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Wondering what financial mistakes Baby Boomers make that could ruin their retirement?
ChatGPT has identified 10 common mistakes boomers make that can seriously harm retirement security. Artificial intelligence (AI) described each mistake and told what to do instead.
Claiming Social Security at age 62
Many people claim Social Security at age 62 because they can, not because they should. ChatGPT reported that claiming at 62 permanently reduces benefits by 30%. Waiting until age 70 increases benefits by about 8% per year after full retirement age.
The example Chatgpt provided shows a huge difference. If your full benefit is $2,000 monthly at 67, claiming at 62 brings it to about $1,400. Waiting until 70 increases that to about $2,480.
This gap increases over the decades. If you are healthy and have other sources of income then delaying it is a better move.
Underestimating health care costs
Many retirees assume that Medicare covers everything. Chatgpt said that is not the case. Premiums, deductibles, Medigap or Advantage plans, and long-term care are mostly not covered by Medicare.
Budget $300,000 or more for a couple’s lifetime health care costs after retirement. Consider long-term care planning as part of your strategy.
carry debt until retirement
Credit cards, car loans, home equity loans and supporting adult children all create debt that eats up fixed retirement income. High interest payments drain the money you need for living expenses.
ChatGPT recommends prioritizing paying off high-interest debt before retiring. Entering retirement debt-free gives you far more flexibility in terms of your fixed income.
being overly conservative when it comes to investing
Some retirees move to 100% cash after they retire. The problem is that inflation eats away purchasing power and you may live 25 to 30 years longer.
ChatGPT provided an example showing that earning $100,000 over 20 years makes a bigger difference than 2% versus 6%. Maintain a balanced portfolio with 40% to 60% equities, depending on your risk tolerance.
Ignoring Required Minimum Distributions
Current law requires you to take required minimum distributions (RMDs) from Traditional IRAs and 401(k) plans at age 73. Heavy fines can be imposed if you do not comply.
Plan withdrawals strategically to minimize future tax increases. RMDs can push you into a higher tax bracket if you’re not prepared.
Helping adult children at the wrong time
Boomers often co-sign loans to help family, pay for weddings, cover rent or deplete retirement savings. ChatGPT said it was generous but risky.
Protect your retirement first. You cannot borrow money for retirement the way you can for your children’s education or a house.
ignore inflation
Many retirees plan based on today’s expenses. Inflation increases grocery, insurance and medical costs while purchasing power decreases.
Even 3% inflation halves purchasing power in about 24 years. ChatGPT recommends incorporating inflation-adjusted projections into retirement planning rather than assuming that costs will remain constant.
failed to downsize
Some retirees live in larger homes, maintaining higher property taxes and paying for unused space. This adds to the cash that can fund retirement income.
Strategically consider downsizing, transferring, or unlocking home equity. A smaller home with lower taxes frees up money for health care and living expenses.
relying heavily on one income source
Some retirees rely almost entirely on Social Security, a single pension, or an investment account. If something changes, income risk increases dramatically.
Diversify income streams across investments, annuities, rental income, dividends and other sources. Multiple income streams protect against failure of a single source.
no exit strategy
Many retirees withdraw money haphazardly, take too much into early retirement, or panic sell during market downturns. ChatGPT noted the 4% rule as a general guideline but said it should be tailored to markets and individual risk tolerances.
Use a structured withdrawal plan consistent with longevity expectations. Taking too much too early could deplete your savings before you die. Panic selling during a recession can permanently lock in losses.
pattern behind mistakes
ChatGPT said the most damaging retirement mistakes fall into three categories. Claiming income too early, underestimating expenses, and being overly reactive by panic selling or overspending.
The theme of all 10 mistakes is a failure to plan for the long term. Retirement can last 30 years or more. Decisions taken at 62 affect your financial security at 85.
