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Social Security at Risk: 2033 Deadline and What to Do
In this issue:
- Latest in Retirement Savings & Personal Finance: U.S. Household Debt Breakdown, Student Loan Reform, Private Equity & Crypto in 401(k)s
- Social Security at Risk: 2033 Deadline and What to Do
- Tools & Tips: Credit Card Balance Transfer Optimizer
- Market Overview
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Chasing Income with Those High Yield ETFs. Smart or Misleading?
In this issue:
- Latest in Retirement Savings & Personal Finance: Missed Car Loan at a Record Level, Employment Numbers Revised Down Sharply, 31% of Retirees Considering Returning to Work
- Chasing Income with Those High Yield ETFs. Smart or Misleading?
- Tools & Tips: ULTY or MSTY Dividend Calculators
- Market Overview
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The Most Reliable Retirement Savings: Why $1.8 Million is a Popular Lie
In this issue:
- Latest in Retirement Savings & Personal Finance: Retirement Savings Still Fall Short, Sluggish Home Sales & The Most Overvalued Stock Market
- The Most Reliable Retirement Savings Needed: Why $1.8 Million is a Popular Lie
- Tools & Tips: Retirement Spending Calculator Based on a Portfolio, Fund, or Stock
- Market Overview
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The Most Reliable Retirement Savings Amount You Need in 2025
You’ve probably come across those big retirement numbers that show up in media or surveys. Most of them sound a lot higher than what many people can actually save. Here are some popular ones: In this article, we will walk you through to show how an American with median income needs far less than the above headline numbers to retire at a similar quality life before retirement. A simple retirement spending formula is to utilize so called 4% wtihdrawal rule: the conventional wisdom goes that if you manage to withdraw 4% every year in a conservative investment portfolio (such as 70% in bonds and 30% in stocks), you probably will end up being able to extend your capital beyond 25 years: remember spending 4% every year in an account without much investment gain will deplete the account completely in 25 years (100%/4%=25). Financiall planners often use this 4% as a rule of thumb to gauge how much retirement income you need. Or put it another way, if you need to spend $10,000 a year, you would need to save $10,000 * 25 =$250,000 income before the retirement. So here are some numbers we can play with a typical American of 65 year old with median income: According to BLS data summarized by SmartAsset, full‑time workers aged 65+ earn a median of roughly $60,268 per year. Financial planners generally advise replacing 75%–85% of pre‑retirement income; Schwab specifically recommends about 80%. That puts your retirement income target at about $48,000 annually. Meanwhile, the average newly retired worker collects about $2,000 per month in Social Security, or $24,000 per year, as of 2025. That equates to Social Security covering nearly half your income goal, leaving a gap of $24,000 per year. Under the 4% safe withdrawal rule, you’d need only $24,000 * 25 = $600,000 (as 100%/4%=25) in savings to generate that supplemental income. This is far less than the headline figures! Why $600K Can Be Enough That’s not to say larger balances are useless. But if you can invest $600K conservatively and consistently earn about 4% after inflation, that portfolio should support a stable $24,000 annual withdrawal. It could last decade, and you can still manage to leave something over at the end. This amount also reduces pressure to chase high‑risk strategies during market fluctuations. In comparison, obsessing over a $1.8 million goal may mislead you into delaying retirement unnecessarily or taking undue risks. Why Realistic Targets Matter — Both Psychologically and Economically Setting an overly ambitious savings target like $1.8 million can create anxiety, discouragement, or inaction. Many people in their 50s or 60s with $300K–$400K saved may feel they’ve already failed, even if they are on track for a comfortable retirement based on income replacement. That psychological burden can erode confidence and planning energy. Economically, inflating your savings goal can steer you toward riskier investments or unnecessary financial austerity in your productive years. By contrast, a realistic target tied to your actual needs lets you invest steadily, spend reasonably now, and retire with clarity. It also makes you to focus on your investment portfolio risk, something you can manage with tools like MyPlanIQ’s Fixed‑Income and Tactical Portfolios, which aim for low‑volatility, inflation‑beating performance for retirement savings. Individuals Vary Of course, the above is just a ‘typical’ American. For all of us, we are anything but an exact typical. For people who have higher income, you can easily see that your retirement savings needed for a comfortable retirement life can double or even triple (for a person with $180,000 annual compensation before retirement, for example). Of course for such a person with $180,000 before retirement, she or he indeed might need 3*600,000 or $1.8m savings! The point is, everyone should take time to run some numbers using the basic rule of thumb discussed in this article to understand their own situation. Headline figures are just headlines. They meant to grab your attention. But the real story is always in the details.
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The Best Age (62, 67, or 70) to Claim Your Social Security Benefits
In this issue:
- Latest in Retirement Savings & Personal Finance: Social Security Benefit Tax in One Big Beautiful Bill, The Worst US Treasury Bond Returns in History!
- The Best Age (62, 67, or 70) to Claim Your Social Security Benefits
- Tools & Tips: Social Security Benefit Claim Age Calculator
- Market Overview
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Key Retirement Ages: Essential Milestones for 401(k), IRA, Solo 401(k), SEP IRA, Social Security & Medicare
A cheat sheet for the important milestone ages such as Rule of 55, Catch-up Contributions, Medicare age,…






