Retirement is full of life upheavals and new activities. Finances also tend to change.
Understanding your options for living in retirement and spending long-saved money may be more complicated than mastering pickleball, yet couples who navigate all of this change together tend to be financially healthier than those who delegate to one person or ignore the financial changes.
The first year of retirement for even long-term couples is challenging, requiring two people to adapt to new schedules after a lifetime of working. Success, both financially and with your mate, is possible by acknowledging this transition and accepting that you will have to work out the kinks as you ease into your new life.
Remember, this is a process — retirement is a continuously evolving state, not a destination.
What should you do to be sure you navigate retirement as a happy couple? Start the conversations now. Look at the topics that successful couples asked one another in order to become successful retirees:
1. Discuss retirement expectations long before you retire.
Open-ended questions that get to the root of your wishes are helpful to ponder separately and together. By talking about them more than a year before you retire, they can evolve, and your vision for retirement together will become clearer.
Here are some questions to get the conversation rolling:
- How will you spend time together?
- What will you do together? Separately?
- Will homecare and homemaker roles change?
- How much money will you have saved for retirement?
- How much are you willing to spend?
2. Regularly discuss current and future income and spending.
Stay on top of your finances by monitoring them together. In many couples, one spouse assumes the primary responsibility for managing the household finances. While you are enjoying a regular income from your jobs, it’s easy to become accustomed to a high standard of living without much focus on spending. Talk about how much money you have available and how you will adjust your spending if necessary.