AARP Hearing Center
Everyone nearing retirement has a vision of what their road will be like once they clock out of the 9-to-5. Maybe that prophecy includes regular travel, longer trips to see the grandchildren, volunteering or finally having the time to work on that screenplay that’s been in your back pocket.
Retirement can be any or all of those things, but you’re going to have to season that stew with a heaping spoonful of reality. Other things are going to occupy your time, and your money.
Says who? Me. I recently retired after a 45-year career as a journalist. I’m still in the throes of trying to figure this thing out while, yes, traveling a bit more, making plans to see family more and getting a new house in order.
It hasn’t been too difficult, but with a little guidance, I could have had a softer landing. To that end, here are six things I wish I’d known in the years leading up to retirement.
1. Don’t borrow from your 401(k)
Yes, I made the classic bad financial move in my 40s. I borrowed from my 401(k). My money, my rules, right?
Technically, yes, and the IRS allows it. You can borrow up to $50,000, or 50 percent of the vested amount in the account, and it must be paid back within five years. Raising four kids, our family hit a wall of expensive credit card debt. That was my excuse when I borrowed $5,000 from my 401(k); retirement took a back seat as it seemed so far off.
Why is it a bad idea? Unless you aggressively pay back the loan, that’s $5,000 less sitting in your retirement pot, and $5,000 less earning investment returns, for years.
Rapid repayment wasn’t something I could afford at the time. I merely went through the required motions, paying back the loan on time but not increasing my contributions later, when I could afford it. I ended up putting less into my plan over time, costing me retirement funds that would come in handy now.
Even if you can afford to both contribute and pay back the loan, you might not be able to: Some retirement plans forbid contributions while you’re repaying. That’s more missed opportunities to generate gains — especially when you factor in lost employer matches — and more lost time growing your nest egg.
2. Pay down credit card debt before retirement
One thing you don’t want to carry into retirement is a lot of debt. Generally, you’re on a fixed income. Siphoning off some of it to pay high-interest credit card debt, for example, is not a burden worth cramping your retirement lifestyle for, especially as credit card interest rates continue to skyrocket.