Planning For Your Parents’ Elder Care Needs

Are you part of the “sandwich generation,” caring for both parents and children while mapping out your own retirement? Planning for your parents’ elder care is probably low on your to-do list, but the sooner you begin talking and planning, the better for everyone. Mid-crisis is not the time to gather information or make important decisions. Here are some suggestions to ease the process. [Read more...]

Financial Steps In Your Forties

Your fortieth birthday is a good opportunity to take stock of life, including your financial life. Many people have achieved, or made plans to achieve, various milestones—getting married, buying a home, starting a family or preparing for the kids’ education. Now it’s time to look ahead. Your future financial success will rise from the bedrock of the careful planning you do now. Let’s look at three important areas—income protection, estate planning and your vision of financial independence. [Read more...]

Surviving the Death of a Breadwinner

If you were to die tomorrow, how would your family carry on financially?

Financial preparedness is especially important if you (or your spouse) are the sole breadwinner. According to the Bureau of Labor Statistics, in 2007 there were 58 million “married-couple families” in the U.S. In just over half of them, both husband and wife worked. That percentage has been falling ever since. The Center for American Progress found that in 2010 alone, more than 1 million two-earner married couples were reduced to one earner.

With more American families now relying on one income, it’s important to plan for the unlikely and unexpected death of the sole breadwinner. The last thing you want to do while grieving the loss of your spouse is sell the family home, get a second job, or impoverish yourself to pay for medical bills and living expenses. Here are some steps you can take now to help avoid a financial crisis during an emotional tragedy.

The Truth About Life Insurance

Most people have life insurance, and most life insurance policyholders believe they have an adequate amount of coverage. Unfortunately, many policyholders are wrong. Only a minority of surviving spouses describe their life insurance payouts as adequate.

The problem is one of perception. Many people have life insurance through their employer. Because these families know they have at least some insurance, they believe they’re prepared. But employer-sponsored life insurance is rarely enough to help a family maintain its standard of living. Once the life insurance proceeds are gone, most families with only employer-sponsored coverage have to start making serious changes in how they live and work.

Assess Your Needs

You can begin with an objective look at what your family needs right now to get by. Do you have dependents, such as young children, a non-working spouse, or parents? How much money do you need to pay the bills and send your kids to college?

When planning for a tragedy such as the premature death of a spouse, it’s particularly important to establish this baseline because a terminal illness could drastically increase your expenses. The death of your spouse also means the loss of that spouse’s health care coverage.

When considering how much life insurance you need, you should also factor in lifestyle changes you anticipate in the near future. Do you plan to have a baby or buy a larger home? Are your aging parents becoming increasingly dependent? Are you considering sending a child to private school? Perhaps you anticipate a more sophisticated lifestyle in the future as your income increases.

You can’t anticipate every future lifestyle change, but you can provide your family with life insurance coverage sufficient to meet their needs. You can review your policy riders, options, and beneficiary designations at regular intervals and purchase additional coverage or make changes as needed.

Evaluate Your Resources

Life insurance may not be your only source of support. Take stock of other assets that may be available to you:

  • Investment accounts that can be accessed to meet the family’s changed circumstances
  • Retirement accounts that can be earmarked for the surviving spouse’s retirement years
  • College savings accounts
  • Social Security Survivors Insurance (based on your spouse’s work history)
  • Family resources (wealthy relatives who would be willing to release part of an inheritance early)

Understand Your Finances

Ideally, both partners should know where their money comes from, where it goes, how to pay the bills, and have an understanding of investment accounts. You should also understand your spouse’s employer-provided benefits. If you or your spouse has taken a backseat in the management of the family finances, it’s time to take a more active role. It’s better to learn your cash-flow picture now, instead of when you’re forced to understand at a time when it will be much more difficult.

Preparation is Best

A surviving spouse will have a lot of financial issues to address. It’s best to address them well in advance. A financial professional can guide you through the difficult questions you should ask to prepare for an event that, hopefully, will never occur.

A Primer on Long-Term Care Insurance

The number of Americans age 65 or older is projected to more than double over the next four decades, from about 39 million today to 89 million in 2050. As the nation’s population continues to age, an increasing number of individuals will require some form of long-term care. As a result, many people are taking a closer look at buying long-term care insurance to protect themselves and their families — just in case.
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A Wellness Plan for Health Care Costs

Whether you’re covered by a company health care plan or paying for a personal plan or Medicare, health care costs are rising—in premiums, co-pays, deductibles and other out-of-pocket costs. It’s hard to control those costs since they are established by the insurance and medical industries, but there are some things you can do to curb the rising costs of health care that have little to do with your wallet: [Read more...]

Planning for Long-Term Care

Good health is a gift, but we can’t assume that it will last forever. An effective financial plan should factor in the costs associated with aging, such as long-term care. Long-term care describes a variety of services which help meet both medical and non-medical needs when people are unable to care for themselves. Long-term care services are provided at home or in assisted living or nursing homes and include things such as assisting with normal daily tasks or providing skilled medical care.
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Off to School with the Right Stuff?

Chances are good that you have a college-bound student in your immediate or extended family who will experience the first few weeks on campus, perhaps for the first time. When college students unpack and find their way to classes, the question is: Did they pack the right stuff to protect the investment in their education?
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Your Most Valuable Asset: You

When people list their assets, they generally recount bank accounts, real estate holdings, automobiles, retirement accounts and stock portfolios. But the key to all those assets is the individual whose earnings fund them. You are your most valuable asset and you deserve the same management you give your other assets.
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