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What to Know for Monday, June 22nd, 2026: |
1: Retirement "magic number" rises to $1.46 million — but typical retiree has only $200,000, widening expectation-reality gap |
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(Image Credit: Getty Images) |
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Northwestern Mutual 2026 survey lifts retirement savings target to $1.46 million (highest ever) amid cumulative inflation: Survey of 4,375 adults shows "widening gap between what we all expect we're going to need and what we actually have" — nearly half of non-retirees don't think financially prepared for retirement — roughly half of all Americans think they could outlive savings — long-term care costs (assisted living, skilled nursing) more expensive than ever due to years of cumulative inflation.
Reality check: typical household 65-74 has only $200,000 in retirement accounts — few reach $1M, many retire on Social Security alone: Few retirement planners suggest everyone needs $1.46M — more attainable goal: save 10 times annual income by age 67 (~$800,000 for typical American earning $83,730) — most Americans retire with nowhere near $1M in savings — many retire comfortably on Social Security income alone.
Gen X lagging severely: only 13% saved 10x income, 49% think financially prepared, half plan working in retirement: Majority of Gen Xers saved 4x income or less — half plan to continue working in retirement — Gen Z ahead of pace, started saving at average age 22 (vs. Gen X at 32), nearly 3/4 already saved more than one year of income — "good news is Gen Z putting away money earlier," reversing troubling retirement preparedness trend.➜ Read the full article from USA Today here.
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2: 2027 Social Security COLA estimates "Trump bump" to 3.8-4.7% (vs. 2.8% in 2026) — driven by Iran war disrupting oil supplies, tariffs |
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(Image Credit: U.S. White House) |
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COLA estimates jumped due to Trump policies raising inflation: Iran military action disrupted Strait of Hormuz, tariffs adding $700/household cost: Social Security COLAs based on CPI-W (Consumer Price Index for Urban Wage Earners) — before Iran war began, TSCL projected 2.8% for 2027 matching 2026 — Iran conflict and oil price spike raised CPI-W to 4.4% in May alone — TSCL now forecasts 3.8% COLA, independent analyst Mary Johnson projects 4.7% or higher — tariffs and trade policies also contributing to inflation despite Supreme Court ruling.
Average retiree could receive $78-97 extra per month in 2027: Based on average January 2026 benefit of $2,071 — if TSCL's 3.8% estimate correct: ~$78.70/month increase ($944.38/year) — if Johnson's 4.7% projection accurate: ~$97.34/month increase ($1,168.04/year) — potentially one of biggest COLAs in several years.
Actual 2027 COLA won't be known until October when Q3 inflation data released: Current estimates based on May CPI-W of 4.4% — possible end to Iran hostilities and Strait of Hormuz reopening could lower Q3 inflation — but retirees should anticipate significant "Trump bump" boost to benefits — represents sharp increase from meager 2.8% COLA in 2026.
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➜ Read the full article from Yahoo Finance here. |
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3: Four planning steps to take before October Medicare open enrollment: review spending, check drug coverage, evaluate benefits usage, assess travel plans |
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(Image Credit: Getty Images) |
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Review current healthcare spending and specialist access before October enrollment begins: Analyze medical bills, copays, premiums, out-of-pocket expenses to determine if current plan meeting needs — identify regular specialists (ENT, cardiologist, dermatologist) and ensure new plan provides access to preferred doctors — healthcare can be one of biggest retirement expenses, careful planning prevents increases over time — evaluate whether overpaying for unused benefits.
Update prescription drug list and discuss future medication needs with doctors: Formularies change annually; medications covered this year may move to different pricing tier or coverage status next year — discuss expected medication changes with doctors (starting new drugs, discontinuing current ones) before choosing plan — drug coverage differences between plans can significantly impact retirement budget and healthcare strategy.
Assess actual usage of Medicare Advantage supplemental benefits — don't pay for unused services: MA plans offer gym access, supplemental benefits helping manage conditions and stretch retirement income — important to actually use benefits included in plan — if never using offered services (gym, dental, vision), look for more cost-effective plan without those features — ensure paying only for benefits you'll actually utilize.
Consider where you'll spend time in new year — MA network limitations may cause access problems for snowbirds: MA plans cap out-of-pocket spending (important on fixed income), but limit to specific provider networks — if planning to spend significant time in multiple states or relocate seasonally (e.g., Connecticut to Florida beach condo), MA may restrict medical access — Original Medicare plus Medigap offers broader geographic flexibility — plan carefully for location-dependent healthcare needs.
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➜ Read the full article from the Motley Fool here. |
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Here’s What You Missed on YouTube: |
Check out our new YouTube videos for Monday, June 22nd. |
New 2026 Social Security Rule for Working Seniors — and the One Thing It Won't Change |
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New 2026 Social Security Rule for Working Seniors — and the One Thing It Won't Change |
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This newsletter is for information only. Always confirm your options directly with Social Security, Medicare, Medicaid, or a qualified advisor before making big decisions about your benefits. |
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