Home Views The 1% Trick That Will 100% Help Your Retirement Goals

The 1% Trick That Will 100% Help Your Retirement Goals

By Natalie Hayes Schmook, MBA, CFP, CVA

January means a new year, and I want to share with you the easiest New Year’s resolution that you will absolutely keep if you do it correctly. It’s such a small thing, but done annually, it can make a huge difference the size of your investment portfolio when you decide to retire.

It’s this simple: in January, increase your retirement contributions by 1%. Just 1%, that’s all. Think you can’t afford it? Consider this:

For a part-time OD making $50,000 per year, 1% is $500. That’s $9.62 per week, which is less than two drinks at Starbucks or one movie ticket.

For a full-time OD making $120,00 per year, that’s $1,200 per year, or $23 per week. TWENTY THREE DOLLARS per week, or one less Amazon impulse buy.

Put that way, it may not even seem like enough to bother investing, but let’s look at this over time.

Just $500 per year growing at 8% per year over 10 years turns into $7,243. If a person at this same salary contributed an extra 1% per year each year for 10 years, that would grow to $30,284 at 8% with only $22,500 of contributions.

$1,200 per year growing at 8% per year over 10 years turns into $17,283. If this same salary-earner upped their contributions by 1% per year for 10 years, those contributions would grow to $76,682 with an 8% return, with only $54,000 of contributions.

I also suggest auto-debiting this from your paycheck so you don’t miss it. For ODs who have an employer-sponsored plan, this is an easy place to contribute your additional 1% and possibly with the added bonus of a match. Q

Do you qualify for a Roth IRA? Contribute there within the $6,000 annual contribution limit. If you’re maxing out your retirement plans, open an individual investment account.

No excuses! Make the 1% challenge part of your New Year Resolution!

Disclaimer: This material is for educational and informational purposes only to the best of the author’s knowledge and is not to be construed as personalized financial or investment advice. Consult a financial professional about your personal situation.

Email your questions for Money Talk to mbijlefeld@jobson.com.
Natalie Hayes Schmook, MBA, Certified Financial Planner™, Certified Valuation Analyst™, is the founder and owner of Hayes Wealth Advisors, a financial planning and investment management service for practice owners and their families.

 Missed previous Money Talk installments?

3 Steps to Tax Savings

The Student Loan Conundrum: To Refinance or Not to Refinance

Is Your Portfolio On Track For Retirement? Use The 4% Rule

Personal Spending Is A Mission-Critical Piece To Retirement Planning

5 Common (But Fixable) Retirement Planning Mistakes

 

 

 

 

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