Savings Rate 101: What Is Savings Rate and How to Calculate it
There are few elements of a financial plan more important than your savings rate. Get it wrong, and you’ll either be retiring late or running out of money early. Get it right,
There are few elements of a financial plan more important than your savings rate. Get it wrong, and you’ll either be retiring late or running out of money early. Get it right,
If retirement prep hasn’t crossed your mind because it feels so far away, then this is the post for you. For many people, planning for retirement feels like a long way away
This is part three of a five-part series on Retirement Planning. Part 1: Years to RetirementPart 2: Savings RatePart 3: InflationPart 4: Social SecurityPart 5: Large Asset Ownership Never in my life
Hit the lottery! That’s the answer you’ll most commonly get when you ask just about anyone how to retire early. Sure, it’s one of many ways to make a million dollars and
This is part five of a five-part series on Retirement Planning. Part 1: Years to RetirementPart 2: Savings RatePart 3: InflationPart 4: Social SecurityPart 5: Large Asset Ownership I have been surprised
This is part four of a five-part series on Retirement Planning. Part 1: Years to RetirementPart 2: Savings RatePart 3: InflationPart 4: Social SecurityPart 5: Large Asset Ownership Social security has always
This is part two of a five-part series on Retirement Planning. Part 1: Years to RetirementPart 2: Savings RatePart 3: InflationPart 4: Social SecurityPart 5: Large Asset Ownership I vividly remember a
This is part one of a five-part series on Retirement Planning. Part 1: Years to RetirementPart 2: Savings RatePart 3: InflationPart 4: Social SecurityPart 5: Large Asset Ownership I was blessed to
Many Americans dream of spending a few, if not most, of their retirement years in places other than where they’ve lived or worked throughout most of their lives. That is especially the
Answering retirement questions and planning for your retirement can seem complicated, time-consuming, and overwhelming. Traditionally, most Americans have had two options: paying around $2,000 to get a financial plan from a fee-for-service