Sentences with phrase «whatever retirement money»

Whatever retirement money you have currently saved, will determine if your quality of life can stay the same.

Not exact matches

When it comes to retirement, whatever money an older divorcing couple has needs to be divided — after high legal bills.
If you want to make the most money possible, you won't be able to wow your friends and family with whatever inane investment strategy happens to be the latest trend that you've (mistakenly) sunk your retirement money into.
You could use that money on savings, a vacation, retirement, whatever you want!
The first film had some basis in the idea of retirees outsourcing their retirements to India, looking to stretch whatever money they had.
Actually, there's an easy way boost your retirement account balances without further squeezing your budget: stash whatever money you do manage to save in the lowest - cost investments you can find.
But I'd say the higher priority should be getting money into a tax - advantaged retirement account (a 401 (k) / 403 (b) / IRA), because the tax - advantaged growth of those accounts makes their long - term return far greater than whatever you're paying on your mortgage, and they provide more benefit (tax - advantaged growth) the earlier you invest in them, so doing that now instead of paying off the house quicker is probably going to be better for you financially, even if it doesn't provide the emotional payoff.
Whether it's about retirement, investing, Social Security, taxes, your portfolio — whatever the topic is, there's a pretty good chance these fellas can give you the insight that will help you make better money moves.
Whatever she does, she mustn't fall into the trap of forgetting to put that money (or more) away for retirement, just because it passes through her bank account rather than being deducted by her employer.
Based on their spending patterns, Simmons suggests Jason and Jessica divide their cash this way: $ 3,000 for fixed expenses («the things that come out of your account whether you like it or not,» like housing, insurance, phone, Netflix); $ 1,000 in short - term spending for big purchases (like travel, puppies, electronics); $ 1,200 in long - term saving («money to be socked away into the nest egg,» she says, for retirement and emergencies); and, good news for Jason and Jessica, $ 2,800 left over to spend on everything else — that's groceries, gas, haircuts, tasty takeout, doggy toys, and whatever else they damn well feel like.
Then if you want to get a little bit more sophisticated in your strategy, then you say how much money do we need in the next 10, 20, 30 years whatever your retirement date is, or whatever goal that you're shooting for, and then find out how much money that you should be saving.
If you put money into a retirement account, you make whatever the profits are on the investment.
Rather than squirreling away whatever money you happen to have left at the end of each month, treat saving, funding your investment portfolio, and contributing to retirement accounts like a bill that must be paid each month.
Everything you spend money on, including whatever amount you contribute to savings and retirement accounts.
It's a safety net for our least fortunate seniors who, for whatever reason, were unable to put aside money for retirement and are now struggling to meet the minimum expenses of rent, food, and utilities.
Pete wants to make sure that there's enough money to fully cover that expense as well as pay to send Heath to college — and Laura can use whatever is left over to bump up her retirement savings.
Whatever your situation, whether you're a single family after divorce, a college student living off campus, or a senior citizen in retirement, chances are you don't have a lot of extra money floating around in case a big emergency happens.
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