Tag Archives: social security

5 Ways A Reverse Mortgage Can Fit Into Your Retirement Plan

5-Gold

How can a Reverse Mortgage be used for retirement security?

  1. Replace cash reserves
  2. Delay drawing Social Security payments and pension payouts
  3. Loan Proceeds are not considered income and can be used as a tax- free income supplement
  4. Eliminate monthly mortgage payments to help increase cash flow
  5. Buffer spending of investments in a down market

 

The Big Picture

Home equity is a dynamic financial tool that should be discussed when planning your retirement.

Call or Email me to set up a free consultation on the pros and cons of a Reverse Mortgage and how it may fit into your families long term plans.

Tyson Underwood – 310-540-1330 or tyson@american-california.com

 

The Importance of Home Equity in Retirement Planning

 

The Importance of Home Equity in Retirement Planning | MyKCM

We often discuss the difference in family wealth between homeowner households and renter households. Much of that difference is the result of the equity buildup that homeowners experience over the time that they own their home. In a report recently released by the nonpartisan Employee Benefit Research Institute (EBRI), they reveal how valuable equity can be in retirement planning.

Craig Copeland, Senior Research Associate at EBRI, recently authored a report, Importance of Individual Account Retirement Plans and Home Equity in Family Total Wealth, in which he reveals:

“Individual account retirement plan assets, plus home equity, represent almost all of what families have to use for retirement expenses outside of Social Security and traditional pensions. Those families without individual account assets typically have very low overall assets, so they have almost nothing to draw from for retirement expenses.”

The report echoed the findings of a working paper, Home Equity Patterns among Older American Households, authored by Barbara Butrica and Stipica Mudrazija of Urban Institute. Fannie Mae highlighted these findings for their blog The Home Story this past winter, quoting Butrica and Mudrazija:

 “For most adults near traditional retirement age, a home is their most valuable asset — dwarfing retirement accounts, other financial assets, and other nonfinancial assets. Although relatively few retirees tap into their home equity, having it provides financial security… In fact, many retirement security experts argue that the conventional three-legged stool of retirement resources — Social Security, pensions, and savings — is incomplete because it ignores the home.”

USAToday interviewed two area experts to comment on the EBRI report. Randy Bruns, a private wealth adviser with HighPoint Planning Partners, agreed with the findings:

“Social Security and home equity are major pieces of the retirement puzzle.”

Wade Pfau, Professor of Retirement Income at The American College of Financial Services and author of Reverse Mortgages: How to use Reverse Mortgages to Secure Your Retirement, said having the equity without a plan to use it won’t help:

“Home equity is a very important asset for American retirees, and so it is important to think about how to make best use of home equity in retirement planning.”

Bottom Line

Whether you use the equity in your home through a reverse mortgage or by selling and downsizing to a less expensive home, it should be a crucial piece of your retirement planning.

Let’s talk Stats Boomers… Ready to Retire?

Thanks for this

 

Are your retirement plans in place, locked down and solid?  Or do you or maybe your parents fall into the overwhelming statistics below?

  • Baby Boomers are turning 62 at a rate of 10,000 a day.
  • Senior home equity is at an all time high.
  • They live longer, are active, carry debt, and have equity.
  • 25,000,000 households with Americans over 65.
  • 85+ is the fastest growing demographic in America.
  • Federal Reserve estimates 50% of Boomers with no retirement savings.
  • $49,800 average savings of those who have saved.
  • $51,000 is average annual cost of assisted living.
  • 80% of seniors have substantial equity in their homes.
  • 81% of seniors plan to remain in their homes as long as possible
  • 43% of current HECM seniors report that without their Reverse Mortage, they could not remain in their home.
  • 23% married social security beneficiaries  receive 90% of their income from SSI.
  • 43% Single social security beneficiaries receive over 90% of their income from SSI.
  • 30% gap between social security and desired monthly income
  • Inflationary pressures on Fixed Income.
  • Health care costs continue to rise.
  • ZERO alternative sources of additional monthly cash for most seniors other than home equity.