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ARTICLES

Retirement Community Report

Where are the Baby Boomers Going Now

Baby Boomer Retirement Options

How to Measure Success

Baby Boomer Hearing Loss Is Costing Millions

How To Take Advantage of Medicare Part D

When An Adult Child Becomes The Parent

Top 10 Tips For Traveling By Air With An Elderly Parent

Should Grandma Come Live With You?

Who Is Going to Take Care of Mom and Dad

Baby Boomers Heading South in Droves

Getting Loved Ones to Accept Assisted Living

Preventing Falls in the Elderly

Back to Fitness" Web Site Targets Baby Boomers

New Preventive Services From Medicare

Medicare and Your Health

Americans Can Now Finance Homes in Mexico

Uruguay Joins Boomers Abroad Expatriate Destinations

Proposals To Change Social Security Benefits

How to Save Money on Gas

5 Things to do to Grow Younger in 2006

How to Choose a Nursing Home

Medication and Older Adults

How Are Social Security Benefits Calculated?

Financial Planning and Long Term Care Insurance

The Health Colonel Voted Best Trainer of 2005

AGING AND YOUR EYES

Strategies on Paying for Nursing Home Care and Medicaid

Parent Becomming Forgetful Trading Places

The Estate Plan You Wish Your Parents Had

Caring For Dependent Relatives

Ten Warning Signs of Alzheimer’s

Online Investing - The road to a fortune or to ruin?

Tai Chi's Ancient Hidden Agenda

Urugay Expatriate Destinations

Can I Use A Canadian Pharmacy With Medicare Part D?

Free Discount Prescription Plans

Head For Mexico

Saving for Retirement

Does Government Care if You Become Disabled

The Beach Boys

Lovin' Spoonful

Information Sites for Boomers and Seniors

What to Buy Grandma

Caregiver Burnout: Ten Coping Tips

The Prentenders

Proposed Tax Reform Affects Retirement

The Best Years of Their Lives

Early Distributions From Retirement Plans

The Right Mutual Funds For Baby Boomers

Jerry Garcia

Five Ways To Boost Your Retirement Income

Embracing Menopause, Path to Peace & Power

Paul Anka

Oldies Radio Stations

Carlos Santana

Flashback to the 50's

The Animals

The Drifters - Then And Where Are They Now

Baby Boomer Golden Oldies Singers and Bands

Golden Oldies Music Songs

Baby Boomer Golden Oldies Music Looking Back

The Escorts

The Oldies? Nostalgia? Watchyacallit?
K.L.O.D Radio the oldies station

Elvis

Frankie Avalon, Bobby Darin, Fabian, Ricky Nelson, Paul Anka, Robby Rydell

Golden Oldies Music Bob Dylan

Golden Oldies Music

Rare Music Memorabilia Site Launched

Your Guide To Retirement Planning

Promensil Sponsors America’s First 'Baby Boomer' Pageant

House Sitting Takes Retired Canadian Around the World

Baby Boomer Retirement Self Directed IRA Retirement Funds Real Estate

Baby Boomer Retirement Golden Years Working

The Baby Boomer’s Bible to Life After 50 Reveals the Essential Truths About Aging

Time Capsule for Baby Boomers

Costa Rica Living & Retirement Tips

Wake Up Baby Boomers – There’s Still Time

Travel Safety In Mexico

Baby Boomer Retirement

Baby Boomer Music

The Baby Boomer Athlete

The Right Mutual Funds For Baby Boomers

Revitalizing The Power of the Baby Boomers

Baby Boomers as Alzheimer's Care Givers

Reverse Mortgages: Information You Need to Know

Five Things To Do Before Placing Your Loved One In A Nursing Home

Baby Boomer's Survival Guide: When Your Life Goes Boom

In Most Cases, Medicare is Still A Distant Second to the Safe, Reliable Canadian Alternative, Says DoctorSolve

The Baby Boomer's Anti-Aging Program

Buying Drugs from Canada Now Comes with a New Level of Safety Assurance, says DoctorSolve Internet Pharmacy Service - Press Release

Reverse Mortgages: Information You Need to Know

Retire Nova Scotia Canada

Getting Older, Getting Better

Western US Retirement Picks

Retirement Radio Show - Press Release

Lighting Up a Seniors Life - Baby Boomer Alert!

Best Places to Retire

Your Choice: Aging Boomer or Ageless Bloomer

Retirees Are Fulfilling Travel Dreams Through House Sitting

Homebase Abroad Offers Exclusive Umbria and Tuscany Villa Rentals

Radical Retirement Communities-Bali

Surprising Impact OF Viagra On Love And Relationships

Baby Boomers -- Now Shredding The Rules for Retirement

Dealing Effectively with Midlife Issues

Wake Up Baby Boomers – There’s Still Time

Boomer Orphans

The Bad Wine That Made A 'Ripple' In Our Culture

Baby Boomers: Will They Be Able to Afford Their Parents?

A Look Back At The Sixties 60's For Baby Boomers

The Baby Boomer Athlete

Blooming Boomers - Women and Retirement

Getting Older, Getting Better

ADULT RETIREMENT COMMUNITIES SITE NURSING HOME SITE

Active Baby Boomers

When To Start Social Security

Knowing that an extra twenty-thousand dollars or so is available at age 62 can be the tipping point when it comes to making a decision over whether to retire early or wait until age 66 or 67. Retire early? "My advice. Take the money," says Paul J. Mauro, CLU, ChFC founder of Legacy Financial Advisors (www.lfsadvisors.com) in Milford, MA.

Knowing that an extra twenty-thousand dollars or so is available at age 62 can be the tipping point when it comes to making a decision over whether to retire early or wait until age 66 or 67. Retire early?

"My advice. Take the money," says Paul J. Mauro, CLU, ChFC founder of Legacy Financial Advisors (www.lfsadvisors.com) in Milford, MA.

For those who want to work some after retirement and do not expect to earn too much money, it makes sense to claim Social Security benefits as soon as possible
Social Security reform has not gotten much traction. A simple fact remains - in addition to providing a modest level of retirement income, Social Security provides Americans with a safety net for the worst ills - such as income to help support a permanently disabled child or adult. Insuring for such contingencies, would be tough for those in their 20's and 30's whose monthly mortgage payments are higher than what their parents paid for their first new car.

 

Those in their 50s and 60s, who have been making Social Security payments since they started working at their first after-school job, simply want to collect the benefits.

The most common question they have is, "Should I retire early and accept lower Social Security payments at the first opportunity -- age 62-- or should I delay payments until I reach full retirement age?" Full retirement is 65 for those born before 1938 and goes up on a sliding scale to 66 or 67 depending upon the birth year and month.

Related questions include: "Should I continue working?" and, "How much will my spouse receive?"

Should I retire early? According to Paul J. Mauro, CLU, ChFC founder of Legacy Financial Advisors (www.lfsadvisors.com) in Milford, MA, "It depends on specific circumstances but, in general, the answer is 'Yes'. "

Average life expectancy in America is age 75 for men and 80 for women. The longer one delays the start of Social Security payments, the higher the payments will be, until they max out at age 70. For most of us, retiring later and collecting greater benefits for fewer years makes less sense than retiring as soon as possible and receiving lower benefit payments for more years.

Though the facts weigh in favor of taking the money now, it is still an individual decision. "Consider family history and personal health. If we come from a family with four living grandparents in their 90s, perhaps early retirement is not the right decision," notes Mauro.

 

If you were born in 1955, have earned the maximum subject to Social Security contributions - now $96,000 annually, and retire at the full retirement age of 66, monthly benefit will be $2,109. Begin accepting benefits at age 62, and the monthly check comes to $1,530. If, however, you were to delay retirement to 70 you would receive more benefits, about $2,825 a month.

Let's compare two people who were born in 1955 and live until age 80.

Retirement at 62 for18 years of benefits, lifetime benefits: $330,480.
Retirement at 66 for 14 years of benefits, lifetime benefits: $354.312.

For the 80 year old, waiting until full retirement means an extra $23,832 spread out over 14 years. If both retirees make it to age 78 instead of 80, the difference is $9,938. Says Mauro, "My advice. Take the money!"

What about working after retirement? It depends on earnings. Social security sets limits on how much one can work without having the monthly payments reduced. Those receiving benefits before full retirement age are allowed to earn up to $12,960 without penalty. Beyond $12,960, for every two dollars earned, Social Security takes away one dollar in benefits. Those who receive benefits at full retirement age may earn up to $34,440 without penalty. After that, Social Security deducts one dollar in benefits for every three dollars earned.

"For those who want to work some after retirement and do not expect to earn too much money, it makes sense to claim Social Security benefits as soon as possible," advises Mauro.

How much will my spouse receive?" Non-working spouses receive half of the working spouse's Social Security benefits, but only when the breadwinner starts to collect benefits. However, spouses who have their own social security account can apply for benefits when they reach the age of 62.

If the retired spouse receives, say, $400 per month at age 62 and the married partner retires later and receives monthly benefits of $1,200, the spouse who retired early would get an increase of $200 to equal $600 - half of $1,200

Concludes Mauro, "Social Security will not pay us enough to buy an island in the Pacific. However, knowing an extra twenty-thousand dollars or so is available at age 62 can be the tipping point when it comes to making a decision over whether to retire early or wait until age 66 or 67."

The examples discussed above are hypothetical and for illustration purposes only. Tax laws are subject to change and individual situation may vary. Before making retirement or investments decisions consult a financial planner or wealth management professional who is versed in both insurance and investment products and a CPA or other qualified tax professional.

Legacy Financial Advisors, Inc. (www.lfsadvisors.com) has over 30 years of experience serving clients with wealth management services for retirement and estate planning. Headquartered in Milford, Massachusetts, Legacy has representatives throughout Eastern Massachusetts, Rhode Island, and on Cape Cod.

Securities offered through Legacy Financial Services, Inc. - Member NASD/SIPC. Advisory services through Legacy Advisory Services, Inc. Supervising Branch Office located at 321 Fortune Boulevard, Milford, MA 01757, (508) 482-9336