How To Set and Manage Your Family Money Boundaries During Retirement
By RetireOnPurpose / March 21, 2016Retirement often allows aging individuals to spend more time with family.
Retirement often allows aging individuals to spend more time with family.
Many people associate retirement years with declining health.
Many retirees avoid assisted living because they see it as the equivalent of a nursing home.
When you reach retirement, you may start thinking about downsizing. Many retirees look forward to moving out of a larger home and into a community for seniors, closer to family, or to a smaller space.
As a parent of a severely disabled child, you understand that childcare is a permanent necessity. It cannot stop when your child is an adult, when you retire, or when you are gone.
The U.S. Census Bureau reported that around 4.2 million households in the U.S. included both grandchildren and grandparents in 2012. Of those, 60% were supported by a grandparent.
According to recent surveys, 71% of Americans say that travel during retirement is an important goal.
Retirement means different things to different people. A traditional view of a retiree is someone who no longer works, stays at home, and does sedentary activities.
As a family business owner, you care about your business’ continuity after retiring.
While the idea of a family business being passed down from generation to generation may seem antiquated, it has begun surging in our economy once again.