Your Retirement Planning Journey, Part 1: First Steps
You've finished school or completed an apprenticeship, and now you're starting your first “adult job”. Or maybe your parents are retiring from the family business and passing the keys to you.
You've finished school or completed an apprenticeship, and now you're starting your first “adult job”. Or maybe your parents are retiring from the family business and passing the keys to you.
Yes, for the first time, you’ll be making some real money. So, go get that paycheck — and get to saving.
Retirement planning waits for no one. The best time to start saving for the end of your professional career is when it begins (and if you’re a little late to the savings game, then the time is now). Even if your initial contributions to a retirement account are modest, you will be glad to have done it when you’re ready leave the workforce.
In the first installment of this series examining the different stages of your retirement planning journey, we’ll break down the first steps on the path and how to begin.
If you’re in your early-20s, retirement might be the last thing on your mind, but it’s important to remember that preparing for it is a long-term undertaking. Most of us will take decades to reach our retirement goals — and with life-expectancies increasing, retirements are expected to last longer and, therefore, be costlier for younger generations — so the earlier you start saving, the better.
Perhaps the most significant advantage of beginning early is it enables you to fully enjoy the benefits of compound interest. Compounding accelerates growth by adding interest payments at consistent intervals to the sum of your initial investment, continued contributions and previous accumulated interest. Over time, savings accounts exponentially grow to well beyond what you personally contributed.
Additionally, a decades-long savings campaign accounts for the ups and downs, zigs and zags, and straight-up roadblocks that will inevitably arise throughout your career and life. Jobs change, children are born, markets evolve and a seemingly endless number of factors inevitably will influence your retirement planning strategy. Ideally, you won’t decrease the amount you’re saving with each paycheck, but circumstances may dictate changes. A longer lead time, however, smooths the road to retirement and encourages consistent growth.
The first steps on the retirement journey can seem daunting, and they are easy to overlook early in your career, but that’s being short-sighted. Instead, consider:
As you get started on your journey, keep in mind these pointers:
Your first steps on the retirement journey are among the most important, but every stage presents unique opportunities and challenges. Check out Part 2 for the next steps on the journey, and contact F.N.B. Wealth Management to learn more from our experts.