Retirement
Learn how retirement accounts work, including tax treatment, contribution limits, income rules, and key requirements that affect your long-term plan.
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Frequently Asked Questions
How much money do I need to retire?
There’s no single number. It depends on your lifestyle, expenses, and income sources. A common starting point is replacing 70–80% of your pre-retirement income, adjusted for inflation.
When can I realistically retire?
Retirement isn’t about age — it’s about cash flow. You can retire when your investments, Social Security, and other income can cover your expenses long term.
How much should I be saving for retirement each year?
Many models suggest saving 10–15% of your income over your working years, including employer contributions. Starting earlier reduces the amount you need to save later.
Where are the best places to retire?
Employer plans like a 401(k) (especially with a match), then IRAs, followed by taxable brokerage accounts. The right mix depends on taxes, income, and flexibility needs.
How does Social Security fit into retirement?
Social Security is meant to supplement, not fully replace income. Your benefit depends on earnings history and when you claim — claiming later generally increases monthly payments.
What are the biggest mistakes people make before retiring?
Underestimating expenses, ignoring taxes and healthcare costs, claiming Social Security too early, and not having a withdrawal strategy.
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Retirement Key Terms
The key terms you need to understand retirement planning and investing
Contribution Limit
The maximum amount you can add to a retirement account each year.
Annual Return
The percentage gain or loss an investment earns over a one-year period.
Compound Interest
Money earning returns on both your original amount and past growth.
Tax-Deferred Growth
Investment growth that isn’t taxed until you withdraw the money in retirement.
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