Hey, you hit the big 50 – thinking about retirement yet? You can now make what’s known as catch-up contributions. Defined and governed by the IRS, your maximum annual contributions increase for both a traditional 401(k) or an IRA. The idea is to make sure you can save more and make up for years you potentially didn’t save.
This becomes especially important if you want to retire early. The rule of 55 gives you the chance to withdraw funds from an employee-sponsored 401(k) plan and others, without incurring a penalty. You’ll have to leave your job before you turn 55 and your plan has to allow these types of withdrawals.
Not quite 60 but almost there! At this milestone, your traditional IRAs and workplace retirement plans enter the full picture. You can now withdraw from them without incurring any penalties.
Up until now, there were a lot of stipulations and factors to consider before withdrawing money. Stop and take inventory of where you are in your retirement planning. There is likely still a significant tax impact from your early withdrawals. Check with a financial professional if an early retirement is right for you
This is the first time Social Security enters the picture. Spousal Social Security becomes available, meaning that if your spouse or ex-spouse of at least 10 years passed away, you can claim a Social Security Survivor benefit.
Social Security is now officially on the table for you – BUT benefits might be reduced if taken before you reach your full retirement age and if you keep working. For more on eligibility and other important factors, visit
Health care is an important piece of the puzzle in retirement. An employer sponsored health care plan might have left you without health care if you already retired. At 65, Medicare eligibility begins and you can enroll three months before you hit 65. If you already collect Social Security benefits, you are automatically enrolled. For more information about Medicare enrollment, visit
You’ve reached full retirement age! Your actual retirement date depends on a sliding scale that you can find here.
No more reason to wait. At 70, waiting to withdraw Social Security doesn't make sense. Each year you opt to wait to withdraw benefits, your benefit increases by 8 percent. At 70 you’ll have maxed out.
This is where RMDs or Required Minimum Distributions come in. To ensure money is eventually taxed, the IRS requires annual withdrawals from tax-deferred accounts as of a designated age. RMDs are withdrawn each year and are included as taxable income along with any other income generated in retirement, except for any income that was previously taxed. You are required to take out RMDs from your workplace retirement plans. The laws around RMDs recently changed with SECURE 2.0 and you can find more information on what that means here.
You’ve made it! This timeline is only a snapshot of what your retirement journey might look like. Click here for more resources on how to best plan for retirement income and how 91制片厂 can be part of your journey.
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Surrender charges may apply to excess withdrawals that the annual free withdrawal available under the contract. You may be subject to a 10% federal penalty if you make withdrawals before age 59 ½.
Under current tax law, the Internal Revenue Code already provides tax-deferral to qualified money, so there is no additional tax benefit obtained by funding a qualified contract, such as an IRA, with an annuity; consider the other benefits provided by an annuity, such as lifetime income and a Death Benefit. Indexed annuities are not stock market investments and do not directly participate in any stock or equity investments. Market indices may not include dividends paid on the underlying stocks, and therefore may not reflect the total return of the underlying stocks; neither an index nor any market-indexed annuity is comparable to a direct investment in the equity markets.
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