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The Truth Behind That 2.8% Social Security Boost
Why the 2026 COLA may not go as far as you think — and how to plan ahead As 2025 winds down, many retirees are taking stock of what the new year will bring — including a 2.8% cost-of-living adjustment (COLA) to Social Security benefits starting in January. That’s roughly $56 more per month for…
Read More7 Thanksgiving Spending Traps Retirees Should Avoid
Thanksgiving is all about gratitude, gathering, and good food—but it’s also the quiet kickoff to a season when spending can slip out of sync with your goals. For retirees living on fixed or carefully managed incomes, the pressure to give, host, travel, and spoil loved ones can build fast. What starts as a joyful tradition…
Read More9 Smart Money Moves to Make Before the Holidays
As the days get shorter and calendars fill up with holiday plans, it’s easy to push financial tasks aside — especially when they don’t feel urgent yet. But for retirees, November is the sweet spot to take control of your finances before the holiday rush and year-end deadlines collide. From tax-saving opportunities to income planning and Medicare decisions,…
Read MoreIs Semi Retirement Right for You? Pros, Cons, and How to Begin
Your alarm goes off at 6 AM. Again. You drag yourself up, thinking: do I really want to do this for another ten years? But then you imagine waking up with nothing to do—no meetings, no deadlines, no reason to get dressed—and that feels equally wrong. You’re caught between two fears. The fear of staying…
Read MoreThe 3 Biggest Retirement Questions You’ve Been Afraid to Ask
You know that feeling at 2 a.m. when your mind won’t shut off? When you’re staring at the ceiling, running through the same worries on repeat? Many retirees share that experience — not because they regret leaving work, but because retirement brings up questions they’ve never said out loud. Asking those questions doesn’t mean you’re…
Read MoreDon’t Let These Financial Frights Haunt Your Retirement
Halloween might bring out ghosts, goblins, and pumpkins on porches, but for many retirees, the real chills don’t come from spooky movies — they come from money worries that sneak up when everything else quiets down. You’ve spent decades saving, planning, and working toward the freedom of retirement. But sometimes, even with the best intentions,…
Read MoreFive RMD Mistakes That Cost Retirees Thousands
December 30th. You’re wrapping up holiday plans when you remember—did you take your required minimum distribution this year? For retirees who’ve been managing RMDs for years, this moment might bring a quick mental checkmark. But for those handling their first few years of distributions, or juggling multiple accounts, that sinking feeling can hit hard. The rules…
Read MoreWhat Is Revenge Saving — and Why Are So Many Retirees Doing It Now?
After a turbulent few years of inflation, market swings, healthcare price hikes, and economic uncertainty, a quiet shift is taking place among retirees and those nearing retirement. It’s not about panic or paranoia. It’s about purpose. They’re saving again — but not the way they used to. They’re saving with urgency, with discipline, and, in…
Read MoreThe $800 Medicare Mistake to Avoid This Fall
“I didn’t realize my plan changed until I got the bill…” That’s what Susan, a 73-year-old retiree living in Rockrimmon, told us last year. Her Medicare Advantage plan dropped her primary care doctor and increased her prescription costs — and she didn’t find out until January. The worst part? She had no idea anything had changed…
Read MoreUnderstanding Medicare Advantage vs Medicare Supplement Plans
Many retirees feel relief when Medicare starts — then quickly realize there are still gaps. For instance, Medicare requires you to pay part of hospital stays and doctor visits, along with other costs that can add up quickly. That’s where the choice between Medicare Advantage (Part C) and Medicare Supplement (Medigap) plans comes in. Both…
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