Most retirement budgets start with yield and get it backward. Here's what financial planners say you should focus on instead to protect purchasing power.
Depending on the household, retirees might want to cut back on lifestyle spending, healthcare premiums, travel and memberships or even housing itself.
Many retirees underbudget for health care, assuming Medicare will pay. Learn why costs are rising and how Dave Ramsey says to ...
The average retiree spends more than $64,000 per year, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics. Would you have enough to ...
Common budget considerations in retirement include housing, health care, entertainment, taxes, debt, travel and hobbies, home ...
A $2,500 monthly retirement in The Villages is possible, but only in a narrow version of the plan. The house has to be paid ...
During budget debate, legislative Democrats argued that retirees last received permanent cost of living increases in 2017.
Former Birmingham City retirees and city leaders gathered at Birmingham City Hall Wednesday for a pension board meeting.
With just days until the start of North Carolina's new fiscal year, thousands of state employees and retirees are still ...
A comfortable retirement in the Tar Heel State can require a nest egg of more than $900,000, depending on your household and ...
A single retiree in Wisconsin needs to save about $750,000 to live comfortably during retirement, according to finance ...
Most retirement budgets start with the wrong question. The instinct is to ask, “What yield do I need so the nest egg covers ...