">online access to your 401(k)</a>as well.</p>\r\n\r\n<h2 id=\"tab1\" >How to open your IRA account</h2>\r\nOpening an IRA varies based on the provider, but you can expect a basic script similar to the following, which is the way Vanguard does it:\r\n<ol>\r\n \t<li><strong> Go to the IRA provider's website and find the button for opening an account.\r\n</strong>IRA providers make this button easy to find. On most sites, it's in the upper-right corner of the screen.</li>\r\n \t<li><strong> Choose a new account or a rollover.\r\n</strong>Remember, you can always open a brand new IRA account if you’re just getting started. But if you’ve been saving for retirement somewhere else, you can <em>rollover,</em> or transfer, money from a 401(k), another IRA, or sometimes even a pension.</li>\r\n \t<li><strong> Show me the money.\r\n</strong>The first thing the IRA provider will want to know is how you’ll fund the account. You can electronically move money from a checking or savings account. You can also rollover from another plan or transfer securities you own elsewhere. If you're funding your account through your bank, you need your bank account information.</li>\r\n \t<li><strong> Do one of the following:</strong>\r\n<ol>\r\n \t<li><strong>If you already have another account with the IRA provider: </strong>You might have an older account with the IRA provider. If you do, sign in. By opening the new IRA with your existing login information, you'll avoid typing lots of information all over again. It’s also easier to manage your accounts if they’re associated with the same username.</li>\r\n \t<li><strong>If you’re opening a first account with the IRA provider: </strong>Be prepared to answer a bunch of questions. You’ll need to enter information about yourself, including a Social Security number and address.</li>\r\n</ol>\r\n</li>\r\n \t<li><strong> Choose the type of account:\r\n</strong>You need to know the type of account you want to open. You'll be asked if the account is for retirement, general savings, or education (as shown in Figure 8-1). If you choose a retirement account, you’ll be asked if you want a traditional IRA, Roth IRA, SIMPLE IRA, or SEP IRA.</li>\r\n \t<li><strong> Answer questions, set up funding, and e-sign.\r\n</strong>You’ll be asked to enter the amount of your initial investment. If you’re opening an account with this IRA provider for the first time, you’ll also need to enter a username and password for online access.</li>\r\n \t<li><strong> Wait.\r\n</strong>Some IRA providers will open your account immediately if everything you entered checks out. Others, such as Vanguard, confirm your information, which can take a day or two.</li>\r\n</ol>\r\n[caption id=\"attachment_268839\" align=\"alignnone\" width=\"556\"]<img class=\"size-full wp-image-268839\" src=\"https://www.dummies.com/wp-content/uploads/retirement-ira-online.jpg\" alt=\"online IRA application\" width=\"556\" height=\"384\" /> Vanguard’s online IRA application steps you through opening an account and getting online access.[/caption]\r\n<h2 id=\"tab2\" >Log in and look around</h2>\r\nThe long road to setting up your IRA is over and you're now an IRA owner. How cool is that? Next, it’s time to see what you can find on the IRA provider’s site. The list is long:\r\n<ul>\r\n \t<li><strong>Account information:</strong> All IRA sites can tell you how much is in your account (your balance) and your investments, or</li>\r\n \t<li><strong>Account activity:</strong> Any time you put money into (contribute to), your IRA or take money out of (withdraw from), your IRA, the transaction is recorded. Your account activity shows the comings and goings of the money in your account.</li>\r\n</ul>\r\n<p class=\"article-tips tip\">Money can come into or go out of your account, even if you’re not putting it in or taking it out. Is your long-lost rich uncle putting money into your IRA? Nope. If you own stock in a company that makes a profit beyond what it needs, the company might pay you, the investor. These payments are called <em>dividends</em> and appear in your account activity. What about money coming out? Fees. The IRA provider might take money out of your account for account-servicing costs.</p>\r\n<p class=\"article-tips warning\">If you own mutual funds, the (sometimes large) fees they charge won’t appear in the account activity listing. Mutual fund fees are taken out of the fund itself.</p>\r\n\r\n<ul>\r\n \t<li><strong>Performance:</strong> Remember getting a report card when you were a kid? Your IRA's report card is its performance tracking. Here you see how much your IRA is growing or shrinking during the year and over the long term.</li>\r\n \t<li><strong>Asset mix:</strong> Your <em>asset mix,</em> or asset allocation, is the combination of asset classes in your portfolio, such as stocks and bonds. The more stocks in your portfolio, the riskier your portfolio but the more it's likely to grow in the long term.</li>\r\n</ul>\r\n<h2 id=\"tab3\" >Understand your portfolio holdings</h2>\r\nIf you want to dig deeper into what you own in your IRA, look for an area called Holdings. In this section, you’ll find the following important attributes of the investments in your account:\r\n<ul>\r\n \t<li><strong>Summary:</strong> Here you’ll find the name of each investment you own and its symbol. Mutual funds and other investment funds are identified by a multi-character abbreviation, or symbol. This symbol is useful if you want to look the fund up using a third-party site.</li>\r\n \t<li><strong>Returns:</strong> The amount of money you make or lose from an investment is more than how much its price has changed. It’s also a tally of the dividends paid. The Returns section adds all this together. You can find your return on an investment during several time periods, such as one, three, five, and ten years.</li>\r\n \t<li><strong>Cost basis:</strong> Your <em>cost basis</em> of an investment is how much you paid to buy it. If you paid $100 for a share of a mutual fund that’s now worth $110 a share, your cost basis is $100. If you sell the mutual fund for $110 a share, you have a <em>realized capital gain,</em> or profit, of $10. If you don’t sell the mutual fund but hold it, you have an <em>unrealized capital gain</em> of $10. Your IRA provider tracks capital gains for you.</li>\r\n</ul>\r\n<p class=\"article-tips remember\">Tracking your capital gains is a big deal with taxable accounts but not with tax-deferred ones such as traditional IRAs. With a taxable account, you pay taxes on only your realized gains. But with an IRA, your entire withdrawal is taxable—even your cost basis because it hasn’t been taxed yet.</p>","description":"If you’re not online with your IRA provider, it’s time you were. If your IRA provider is keeping up with industry trends, you’ll be amazed at the digital resources available to you. You just need to know what to look for.\r\n<p class=\"article-tips tip\">It might seem tempting to skip the process of registering for online access of your IRA account. If you do that, though, you’ll seriously miss out. Yes, you could manage your IRA over the phone and through the mail. But even if you’re a hands-off investor, you’re much better off doing everything online.</p>\r\n<p class=\"article-tips tip\">Be sure you know how to get <a href=\"https://www.dummies.com/personal-finance/investing/retirement/how-to-get-online-access-to-your-401k/\">online access to your 401(k)</a>as well.</p>\r\n\r\n<h2 id=\"tab1\" >How to open your IRA account</h2>\r\nOpening an IRA varies based on the provider, but you can expect a basic script similar to the following, which is the way Vanguard does it:\r\n<ol>\r\n \t<li><strong> Go to the IRA provider's website and find the button for opening an account.\r\n</strong>IRA providers make this button easy to find. On most sites, it's in the upper-right corner of the screen.</li>\r\n \t<li><strong> Choose a new account or a rollover.\r\n</strong>Remember, you can always open a brand new IRA account if you’re just getting started. But if you’ve been saving for retirement somewhere else, you can <em>rollover,</em> or transfer, money from a 401(k), another IRA, or sometimes even a pension.</li>\r\n \t<li><strong> Show me the money.\r\n</strong>The first thing the IRA provider will want to know is how you’ll fund the account. You can electronically move money from a checking or savings account. You can also rollover from another plan or transfer securities you own elsewhere. If you're funding your account through your bank, you need your bank account information.</li>\r\n \t<li><strong> Do one of the following:</strong>\r\n<ol>\r\n \t<li><strong>If you already have another account with the IRA provider: </strong>You might have an older account with the IRA provider. If you do, sign in. By opening the new IRA with your existing login information, you'll avoid typing lots of information all over again. It’s also easier to manage your accounts if they’re associated with the same username.</li>\r\n \t<li><strong>If you’re opening a first account with the IRA provider: </strong>Be prepared to answer a bunch of questions. You’ll need to enter information about yourself, including a Social Security number and address.</li>\r\n</ol>\r\n</li>\r\n \t<li><strong> Choose the type of account:\r\n</strong>You need to know the type of account you want to open. You'll be asked if the account is for retirement, general savings, or education (as shown in Figure 8-1). If you choose a retirement account, you’ll be asked if you want a traditional IRA, Roth IRA, SIMPLE IRA, or SEP IRA.</li>\r\n \t<li><strong> Answer questions, set up funding, and e-sign.\r\n</strong>You’ll be asked to enter the amount of your initial investment. If you’re opening an account with this IRA provider for the first time, you’ll also need to enter a username and password for online access.</li>\r\n \t<li><strong> Wait.\r\n</strong>Some IRA providers will open your account immediately if everything you entered checks out. Others, such as Vanguard, confirm your information, which can take a day or two.</li>\r\n</ol>\r\n[caption id=\"attachment_268839\" align=\"alignnone\" width=\"556\"]<img class=\"size-full wp-image-268839\" src=\"https://www.dummies.com/wp-content/uploads/retirement-ira-online.jpg\" alt=\"online IRA application\" width=\"556\" height=\"384\" /> Vanguard’s online IRA application steps you through opening an account and getting online access.[/caption]\r\n<h2 id=\"tab2\" >Log in and look around</h2>\r\nThe long road to setting up your IRA is over and you're now an IRA owner. How cool is that? Next, it’s time to see what you can find on the IRA provider’s site. The list is long:\r\n<ul>\r\n \t<li><strong>Account information:</strong> All IRA sites can tell you how much is in your account (your balance) and your investments, or</li>\r\n \t<li><strong>Account activity:</strong> Any time you put money into (contribute to), your IRA or take money out of (withdraw from), your IRA, the transaction is recorded. Your account activity shows the comings and goings of the money in your account.</li>\r\n</ul>\r\n<p class=\"article-tips tip\">Money can come into or go out of your account, even if you’re not putting it in or taking it out. Is your long-lost rich uncle putting money into your IRA? Nope. If you own stock in a company that makes a profit beyond what it needs, the company might pay you, the investor. These payments are called <em>dividends</em> and appear in your account activity. What about money coming out? Fees. The IRA provider might take money out of your account for account-servicing costs.</p>\r\n<p class=\"article-tips warning\">If you own mutual funds, the (sometimes large) fees they charge won’t appear in the account activity listing. Mutual fund fees are taken out of the fund itself.</p>\r\n\r\n<ul>\r\n \t<li><strong>Performance:</strong> Remember getting a report card when you were a kid? Your IRA's report card is its performance tracking. Here you see how much your IRA is growing or shrinking during the year and over the long term.</li>\r\n \t<li><strong>Asset mix:</strong> Your <em>asset mix,</em> or asset allocation, is the combination of asset classes in your portfolio, such as stocks and bonds. The more stocks in your portfolio, the riskier your portfolio but the more it's likely to grow in the long term.</li>\r\n</ul>\r\n<h2 id=\"tab3\" >Understand your portfolio holdings</h2>\r\nIf you want to dig deeper into what you own in your IRA, look for an area called Holdings. In this section, you’ll find the following important attributes of the investments in your account:\r\n<ul>\r\n \t<li><strong>Summary:</strong> Here you’ll find the name of each investment you own and its symbol. Mutual funds and other investment funds are identified by a multi-character abbreviation, or symbol. This symbol is useful if you want to look the fund up using a third-party site.</li>\r\n \t<li><strong>Returns:</strong> The amount of money you make or lose from an investment is more than how much its price has changed. It’s also a tally of the dividends paid. The Returns section adds all this together. You can find your return on an investment during several time periods, such as one, three, five, and ten years.</li>\r\n \t<li><strong>Cost basis:</strong> Your <em>cost basis</em> of an investment is how much you paid to buy it. If you paid $100 for a share of a mutual fund that’s now worth $110 a share, your cost basis is $100. If you sell the mutual fund for $110 a share, you have a <em>realized capital gain,</em> or profit, of $10. If you don’t sell the mutual fund but hold it, you have an <em>unrealized capital gain</em> of $10. Your IRA provider tracks capital gains for you.</li>\r\n</ul>\r\n<p class=\"article-tips remember\">Tracking your capital gains is a big deal with taxable accounts but not with tax-deferred ones such as traditional IRAs. With a taxable account, you pay taxes on only your realized gains. But with an IRA, your entire withdrawal is taxable—even your cost basis because it hasn’t been taxed yet.</p>","blurb":"","authors":[{"authorId":33279,"name":"Matthew Krantz","slug":"matthew-krantz","description":"<b>Matt Krantz</b> is a nationally known financial journalist who specializes in investing topics. He's personal finance and management editor at <i>Investor's Business Daily.</i> He's also worked in the financial industry and covered markets and investing for <i>USA TODAY.</i> His writing on financial topics has also appeared in <i>Money</i> magazine, <i> Kiplinger's</i>, and <i>Men's Health</i>. Krantz is the author of <i>Fundamental Analysis For Dummies</i> and co-author of <i>Investment Banking For Dummies.</i>","hasArticle":false,"_links":{"self":"https://dummies-api.dummies.com/v2/authors/33279"}}],"primaryCategoryTaxonomy":{"categoryId":34308,"title":"Retirement","slug":"retirement","_links":{"self":"https://dummies-api.dummies.com/v2/categories/34308"}},"secondaryCategoryTaxonomy":{"categoryId":0,"title":null,"slug":null,"_links":null},"tertiaryCategoryTaxonomy":{"categoryId":0,"title":null,"slug":null,"_links":null},"trendingArticles":[{"articleId":192609,"title":"How to Pray the Rosary: A Comprehensive Guide","slug":"how-to-pray-the-rosary","categoryList":["body-mind-spirit","religion-spirituality","christianity","catholicism"],"_links":{"self":"/articles/192609"}},{"articleId":208741,"title":"Kabbalah For Dummies Cheat 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holdings","target":"#tab3"}],"relatedArticles":{"fromBook":[{"articleId":268853,"title":"How to Manage Your Pension","slug":"how-to-manage-your-pension","categoryList":["business-careers-money","personal-finance","retirement"],"_links":{"self":"https://dummies-api.dummies.com/v2/articles/268853"}},{"articleId":268848,"title":"How to Take Money Out of Your IRA","slug":"how-to-take-money-out-of-your-ira","categoryList":["business-careers-money","personal-finance","retirement"],"_links":{"self":"https://dummies-api.dummies.com/v2/articles/268848"}},{"articleId":268843,"title":"How to Manage Your IRA Contributions","slug":"how-to-manage-your-ira-contributions","categoryList":["business-careers-money","personal-finance","retirement"],"_links":{"self":"https://dummies-api.dummies.com/v2/articles/268843"}},{"articleId":268829,"title":"How to Get Online Access to Your 401(k)","slug":"how-to-get-online-access-to-your-401k","categoryList":["business-careers-money","personal-finance","retirement"],"_links":{"self":"https://dummies-api.dummies.com/v2/articles/268829"}},{"articleId":268822,"title":"How to Manage Your IRA","slug":"how-to-manage-your-ira","categoryList":["business-careers-money","personal-finance","retirement"],"_links":{"self":"https://dummies-api.dummies.com/v2/articles/268822"}}],"fromCategory":[{"articleId":288529,"title":"401(k)s and IRAs For Dummies Cheat Sheet","slug":"401ks-and-iras-for-dummies-cheat-sheet","categoryList":["business-careers-money","personal-finance","retirement"],"_links":{"self":"https://dummies-api.dummies.com/v2/articles/288529"}},{"articleId":268853,"title":"How to Manage Your Pension","slug":"how-to-manage-your-pension","categoryList":["business-careers-money","personal-finance","retirement"],"_links":{"self":"https://dummies-api.dummies.com/v2/articles/268853"}},{"articleId":268848,"title":"How to Take Money Out of Your IRA","slug":"how-to-take-money-out-of-your-ira","categoryList":["business-careers-money","personal-finance","retirement"],"_links":{"self":"https://dummies-api.dummies.com/v2/articles/268848"}},{"articleId":268843,"title":"How to Manage Your IRA Contributions","slug":"how-to-manage-your-ira-contributions","categoryList":["business-careers-money","personal-finance","retirement"],"_links":{"self":"https://dummies-api.dummies.com/v2/articles/268843"}},{"articleId":268829,"title":"How to Get Online Access to Your 401(k)","slug":"how-to-get-online-access-to-your-401k","categoryList":["business-careers-money","personal-finance","retirement"],"_links":{"self":"https://dummies-api.dummies.com/v2/articles/268829"}}]},"hasRelatedBookFromSearch":false,"relatedBook":{"bookId":281850,"slug":"retirement-planning-for-dummies","isbn":"9781119627579","categoryList":["business-careers-money","personal-finance","retirement"],"amazon":{"default":"https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/1119627575/ref=as_li_tl?ie=UTF8&tag=wiley01-20","ca":"https://www.amazon.ca/gp/product/1119627575/ref=as_li_tl?ie=UTF8&tag=wiley01-20","indigo_ca":"http://www.tkqlhce.com/click-9208661-13710633?url=https://www.chapters.indigo.ca/en-ca/books/product/1119627575-item.html&cjsku=978111945484","gb":"https://www.amazon.co.uk/gp/product/1119627575/ref=as_li_tl?ie=UTF8&tag=wiley01-20","de":"https://www.amazon.de/gp/product/1119627575/ref=as_li_tl?ie=UTF8&tag=wiley01-20"},"image":{"src":"https://www.dummies.com/wp-content/uploads/retirement-planning-for-dummies-cover-9781119627579-203x255.jpg","width":203,"height":255},"title":"Retirement Planning For Dummies","testBankPinActivationLink":"","bookOutOfPrint":true,"authorsInfo":"<p><b>Matt Krantz</b> is a nationally known financial journalist who specializes in investing topics. He's personal finance and management editor at <i>Investor's Business Daily.</i> He's also worked in the financial industry and covered markets and investing for <i>USA TODAY.</i> His writing on financial topics has also appeared in <i>Money</i> magazine, <i> Kiplinger's</i>, and <i>Men's Health</i>. Krantz is the author of <i>Fundamental Analysis For Dummies</i> and co-author of <i>Investment Banking For Dummies.</i></p>","authors":[{"authorId":33279,"name":"Matthew Krantz","slug":"matthew-krantz","description":"<b>Matt Krantz</b> is a nationally known financial journalist who specializes in investing topics. He's personal finance and management editor at <i>Investor's Business Daily.</i> He's also worked in the financial industry and covered markets and investing for <i>USA TODAY.</i> His writing on financial topics has also appeared in <i>Money</i> magazine, <i> Kiplinger's</i>, and <i>Men's Health</i>. Krantz is the author of <i>Fundamental Analysis For Dummies</i> and co-author of <i>Investment Banking For Dummies.</i>","hasArticle":false,"_links":{"self":"https://dummies-api.dummies.com/v2/authors/33279"}}],"_links":{"self":"https://dummies-api.dummies.com/v2/books/"}},"collections":[],"articleAds":{"footerAd":"<div class=\"du-ad-region row\" id=\"article_page_adhesion_ad\"><div class=\"du-ad-unit col-md-12\" data-slot-id=\"article_page_adhesion_ad\" data-refreshed=\"false\" \r\n data-target = \"[{&quot;key&quot;:&quot;cat&quot;,&quot;values&quot;:[&quot;business-careers-money&quot;,&quot;personal-finance&quot;,&quot;retirement&quot;]},{&quot;key&quot;:&quot;isbn&quot;,&quot;values&quot;:[&quot;9781119627579&quot;]}]\" id=\"du-slot-63221abeacda4\"></div></div>","rightAd":"<div class=\"du-ad-region row\" id=\"article_page_right_ad\"><div class=\"du-ad-unit col-md-12\" data-slot-id=\"article_page_right_ad\" data-refreshed=\"false\" \r\n data-target = \"[{&quot;key&quot;:&quot;cat&quot;,&quot;values&quot;:[&quot;business-careers-money&quot;,&quot;personal-finance&quot;,&quot;retirement&quot;]},{&quot;key&quot;:&quot;isbn&quot;,&quot;values&quot;:[&quot;9781119627579&quot;]}]\" id=\"du-slot-63221abead680\"></div></div>"},"articleType":{"articleType":"Articles","articleList":null,"content":null,"videoInfo":{"videoId":null,"name":null,"accountId":null,"playerId":null,"thumbnailUrl":null,"description":null,"uploadDate":null}},"sponsorship":{"sponsorshipPage":false,"backgroundImage":{"src":null,"width":0,"height":0},"brandingLine":"","brandingLink":"","brandingLogo":{"src":null,"width":0,"height":0},"sponsorAd":"","sponsorEbookTitle":"","sponsorEbookLink":"","sponsorEbookImage":{"src":null,"width":0,"height":0}},"primaryLearningPath":"Explore","lifeExpectancy":null,"lifeExpectancySetFrom":null,"dummiesForKids":"no","sponsoredContent":"no","adInfo":"","adPairKey":[]},"status":"publish","visibility":"public","articleId":268838},{"headers":{"creationTime":"2020-03-04T18:37:05+00:00","modifiedTime":"2020-03-04T18:37:05+00:00","timestamp":"2022-09-14T18:17:34+00:00"},"data":{"breadcrumbs":[{"name":"Business, Careers, & Money","_links":{"self":"https://dummies-api.dummies.com/v2/categories/34224"},"slug":"business-careers-money","categoryId":34224},{"name":"Personal Finance","_links":{"self":"https://dummies-api.dummies.com/v2/categories/34273"},"slug":"personal-finance","categoryId":34273},{"name":"Retirement","_links":{"self":"https://dummies-api.dummies.com/v2/categories/34308"},"slug":"retirement","categoryId":34308}],"title":"How to Get Online Access to Your 401(k)","strippedTitle":"how to get online access to your 401(k)","slug":"how-to-get-online-access-to-your-401k","canonicalUrl":"","seo":{"metaDescription":"Learn how to register online for your 401(k), how to use the 401(k) tools provided, and how to check out the performance of your investments.","noIndex":0,"noFollow":0},"content":"Many employers tout their 401(k) plans as a job perk. But, typically, you're on your own when it comes to setting up online access. In some ways, this situation is symbolic of how the responsibility for <a href=\"https://www.dummies.com/personal-finance/investing/retirement/retirement-planning-for-dummies-cheat-sheet/\">retirement planning</a> has shifted to employees. Not only do employers want to scale back how much they contribute to your retirement, many don’t even want to help you manage the account.\r\n<h2 id=\"tab1\" >How to register for 401(k) access</h2>\r\nMost 401(k)s are established on paper. The paperwork you sign when you join a company opens the account and gives the 401(k) plan administrator the right to take money out of your paycheck.\r\n\r\nBut you can’t do much with the account until you register for online assess with the 401(k) plan site. After that, you can see your balances, make changes, and evaluate how you’re doing.\r\n\r\nYou might be surprised at some of the online tools you can pick up right from your 401(k) plan provider. Nearly all 401(k) sites offer useful calculators and information to help you better prepare for retirement.\r\n\r\nWhat kicks off the process of setting up 401(k) account access? Ironically, it’s probably snail mail. At some point after starting a job or signing up for a 401(k), you should get a letter in the mail from your 401(k) administrator with your summary plan description. This document, similar to the one shown, lets you know that the account is established and that you can set up online access.\r\n\r\n[caption id=\"attachment_268833\" align=\"alignnone\" width=\"450\"]<img class=\"size-full wp-image-268833\" src=\"https://www.dummies.com/wp-content/uploads/retirement-summary-plan.jpg\" alt=\"summary plan description\" width=\"450\" height=\"600\" /> Your summary plan description tells you it’s time to set up online access.[/caption]\r\n\r\nIf you look closely, you’ll see a website address in the upper-right corner of the summary plan description in the figure. In this example, it’s <em>www.voyaretirementplans.com</em>. From here, you’ll want to follow these steps to register:\r\n<ol>\r\n \t<li><strong> Click the Register Now button.</strong>\r\nJust about all 401(k) sites put the button just below the log-in section, as you can see in this figure for the Voya example.\r\n\r\n[caption id=\"attachment_268832\" align=\"alignnone\" width=\"556\"]<img class=\"size-full wp-image-268832\" src=\"https://www.dummies.com/wp-content/uploads/retirement-register-now.jpg\" alt=\"Register Now\" width=\"556\" height=\"525\" /> Find the Register Now or a similar option.[/caption]</li>\r\n \t<li><strong> Choose an identification method.</strong>\r\nSites usually ask for either your personal identification number (PIN) or your Social Security number and date of birth. The PIN would have been sent to you in the mail. If you didn’t get a PIN, go with door #2, because you know your Social Security and birthday.</li>\r\n \t<li><strong> Create your log-in</strong> <strong>information</strong>.\r\nYou are asked to choose a username and password. Try to choose something difficult to guess—or better yet, use a password manager.</li>\r\n</ol>\r\n<p class=\"article-tips tip\">Passwords are getting more complicated in an effort to keep hackers out. Choose a password that’s not a real word, and use a string of symbols, numbers, and uppercase and lowercase letters. Try to come up with something only you will know. For example, suppose you’re a Star Wars fan. Rather than using <em>starwars</em> as a password, use <em>MT4ceBWY</em>. (Get it? <em>May the Force be with you</em>.)</p>\r\n\r\n<h2 id=\"tab2\" >Get to know your 401(k) tools</h2>\r\nThe beauty of 401(k) plans is their hands-off nature. If you’re like many 401(k) investors, after you sign up for the plan, you don't want to think about it—and you certainly don't want to do is dig around the various features of the 401(k) provider’s website.\r\n\r\nBut you might be surprised at some of the online tools you can pick up right from your 401(k) plan provider. Nearly all 401(k) sites offer useful calculators and information to help you better prepare for retirement.\r\n<p class=\"article-tips tip\">Using the tools on your 401(k) plan provider’s site is helpful because you already have log-in information with them, and many of the tools can be personalized because your details are already there.</p>\r\nA few helpful tools to look for on your 401(k) plan provider’s site follow:\r\n<ul>\r\n \t<li><strong>Calculators:</strong> Most 401(k) providers will use your account details as inputs for calculators. You’ll likely find a contribution calculator that will tell you if you’re putting enough in your 401(k) to meet your full-year contribution goal. This tool is useful if you want to max out your 401(k), putting in the most legally allowed. The tool will also tell you what percentage you should take out of your paycheck to hit your annual contribution target.</li>\r\n</ul>\r\n<p style=\"padding-left: 40px;\">Also look for a retirement overview calculator. This tool helps you see how much money you should have when you retire based on your savings rate, income needs, and rate of return.</p>\r\n<p style=\"padding-left: 40px;\">Lastly, 401(k) providers offer retirement income estimate calculators. These tools look at how much you’re saving and your expected returns, and estimate how much income you might expect in retirement.</p>\r\n\r\n<ul>\r\n \t<li><strong>Investing education:</strong> You’ll likely find useful articles and videos to coach you on the importance of diversification and asset allocation. You might also find information on related topics such as estate planning.</li>\r\n \t<li><strong>Risk questionnaires:</strong> Some 401(k) sites feature basic questionnaires that will help you see how much risk you can handle. You’ll be asked how much you know about investing, how much volatility you can handle, and your age.</li>\r\n</ul>\r\n<p style=\"padding-left: 40px;\">Some 401(k)-planning sites use this information, paired with what the plan administrator already knows about you, to offer a possible asset allocation, as shown. Your <em>asset allocation</em> is the mix of asset classes expected to give you the best return for your level of risk.</p>\r\n\r\n\r\n[caption id=\"attachment_268831\" align=\"alignnone\" width=\"556\"]<img class=\"size-full wp-image-268831\" src=\"https://www.dummies.com/wp-content/uploads/retirement-asset-allocation.jpg\" alt=\"recommended portfolio\" width=\"556\" height=\"442\" /> Voya’s questionnaire recommends a portfolio based on what it knows about you.[/caption]\r\n<p style=\"padding-left: 40px;\">Typically, your appetite for risk is a function of how much <em>volatility,</em> or ups and downs in portfolio value, you can endure. For example, suppose that the target-date fund for your retirement year suggests a middle-of-the-road portfolio of 60 percent stocks and 40 percent bonds. But after taking the questionnaire, the 401(k) provider’s site might suggest a more aggressive portfolio with 70 percent stocks and 30 percent bonds.</p>\r\n\r\n<h2 id=\"tab3\" >Check out your 401(k) performance</h2>\r\nBefore you think about making your 401(k) work better for you, it’s wise to see how it’s doing so far. 401(k) provider sites help you track how much return you’re getting on your money.\r\n<p class=\"article-tips remember\">Measuring investment performance is important and something you should count on from your 401(k) provider. The results of the calculation tell you if your investment choices are delivering what you need to reach your goals. Performance statistics also tell you if you’re getting results that are at least keeping up with the average. If your portfolio returns are less than market returns, or indexes, that’s a big sign that you should optimize your 401(k).</p>\r\nMost 401(k) sites will help you see your portfolio performance in two ways:\r\n<ul>\r\n \t<li><strong>At the fund level:</strong> Nearly all 401(k) plans have an Investments section. Here you can look up how the funds have performed over various time periods, including short periods (such as a month or year) and longer periods (such as five or ten years). The data is typically shown in a table like the one shown here.</li>\r\n</ul>\r\n[caption id=\"attachment_268830\" align=\"alignnone\" width=\"556\"]<img class=\"size-full wp-image-268830\" src=\"https://www.dummies.com/wp-content/uploads/retirement-investments.jpg\" alt=\"investments section\" width=\"556\" height=\"417\" /> The Investments section shows you how each of the individual investments in the plan have done.[/caption]\r\n<p class=\"article-tips tip\">If you own only the 401(k)’s target-date fund, look up your particular fund in the investments list. This might be all the information you need to know how you’re doing.</p>\r\n\r\n<ul>\r\n \t<li><strong>As a personal rate of return: </strong>401(k) providers don’t just tell you how the funds in the plan have performed. They also keep track of how you have done.</li>\r\n</ul>\r\n<p style=\"padding-left: 40px;\">What’s the difference between the funds’ returns and your returns? Keep in mind that some investors spread their portfolios over multiple funds. They might also move money from one fund to another. The timing of your contributions matter, too. The personal rate of return incorporates all these factors to arrive at your total return.</p>","description":"Many employers tout their 401(k) plans as a job perk. But, typically, you're on your own when it comes to setting up online access. In some ways, this situation is symbolic of how the responsibility for <a href=\"https://www.dummies.com/personal-finance/investing/retirement/retirement-planning-for-dummies-cheat-sheet/\">retirement planning</a> has shifted to employees. Not only do employers want to scale back how much they contribute to your retirement, many don’t even want to help you manage the account.\r\n<h2 id=\"tab1\" >How to register for 401(k) access</h2>\r\nMost 401(k)s are established on paper. The paperwork you sign when you join a company opens the account and gives the 401(k) plan administrator the right to take money out of your paycheck.\r\n\r\nBut you can’t do much with the account until you register for online assess with the 401(k) plan site. After that, you can see your balances, make changes, and evaluate how you’re doing.\r\n\r\nYou might be surprised at some of the online tools you can pick up right from your 401(k) plan provider. Nearly all 401(k) sites offer useful calculators and information to help you better prepare for retirement.\r\n\r\nWhat kicks off the process of setting up 401(k) account access? Ironically, it’s probably snail mail. At some point after starting a job or signing up for a 401(k), you should get a letter in the mail from your 401(k) administrator with your summary plan description. This document, similar to the one shown, lets you know that the account is established and that you can set up online access.\r\n\r\n[caption id=\"attachment_268833\" align=\"alignnone\" width=\"450\"]<img class=\"size-full wp-image-268833\" src=\"https://www.dummies.com/wp-content/uploads/retirement-summary-plan.jpg\" alt=\"summary plan description\" width=\"450\" height=\"600\" /> Your summary plan description tells you it’s time to set up online access.[/caption]\r\n\r\nIf you look closely, you’ll see a website address in the upper-right corner of the summary plan description in the figure. In this example, it’s <em>www.voyaretirementplans.com</em>. From here, you’ll want to follow these steps to register:\r\n<ol>\r\n \t<li><strong> Click the Register Now button.</strong>\r\nJust about all 401(k) sites put the button just below the log-in section, as you can see in this figure for the Voya example.\r\n\r\n[caption id=\"attachment_268832\" align=\"alignnone\" width=\"556\"]<img class=\"size-full wp-image-268832\" src=\"https://www.dummies.com/wp-content/uploads/retirement-register-now.jpg\" alt=\"Register Now\" width=\"556\" height=\"525\" /> Find the Register Now or a similar option.[/caption]</li>\r\n \t<li><strong> Choose an identification method.</strong>\r\nSites usually ask for either your personal identification number (PIN) or your Social Security number and date of birth. The PIN would have been sent to you in the mail. If you didn’t get a PIN, go with door #2, because you know your Social Security and birthday.</li>\r\n \t<li><strong> Create your log-in</strong> <strong>information</strong>.\r\nYou are asked to choose a username and password. Try to choose something difficult to guess—or better yet, use a password manager.</li>\r\n</ol>\r\n<p class=\"article-tips tip\">Passwords are getting more complicated in an effort to keep hackers out. Choose a password that’s not a real word, and use a string of symbols, numbers, and uppercase and lowercase letters. Try to come up with something only you will know. For example, suppose you’re a Star Wars fan. Rather than using <em>starwars</em> as a password, use <em>MT4ceBWY</em>. (Get it? <em>May the Force be with you</em>.)</p>\r\n\r\n<h2 id=\"tab2\" >Get to know your 401(k) tools</h2>\r\nThe beauty of 401(k) plans is their hands-off nature. If you’re like many 401(k) investors, after you sign up for the plan, you don't want to think about it—and you certainly don't want to do is dig around the various features of the 401(k) provider’s website.\r\n\r\nBut you might be surprised at some of the online tools you can pick up right from your 401(k) plan provider. Nearly all 401(k) sites offer useful calculators and information to help you better prepare for retirement.\r\n<p class=\"article-tips tip\">Using the tools on your 401(k) plan provider’s site is helpful because you already have log-in information with them, and many of the tools can be personalized because your details are already there.</p>\r\nA few helpful tools to look for on your 401(k) plan provider’s site follow:\r\n<ul>\r\n \t<li><strong>Calculators:</strong> Most 401(k) providers will use your account details as inputs for calculators. You’ll likely find a contribution calculator that will tell you if you’re putting enough in your 401(k) to meet your full-year contribution goal. This tool is useful if you want to max out your 401(k), putting in the most legally allowed. The tool will also tell you what percentage you should take out of your paycheck to hit your annual contribution target.</li>\r\n</ul>\r\n<p style=\"padding-left: 40px;\">Also look for a retirement overview calculator. This tool helps you see how much money you should have when you retire based on your savings rate, income needs, and rate of return.</p>\r\n<p style=\"padding-left: 40px;\">Lastly, 401(k) providers offer retirement income estimate calculators. These tools look at how much you’re saving and your expected returns, and estimate how much income you might expect in retirement.</p>\r\n\r\n<ul>\r\n \t<li><strong>Investing education:</strong> You’ll likely find useful articles and videos to coach you on the importance of diversification and asset allocation. You might also find information on related topics such as estate planning.</li>\r\n \t<li><strong>Risk questionnaires:</strong> Some 401(k) sites feature basic questionnaires that will help you see how much risk you can handle. You’ll be asked how much you know about investing, how much volatility you can handle, and your age.</li>\r\n</ul>\r\n<p style=\"padding-left: 40px;\">Some 401(k)-planning sites use this information, paired with what the plan administrator already knows about you, to offer a possible asset allocation, as shown. Your <em>asset allocation</em> is the mix of asset classes expected to give you the best return for your level of risk.</p>\r\n\r\n\r\n[caption id=\"attachment_268831\" align=\"alignnone\" width=\"556\"]<img class=\"size-full wp-image-268831\" src=\"https://www.dummies.com/wp-content/uploads/retirement-asset-allocation.jpg\" alt=\"recommended portfolio\" width=\"556\" height=\"442\" /> Voya’s questionnaire recommends a portfolio based on what it knows about you.[/caption]\r\n<p style=\"padding-left: 40px;\">Typically, your appetite for risk is a function of how much <em>volatility,</em> or ups and downs in portfolio value, you can endure. For example, suppose that the target-date fund for your retirement year suggests a middle-of-the-road portfolio of 60 percent stocks and 40 percent bonds. But after taking the questionnaire, the 401(k) provider’s site might suggest a more aggressive portfolio with 70 percent stocks and 30 percent bonds.</p>\r\n\r\n<h2 id=\"tab3\" >Check out your 401(k) performance</h2>\r\nBefore you think about making your 401(k) work better for you, it’s wise to see how it’s doing so far. 401(k) provider sites help you track how much return you’re getting on your money.\r\n<p class=\"article-tips remember\">Measuring investment performance is important and something you should count on from your 401(k) provider. The results of the calculation tell you if your investment choices are delivering what you need to reach your goals. Performance statistics also tell you if you’re getting results that are at least keeping up with the average. If your portfolio returns are less than market returns, or indexes, that’s a big sign that you should optimize your 401(k).</p>\r\nMost 401(k) sites will help you see your portfolio performance in two ways:\r\n<ul>\r\n \t<li><strong>At the fund level:</strong> Nearly all 401(k) plans have an Investments section. Here you can look up how the funds have performed over various time periods, including short periods (such as a month or year) and longer periods (such as five or ten years). The data is typically shown in a table like the one shown here.</li>\r\n</ul>\r\n[caption id=\"attachment_268830\" align=\"alignnone\" width=\"556\"]<img class=\"size-full wp-image-268830\" src=\"https://www.dummies.com/wp-content/uploads/retirement-investments.jpg\" alt=\"investments section\" width=\"556\" height=\"417\" /> The Investments section shows you how each of the individual investments in the plan have done.[/caption]\r\n<p class=\"article-tips tip\">If you own only the 401(k)’s target-date fund, look up your particular fund in the investments list. This might be all the information you need to know how you’re doing.</p>\r\n\r\n<ul>\r\n \t<li><strong>As a personal rate of return: </strong>401(k) providers don’t just tell you how the funds in the plan have performed. They also keep track of how you have done.</li>\r\n</ul>\r\n<p style=\"padding-left: 40px;\">What’s the difference between the funds’ returns and your returns? Keep in mind that some investors spread their portfolios over multiple funds. They might also move money from one fund to another. The timing of your contributions matter, too. The personal rate of return incorporates all these factors to arrive at your total return.</p>","blurb":"","authors":[{"authorId":33279,"name":"Matthew Krantz","slug":"matthew-krantz","description":"<b>Matt Krantz</b> is a nationally known financial journalist who specializes in investing topics. He's personal finance and management editor at <i>Investor's Business Daily.</i> He's also worked in the financial industry and covered markets and investing for <i>USA TODAY.</i> His writing on financial topics has also appeared in <i>Money</i> magazine, <i> Kiplinger's</i>, and <i>Men's Health</i>. 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When you're retired, you don't work, and yet you still need money. We're here to help you unravel that paradox, with all the info on retirement accounts, financial planning, and making ends meet.

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Retirement Retirement Planning For Dummies Cheat Sheet

Cheat Sheet / Updated 08-12-2024

No two retirement plans are completely alike. You may have heard that you’ll have a comfortable retirement if you save a certain amount of money by a certain age. “Just save a million bucks and you’re good,” such advice goes. But how long a million dollars will last in retirement is up to you, which you can figure out pretty easily. Others say all you need to do is max out your 401(k). And for most people, that’s good advice. But if your goal is to retire really early, you’ll need to get more aggressive in saving money. Perhaps you’re starting to fear retirement planning because you’re not doing something that the experts say you must do to retire. Don’t let the endless retirement advice you read and hear paralyze you. You can start a basic retirement plan in 15 minutes.

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Retirement How to Protect Your Retirement Money with Insurance

Article / Updated 08-31-2023

Protecting your retirement funds from disaster is a critical part of retirement planning. That’s where insurance comes in. You want to make sure your plan can withstand an unexpected event. Typically, health scares are the culprits in disrupting a plan, but home and auto accidents can be major expenses, too. Find your insurance declaration pages. These documents will tell you how much coverage you have, which you’ll need to evaluate your plan and make certain you’re protected. Check property and casualty coverages If you’re planning for retirement, it’s important that you have in place the right amount of automobile and homeowner's (or renter's) insurance coverage, in addition to healthcare coverage: Automobile insurance: Your car can be the source of enormous financial losses, not only to your vehicle but to someone else's vehicle and other personal property. Additionally, the financial hit from injuries can wipe out a financial plan overnight. If you’re nearing retirement age, you likely have significant assets to protect. Simply accepting the minimum coverage required by your state is likely not enough. Homeowner's (or renter's) insurance: If you own your home, it might be one of the pieces of bedrock in your financial plan. If you don’t have rent or a mortgage, you’re well ahead of those who spend 30 percent of their budget for housing. Protecting your home from a devastating fire or other catastrophe is important. Don’t count on the insurance company to verify that you have enough coverage. Renters insurance can help safeguard your personal belongings. Insurance needs remain fairly unchanged as you near retirement—you need to protect your home whether you’re 34 or 64. But one factor that you might want to modify as you age is your deductible. Your deductible is how much of a loss you’re responsible for in an accident. Let’s say your car sustains $1,500 in damage. If you’re young, you might not have the financial resources to handle a large hit and so you opt for a lower $250 deductible. The lower deductible comes at a cost, in the form of a higher monthly payment. As you age, however, you probably have a larger financial reserve. One easy way to save money on insurance is to push up your deductible to $1,000 and save on your monthly premiums. Log into your insurance provider’s site, as shown, to see whether a higher deductible is available. You’ll also want to double-check that the limits are appropriate. Get ready for a rainy day: Umbrella insurance Knowing your coverage limits on your automotive and homeowner’s insurance policies unlocks the next phase of insurance. As you age and amass more money, you have more at risk from a big accident. Not only do you have more money to lose, you have less time to recover from a financial blow. After looking at your limits on your homeowner’s and automotive plans, you might see a disconnect. If your net worth exceeds your insurance limits, that’s a red flag. If you’ve accumulated a big nest egg, you don’t want to see it evaporate if you’re caught in a massive car pileup on the freeway. Similarly, if someone gets seriously hurt on your property, lawsuit damages can be enormous. How do you protect yourself other than never leaving the house or never inviting someone over to visit? Enter umbrella insurance, which unlocks millions of dollars of extra coverage beyond what your homeowner’s and auto policies cover. Umbrella policies don’t kick in until the limits of your homeowner’s and automotive policies are exceeded. Because the umbrella policy doesn’t pay anything until your homeowner's or auto policy’s limit is topped, the rates on umbrella policies tend to be reasonable. It’s common to buy $1 million of coverage for $100 or $200 a year. It’s a small price to pay for such a large amount of protection and peace of mind. How much umbrella coverage to you need? You could figure it out yourself, but I like Kiplinger’s How Much Umbrella Insurance Do I Need? calculator. The calculator, which is shown here, helps you buy just enough umbrella insurance to safeguard you from a major financial shock. To use the calculator, start with your net worth and work backwards: Enter your net worth. Your net worth is the value of what you own minus what you owe. To err on the side of safety, consider buying an umbrella policy valued at your net worth. Yes, some of your money is protected against creditors, as you’ll see in Steps 2 and 3. But when you take the money out of protected accounts, such as retirement accounts, it’s exposed. This approach isn’t necessarily recommended, but it's a conservative way to go. Enter your home equity value. The equity value is the market value of your home minus mortgages or loans. Most states protect at least some of your home equity. The Kiplinger calculator can tabulate how much of your home equity is at risk. Enter your retirement plan balances. Enter the value of your retirement plans, including 401(k), IRA, Roth IRA, SIMPLE IRA, and SEP IRA. Assets held in these accounts are protected from creditors. Set a limit to your homeowner's and auto policies. Remember that your auto and homeowner’s liability coverage pays injury claims first. Most umbrella policy insurers will require your homeowner's liability limit to be $250,000 or higher. And you’ll likely need to have a per-person liability limit on your auto policy of $250,000 or more and $500,000 per accident. You’ll usually get the most bang from your insurance buck if you raise your auto and homeowner's liability limits to the lowest required by your umbrella policy provider. Because you buy umbrella coverage in giant $1 million chunks, you can usually boost your total protection at a lower cost with an umbrella than with homeowner's or auto policy limits. Also, to save money on premiums, see if you can get your umbrella policy from the same company that provides your auto and homeowner’s policies. It’s also easier to coordinate payments from a single company. Protect your family with life insurance Thinking about all the things that can go wrong in life is no fun. That’s why I left the chapter on insurance for the end of the book. Planning for retirement should be fun. It gets you thinking about what’s most important in life and how to enjoy what you have for as long as possible. But you need to prepare for unhappy events, too. Understanding the benefits of life insurance Life insurance isn’t for you. It’s for your beneficiaries. You buy a life insurance policy on your life with the idea that it will cover your financial role if you pass away. Life insurance is especially critical when you’re starting a family. If you’re the primary breadwinner and you die, imagine the financial hardship your family would suffer. To combat this potentially cataclysmic crisis, you can buy a term-life insurance policy. By agreeing to pay an annual premium, if you were to die in a certain amount of time (or term), the insurance company agrees to pay out a pre-determined sum of money. The premium is the fee you pay to keep the policy active. Life insurance is there only to take care of people who count on you financially, after you die. If you’re not supporting anyone financially, you probably don’t need life insurance. Also, other forms of life insurance wrap savings and investment plans in with the death benefit. These plans are called whole-life plans. Whole-life plans might make sense for a subset of people, but they’re so complicated and potentially expensive that you should consult with an expert before buying one. Or you could just buy a term-life insurance policy and keep it simple. Estimating how much life insurance you need If you decide that you need life insurance, the next question is how much coverage you require. Some excellent online calculators, such as the following, can help you make the calculations: LifeHappens Calculate Your Needs calculator: Steps you through the important questions you need to answer to decide how much life insurance coverage you need. As you can see in Figure 16-8, the site shows you the two variables that determine how much money your dependents would need if you died and in the future. The site helps you measure both. LifeHappens Human Life Calculator: Puts a price tag on your existence by showing how much of a financial blow your family would suffer if you died today. Putting a price tag on your life is another way to think about your life insurance needs, as you can see in the sidebar, “What’s a Life Worth?” The calculator is an eye-opening tabulation of what a human life is worth. Bankrate Life Insurance Calculator: Looks at the question of how much life insurance you need in a slightly different way. Most life insurance calculators differ in their approach, so it’s a good idea to run your numbers through a few. Don’t fixate too much on how much life insurance you need. The biggest question is whether or not you need it. And if you do need it, don’t waste any time. Just buy it. An easy rule-of-thumb on how much you and your spouse collectively need is to buy? You’ll want a policy with a payout that’s 10 times your combined household income. Buying life insurance Talk about a tough sell. How would you like to buy something that costs you money every year, doesn't benefit you personally, and pays out only if you die? Not exactly uplifting. That’s why the moment someone hears that you’re interested in buying life insurance, sellers will come out of the woodwork to sell you a policy. Just search for life insurance online and you'll get life insurance ads on your screen for months. If you do decide that you’re ready to buy a policy, first check with the carrier that provides your auto, homeowner’s, or umbrella coverage. Most also sell life insurance and provide a multi-policy discount. In addition, online insurance forums, such as LendingTree.com and SelectQuote, will shop your insurance needs against a network of bidders. You can then compare coverage and prices to get the best combination for you.

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Retirement RRSPs & TFSAs For Canadians For Dummies Cheat Sheet

Cheat Sheet / Updated 04-14-2023

Inflation has become a big part of our lives lately. You need help to quickly determine just how much of a bite inflation takes out of, or will take out of, your hard-earned money, especially when you need precise and tailored calculations. This Cheat Sheet summarizes some important factors to keep in mind when you're considering retirement plans like Registered Retirement Savings Plans (RRSPs) and Tax-Free Savings Accounts (TFSAs).

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Retirement 401(k)s For Dummies Cheat Sheet

Cheat Sheet / Updated 12-07-2022

Knowing how to build your 401(k) retirement plan, devising investment strategies, and making the most of your plan can all help to financially secure your path to retirement. During economic difficulties, you may be tempted to tap into your 401(k) funds, but most often, you're much better off financially if you can leave the funds alone. And your 401(k) management duties don't end when you retire; you still need to invest and spend wisely.

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Retirement 401(k)s and IRAs For Dummies Cheat Sheet

Cheat Sheet / Updated 10-01-2021

When you’re ready to start setting aside (or withdrawing) money for your retirement — whenever that might be — take a look at the valuable benefits of each of these types of retirement plans. Consider investment recommendations including bundling, pre-tax contributions, and how life circumstances may change your opportunities.

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Retirement How to Manage Your Pension

Article / Updated 03-04-2020

Keeping track of your pension, which is important for planning your retirement, isn’t as easy as logging onto your online brokerage. Most companies are eager to get out of the pension business, so they farm the entire thing out to firms that specialize in pensions, such as Willis Towers Watson. If you need to call for pension help, you'll probably be talking to people who work for the firm your employer hired to handle the pension plan. However, the site operated by the pension firm will usually look like it’s run by your employer. How to use online tools Getting logged into your company’s pension plan usually takes a bit of a work. You might need to call your employer’s human resources department. Then, if your employer has outsourced their pension plan management, you'll probably be handed off to the company running the pension plan. Most pension systems will allow you to look at the following information: Pension estimate: By entering your dates of employment, age, and beneficiary information, the site will tell you the payment you can expect when you retire, as shown in the following figure. As you can see in this example, the single-life annuity results in the largest monthly payout of $641.39. When you add a 50 percent survivor annuity, you’re looking at a monthly payment of $603.54. The survivor annuity payment is smaller than the single-life payment because the payments are likely to last for a longer period of time. Why? When the pensioner who worked at the company dies, a payout continues to the surviving spouse, who gets only half the payment, just $301.77. Lump sum calculator: The pension site should also show your lump sum payment if taken now versus later. This information will help you decide which choice to make. Scenario analysis: Pensions are complicated, with many variables affecting your payout amount. To help you understand the complexities, most pension sites offer scenario analyzers. You enter different retirement ages and whether or not your spouse will get benefits. The scenario analysis calculator then shows how these different choices affect your payout. You don’t have to be retired to take money out of a pension. If you leave a company, you can activate monthly payments or take a lump sum. However, your payments will be reduced if you start taking them before reaching full retirement age. Also know that if you take a lump sum payout and don’t roll it over into another retirement account, you might trigger a nasty tax surprise. How to calculate the value of a lump sum payment One of the trickier decisions with pensions is whether you should take monthly payments or the lump sum. The pension's website can help you make this decision. Although your decision is final, a workaround exists. You can create your own pension, in a way, by using your lump sum payout to buy an annuity. By using both your pension provider’s site and an annuity pricing site, you can easily put some numbers around this complex decision. Here’s how: 1. Use the pension's online tool to get your lump sum payout. Let’s say a 48-year-old worker left a company and wants to take her pension with her. As shown in the figure, her lump sum payout is $70,897.10. The monthly payout amount is $338.46 for a single-life annuity and $337.62 for a ten-year certain and continuous annuity. 2. Go to an annuity pricing site, such as www.immediateannuities.com and do the following: a. Enter the lump sum information. b. Enter your pension details and select the immediate payment option. For the amount to invest, enter the lump sum payout from your pension site. I entered $70,897.10. 3. Compare the monthly payouts. As you can see in the following figure, the monthly payout from the pension plan is higher than what our retiree can buy in the open annuity market. Using the lump sum amount, the payout from the privately bought annuity is $280 for a single life, which is 17 percent less than the pension payout. Similarly, the pension payout with the ten-year certain option is $675 a month. But with the annuity provider, it’s 6 percent less, or $637 a month. 4. Get another estimate. You wouldn't get only one medical opinion for a serious health condition, would you? The same is true for deciding what to do with a pension. Many online brokerages and mutual fund companies, such as Vanguard and Fidelity, tell you what size payment you’d get in exchange for a lump sum. For information on annuities, go to Vanguard's site, Fidelity's site, and Schwab’s annuity site (see the following figure). It’s typical for the payouts from a pension plan to be higher than what you can buy on your own from an annuity. An annuity has fees whereas an employer-sponsored pension doesn't. However, don’t make your decision solely on the size of the lump sum. If you’re young, you could easily invest the lump sum, and then, years later when you’re looking to retire, buy an annuity with the now-larger amount of money. Rolling over a pension Never assume you’re trapped in a pension. And that’s a good thing because many workers tend to not stay at the same job for more than five years. When you leave a job, you can take the pension with you by rolling it over. The rules around rolling over a pension are strict. Even a small mistake can make the lump sum you take from your pension a taxable event. You must rollover the pension into a qualified retirement plan, which for most people means a rollover IRA. Depending on how long you worked at the company, a rollover is likely a good option. You might consider rolling over your pension if you Know the pension won’t grow: Check the pension's documentation. Many pensions provide only a modest cost-of-living annual adjustment, which is just the inflation rate. If you put the money into a diversified portfolio of stocks and bonds, your portfolio will likely grow much faster than inflation. Don’t expect to retire in many years: The longer the amount of time you have to put your money to work, the better. If you don’t plan to retire in ten or more years, you still have time to put your portfolio into areas that are likely to grow faster. Have other forms of guaranteed income: If you have other options for a steady cash flow, it makes sense to try to get a better return from your pension assets. If you don’t have another form of guaranteed income, you can buy one, such as an annuity, by using other savings. How do you conduct a rollover from your pension to a qualified plan? The steps are straightforward: 1. Set up a rollover IRA. All the major online brokerages and mutual fund companies can help you with this task. 2. Initiate your distribution with your pension provider. Most pension providers’ sites allow you to begin the distribution process. You’ll need to take the lump sum distribution method. The pension provider will mail you paperwork to fill out. 3. Fill out the paperwork from the pension provider. Your spouse will need to sign a benefit waiver for you to get the lump sum. 4. Make sure the check is made out to the company you’re rolling into. This step is important. The pension lump sum amount must be made out to the financial firm where you have your rollover IRA. The check should not be made out to you. Depositing the lump sum and then immediately writing a check to the rollover IRA provider will not work. The Internal Revenue Service will think you took the money and want to tax it.

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Retirement How to Take Money Out of Your IRA

Article / Updated 03-04-2020

When you turn 70-1/2, you’re no longer allowed to contribute to a traditional IRA. You can contribute to a Roth IRA at any age as long as you have earned income below limits dictated by the IRS. Remember that earned income is money you make from reportable income-producing activities—in other words, a paying job. Gearing up to take money out of your IRA requires a change in mindset. Fortunately, your IRA provider can be of help here, too. Getting money out early: 72(t) distributions Taking money out of a traditional IRA before you turn 59-1/2 is generally a no-no with retirement accounts because it triggers a bad tax day. You owe not only the taxes on the money you took out but also a 10 percent early withdrawal penalty—unless you know the 72(t) trick. This rule is named after an arcane section of the IRS code that says you can take money out without a 10 percent penalty if you do so in “substantially equal periodic payments.” You must take out the distributions, in equal amounts, for at least five years or until you turn 59-1/2. You can calculate how much money you must take out in three ways: the required minimum distribution method, the fixed amortization method, and the fixed annuitization method. As you can guess from their names, the calculations are complicated. If you’re interested in a 72(t) withdrawal, your IRA provider can help. You can take money out of an IRA before you turn 59-1/2 without paying the 10 percent penalty in a few other ways, without invoking the 72(t). A big exception for the 10 percent penalty is when you’re permanently or completely disabled. In that case, you can take money out of both a traditional IRA and a Roth IRA. Also, if you die, your beneficiary can take withdrawals. Taking your required minimum distribution When you blow out a cake with 70 candles, know that in six months you’ll be in for a big change with your traditional IRA. That’s when Uncle Sam says it’s time for your required minimum distribution (RMD). It must be taken out before April 1 of the year after you turn 70-1/2. The RMD is calculated using a complicated formula based on your life expectancy. You must take your RMD from all of your traditional IRAs. This requirement is another reason to have your retirement money in one place; you’ll deal with just one annual check. As part of their service, most IRA providers will calculate your RMD. Vanguard shows the calculation in its RMD calculator, shown in the figure and available. Don’t ignore the RMD. If you don’t withdraw the RMD and pay the tax, you’ll owe a 50 percent penalty tax on the money you should have withdrawn. Yes, half will be gone in taxes. Most IRA providers calculate your RMD for you and even withhold some of the tax due from what you’re paid. IRA providers will even deposit the money into your account electronically — almost like a paycheck. Setting up a beneficiary Your retirement funds are there for you and your spouse, if you have one, or other beneficiary to enjoy later in life. Make sure that your IRA provider knows who to give the money to if you die before your beneficiary. Yes, you could do this in a will, but it’s a better idea to set up a beneficiary. Your beneficiary instructions will take precedence over a will. When you die, the IRA provider knows to shift the ownership of the IRA to your beneficiary. Listing beneficiaries on IRA accounts is so important that many IRA providers won’t let you fund an account until you choose a beneficiary. If you have a large or complicated estate or unusual wishes for where your money should go when you die, you might want to create a trust. A trust is a legal entity that can take ownership of assets and follow your instructions in distributing them. Consult with an estate-planning attorney or pick up Estate & Trust Administration For Dummies, 2nd Edition, by Margaret Munro and Kathyrn Murphy (Wiley). A word about inherited IRAs Don’t keep your IRA a secret from the beneficiary. After you die and your IRA passes to your beneficiary, new rules kick in. The beneficiary will need to contact the IRA provider and let them know you’re dead. Most IRA providers require a death certificate. The rules surrounding inherited IRAs vary based on whether or not the IRA is inherited by a spouse. If spouses inherit an IRA, they have a choice on how to take it over: Make it their own: Spouses can choose to take over the IRA in their own name. This allows spouses to contribute or take distributions as if it were theirs in the first place. Turn it into an inherited IRA: If you go this route, you’ll need to follow rules set out by the IRS, which have many options. A beneficiary who isn’t a spouse has only one avenue: transferring the IRA into an inherited IRA. Again, your IRA provider will help with the details. If you’d like to read more about how inherited IRAs are handled, check out Vanguard's description. Schwab shows all the inherited IRA rules, too.

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Retirement How to Manage Your IRA Contributions

Article / Updated 03-04-2020

Getting money into your IRA is where the magic begins. You can’t build a portfolio until a source of funds exists. IRAs give you not only big leeway in what investments you buy but also lots of control over how you buy those investments. Set up IRA deposits When you’re talking about putting money aside that you can’t touch for decades, it’s easy to understand why lots of people put off retirement savings. Let’s face it, blowing $800 on a new smartphone is more immediately satisfying than putting $800 in an IRA. IRA providers know this, and go out of their way to make it easy for you to get money into your account. You can make ongoing contributions to your IRA in two main ways: One-time contribution: The IRA provider lets you connect multiple checking and savings accounts to your retirement account. You can then tell the provider to digitally pull money from one or more of those accounts as a contribution. Vanguard’s one-time contribution screen, shown in Figure 8-5, asks you to choose the investment you want the money to go into. It also tracks your annual contribution to date. Automatic contribution: You can also tell your IRA provider to take money from a checking or savings account, say every month or quarter. This method puts your retirement plan on autopilot. It’s up to you to make sure your contributions meet the requirements and don’t exceed limits. If you’re covered by a retirement plan at work, the IRS spells out whether you can deduct your IRA contributions. If you make too much money, the deducible amount of your contribution is reduced or eliminated. In a nutshell, if you made more than $74,000 as a single taxpayer or $123,000 married filing jointly and are covered by a plan at work, you can’t deduct IRA contributions. Roll over Beethoven: IRA rollovers Another way to fund an IRA is a rollover. You might opt to rollover your old 401(k) from a previous place of employment, which can be a good idea if your old 401(k) has high fees or poor investment choices. You can rollover funds also from one IRA to another, although that process is usually called a transfer. Generally, it's best to keep your retirement accounts in as few places as possible. Consolidating your retirement funds with one IRA provider helps you qualify for lower-priced investments and makes it easier to keep track of your money. A rollover involves three steps: Fill out your IRA provider's rollover form. The form is usually short, asking for the account number and the provider holding the funds now. You’ll also be asked if you’d like to roll the funds into a new IRA or an existing one. Notify the 401(k) or IRA provider you’re moving from. Tell them you’re moving the money and where you're moving it. The provider will cut a check for the money. Make sure the check is made out to the firm where the money is going, not to you. If the money goes to you, the IRS might think you took a distribution and hit you with a tax bill. Wait. A rollover can take a few weeks. Your new IRA provider will let you know when the process has been completed. Fund an IRA with a Roth conversion With traditional IRAs, you get a tax break now. With a Roth IRA, you pay now but take out the money later free and clear. Guessing which will be best for you is difficult. In general, a Roth is a good idea if you think your current tax rate is lower than it will be when you’re retired. Roth IRAs are preferable also if you think you might need to pull the money out sooner than in retirement, or if you think you won’t need the money and want to leave it for a spouse or an heir. Traditional IRAs require you to take money out when you turn 70-1/2. With a Roth, you can leave the money in. Given all the guesswork in choosing a Roth IRA versus a traditional IRA, you might change your mind about the kind of IRA you want. That’s where a Roth conversion comes in. You can turn a traditional IRA into a Roth IRA if you pay the taxes now. Converting a traditional IRA to a Roth can make sense. It’s also a back door way to open a Roth for people who earn too much to fund a Roth. A Roth conversion has several drawbacks, however. You must wait at least five years after a conversion to take money out of a Roth. The conversion also triggers a tax event — you’ll have a tax bill on those tax-deferred contributions. Does a Roth conversion make sense for you? To answer that question, you can use a variety of online tools, including the following: Schwab IRA Conversion Calculator: This tool helps you think about all the important variables that determine whether or not you should convert to a Roth. These variables include the amount of money you’d like to convert and your taxable income. CalcXML’s Roth Conversion Calculator: This tool does all the math to see whether a Roth conversion makes sense. The calculator considers the size of the conversion as well as your age and income needs.

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Retirement How to Get Online with Your IRA Provider

Article / Updated 03-04-2020

If you’re not online with your IRA provider, it’s time you were. If your IRA provider is keeping up with industry trends, you’ll be amazed at the digital resources available to you. You just need to know what to look for. It might seem tempting to skip the process of registering for online access of your IRA account. If you do that, though, you’ll seriously miss out. Yes, you could manage your IRA over the phone and through the mail. But even if you’re a hands-off investor, you’re much better off doing everything online. Be sure you know how to get online access to your 401(k)as well. How to open your IRA account Opening an IRA varies based on the provider, but you can expect a basic script similar to the following, which is the way Vanguard does it: Go to the IRA provider's website and find the button for opening an account. IRA providers make this button easy to find. On most sites, it's in the upper-right corner of the screen. Choose a new account or a rollover. Remember, you can always open a brand new IRA account if you’re just getting started. But if you’ve been saving for retirement somewhere else, you can rollover, or transfer, money from a 401(k), another IRA, or sometimes even a pension. Show me the money. The first thing the IRA provider will want to know is how you’ll fund the account. You can electronically move money from a checking or savings account. You can also rollover from another plan or transfer securities you own elsewhere. If you're funding your account through your bank, you need your bank account information. Do one of the following: If you already have another account with the IRA provider: You might have an older account with the IRA provider. If you do, sign in. By opening the new IRA with your existing login information, you'll avoid typing lots of information all over again. It’s also easier to manage your accounts if they’re associated with the same username. If you’re opening a first account with the IRA provider: Be prepared to answer a bunch of questions. You’ll need to enter information about yourself, including a Social Security number and address. Choose the type of account: You need to know the type of account you want to open. You'll be asked if the account is for retirement, general savings, or education (as shown in Figure 8-1). If you choose a retirement account, you’ll be asked if you want a traditional IRA, Roth IRA, SIMPLE IRA, or SEP IRA. Answer questions, set up funding, and e-sign. You’ll be asked to enter the amount of your initial investment. If you’re opening an account with this IRA provider for the first time, you’ll also need to enter a username and password for online access. Wait. Some IRA providers will open your account immediately if everything you entered checks out. Others, such as Vanguard, confirm your information, which can take a day or two. Log in and look around The long road to setting up your IRA is over and you're now an IRA owner. How cool is that? Next, it’s time to see what you can find on the IRA provider’s site. The list is long: Account information: All IRA sites can tell you how much is in your account (your balance) and your investments, or Account activity: Any time you put money into (contribute to), your IRA or take money out of (withdraw from), your IRA, the transaction is recorded. Your account activity shows the comings and goings of the money in your account. Money can come into or go out of your account, even if you’re not putting it in or taking it out. Is your long-lost rich uncle putting money into your IRA? Nope. If you own stock in a company that makes a profit beyond what it needs, the company might pay you, the investor. These payments are called dividends and appear in your account activity. What about money coming out? Fees. The IRA provider might take money out of your account for account-servicing costs. If you own mutual funds, the (sometimes large) fees they charge won’t appear in the account activity listing. Mutual fund fees are taken out of the fund itself. Performance: Remember getting a report card when you were a kid? Your IRA's report card is its performance tracking. Here you see how much your IRA is growing or shrinking during the year and over the long term. Asset mix: Your asset mix, or asset allocation, is the combination of asset classes in your portfolio, such as stocks and bonds. The more stocks in your portfolio, the riskier your portfolio but the more it's likely to grow in the long term. Understand your portfolio holdings If you want to dig deeper into what you own in your IRA, look for an area called Holdings. In this section, you’ll find the following important attributes of the investments in your account: Summary: Here you’ll find the name of each investment you own and its symbol. Mutual funds and other investment funds are identified by a multi-character abbreviation, or symbol. This symbol is useful if you want to look the fund up using a third-party site. Returns: The amount of money you make or lose from an investment is more than how much its price has changed. It’s also a tally of the dividends paid. The Returns section adds all this together. You can find your return on an investment during several time periods, such as one, three, five, and ten years. Cost basis: Your cost basis of an investment is how much you paid to buy it. If you paid $100 for a share of a mutual fund that’s now worth $110 a share, your cost basis is $100. If you sell the mutual fund for $110 a share, you have a realized capital gain, or profit, of $10. If you don’t sell the mutual fund but hold it, you have an unrealized capital gain of $10. Your IRA provider tracks capital gains for you. Tracking your capital gains is a big deal with taxable accounts but not with tax-deferred ones such as traditional IRAs. With a taxable account, you pay taxes on only your realized gains. But with an IRA, your entire withdrawal is taxable—even your cost basis because it hasn’t been taxed yet.

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Retirement How to Get Online Access to Your 401(k)

Article / Updated 03-04-2020

Many employers tout their 401(k) plans as a job perk. But, typically, you're on your own when it comes to setting up online access. In some ways, this situation is symbolic of how the responsibility for retirement planning has shifted to employees. Not only do employers want to scale back how much they contribute to your retirement, many don’t even want to help you manage the account. How to register for 401(k) access Most 401(k)s are established on paper. The paperwork you sign when you join a company opens the account and gives the 401(k) plan administrator the right to take money out of your paycheck. But you can’t do much with the account until you register for online assess with the 401(k) plan site. After that, you can see your balances, make changes, and evaluate how you’re doing. You might be surprised at some of the online tools you can pick up right from your 401(k) plan provider. Nearly all 401(k) sites offer useful calculators and information to help you better prepare for retirement. What kicks off the process of setting up 401(k) account access? Ironically, it’s probably snail mail. At some point after starting a job or signing up for a 401(k), you should get a letter in the mail from your 401(k) administrator with your summary plan description. This document, similar to the one shown, lets you know that the account is established and that you can set up online access. If you look closely, you’ll see a website address in the upper-right corner of the summary plan description in the figure. In this example, it’s www.voyaretirementplans.com. From here, you’ll want to follow these steps to register: Click the Register Now button. Just about all 401(k) sites put the button just below the log-in section, as you can see in this figure for the Voya example. Choose an identification method. Sites usually ask for either your personal identification number (PIN) or your Social Security number and date of birth. The PIN would have been sent to you in the mail. If you didn’t get a PIN, go with door #2, because you know your Social Security and birthday. Create your log-in information. You are asked to choose a username and password. Try to choose something difficult to guess—or better yet, use a password manager. Passwords are getting more complicated in an effort to keep hackers out. Choose a password that’s not a real word, and use a string of symbols, numbers, and uppercase and lowercase letters. Try to come up with something only you will know. For example, suppose you’re a Star Wars fan. Rather than using starwars as a password, use MT4ceBWY. (Get it? May the Force be with you.) Get to know your 401(k) tools The beauty of 401(k) plans is their hands-off nature. If you’re like many 401(k) investors, after you sign up for the plan, you don't want to think about it—and you certainly don't want to do is dig around the various features of the 401(k) provider’s website. But you might be surprised at some of the online tools you can pick up right from your 401(k) plan provider. Nearly all 401(k) sites offer useful calculators and information to help you better prepare for retirement. Using the tools on your 401(k) plan provider’s site is helpful because you already have log-in information with them, and many of the tools can be personalized because your details are already there. A few helpful tools to look for on your 401(k) plan provider’s site follow: Calculators: Most 401(k) providers will use your account details as inputs for calculators. You’ll likely find a contribution calculator that will tell you if you’re putting enough in your 401(k) to meet your full-year contribution goal. This tool is useful if you want to max out your 401(k), putting in the most legally allowed. The tool will also tell you what percentage you should take out of your paycheck to hit your annual contribution target. Also look for a retirement overview calculator. This tool helps you see how much money you should have when you retire based on your savings rate, income needs, and rate of return. Lastly, 401(k) providers offer retirement income estimate calculators. These tools look at how much you’re saving and your expected returns, and estimate how much income you might expect in retirement. Investing education: You’ll likely find useful articles and videos to coach you on the importance of diversification and asset allocation. You might also find information on related topics such as estate planning. Risk questionnaires: Some 401(k) sites feature basic questionnaires that will help you see how much risk you can handle. You’ll be asked how much you know about investing, how much volatility you can handle, and your age. Some 401(k)-planning sites use this information, paired with what the plan administrator already knows about you, to offer a possible asset allocation, as shown. Your asset allocation is the mix of asset classes expected to give you the best return for your level of risk. Typically, your appetite for risk is a function of how much volatility, or ups and downs in portfolio value, you can endure. For example, suppose that the target-date fund for your retirement year suggests a middle-of-the-road portfolio of 60 percent stocks and 40 percent bonds. But after taking the questionnaire, the 401(k) provider’s site might suggest a more aggressive portfolio with 70 percent stocks and 30 percent bonds. Check out your 401(k) performance Before you think about making your 401(k) work better for you, it’s wise to see how it’s doing so far. 401(k) provider sites help you track how much return you’re getting on your money. Measuring investment performance is important and something you should count on from your 401(k) provider. The results of the calculation tell you if your investment choices are delivering what you need to reach your goals. Performance statistics also tell you if you’re getting results that are at least keeping up with the average. If your portfolio returns are less than market returns, or indexes, that’s a big sign that you should optimize your 401(k). Most 401(k) sites will help you see your portfolio performance in two ways: At the fund level: Nearly all 401(k) plans have an Investments section. Here you can look up how the funds have performed over various time periods, including short periods (such as a month or year) and longer periods (such as five or ten years). The data is typically shown in a table like the one shown here. If you own only the 401(k)’s target-date fund, look up your particular fund in the investments list. This might be all the information you need to know how you’re doing. As a personal rate of return: 401(k) providers don’t just tell you how the funds in the plan have performed. They also keep track of how you have done. What’s the difference between the funds’ returns and your returns? Keep in mind that some investors spread their portfolios over multiple funds. They might also move money from one fund to another. The timing of your contributions matter, too. The personal rate of return incorporates all these factors to arrive at your total return.

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