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Common Sense Party

(14,139 posts)
Sun Mar 4, 2012, 02:58 AM Mar 2012

Delaying Retirement: Why 68 Has Become the New 65

"Not only does working longer mean more contributions and more compounding, but the longer you can defer drawing assets from your portfolio, the more you improve its longevity," says Christine Benz, director of personal finance at Morningstar...

If you're 55 or older {I think they mean younger}, you won't reach the full retirement age for Social Security benefits until age 66 1/2 or 67. So retiring at 68 or even 70 may not seem like much of a stretch.

Delaying retirement beyond your full retirement age — until you're required to take distributions at age 70 — can increase your Social Security benefits by 8 percent a year, plus these benefits are largely tax-exempt.

By retiring at age 70, you'd receive nearly double the annual Social Security as you have received if you took early retirement at age 62.


http://finance.yahoo.com/news/delaying-retirement--why-68-has-become--the-new-65-.html


Pretty difficult for many people to consider...if they don't HAVE a job, or their health won't allow them to keep working.

But if you are employed and relatively healthy, working a few more years may make sense.

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Delaying Retirement: Why 68 Has Become the New 65 (Original Post) Common Sense Party Mar 2012 OP
You are not required to take SheilaT Mar 2012 #1
 

SheilaT

(23,156 posts)
1. You are not required to take
Thu Mar 29, 2012, 04:41 PM
Mar 2012

social security at age 70. It's just that no matter how much you work and earn and contribute, your own monthly check will not increase after that age, so it would be foolish not to start collecting by then.

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