Retirees lack emergency savings to cover yearly unexpected expenses

Retirees lack emergency savings to cover yearly unexpected expenses

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As you gauge how much income you’ll need to pay for your living expenses in retirement, don’t forget to consider how you’ll cover unexpected costs.

More than 8 in 10 retiree households — 83% — will face unplanned outlays in any given year, according to new research from the Center for Retirement Research at Boston College. Among households that do experience unexpected expenses, the average annual amount spent across retirement is $6,000. Measured another way, the typical household will spend an amount equivalent to 10% of its yearly income.

Yet many households don’t have that available in emergency savings, according to the research. While roughly 58% have enough cash to cover unplanned costs for a single year, around 16% would have to tap their 401(k) or other retirement accounts and the rest — about 27% — would fall short even after using all their cash and retirement assets.

“About 40% of [retired] households do not have enough cash to cover even a single year [of unplanned expenses], let alone their whole retirement,” the research notes.

The research uses data from 3,427 retired households that have been part of the 2000-2020 Health and Retirement Study and the Consumption and Activities Mail Survey, both from the University of Michigan.

It’s important to have some cash savings

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Expenses are separated into three categories in the research:

  • “Rainy day” expenses, such as car maintenance costing more than $500 or home maintenance of $1,000 or more.
  • Family-related expenses, such as the death of a spouse or providing financial help to family.
  • Health-care expenses above $500, such as dental expenses or prescription costs.

The Center for Retirement Research estimated that 60% of all retiree households will face a rainy day shock; 29% will have an unexpected family-related expense; and 58% will confront an unexpected health-care expense.

Higher-income retirees experience these unexpected expenses at a greater rate than those with lower incomes, according to the research. For example, about 45% of households with less than $50,000 in income face a rainy day or health-care shock in a given year, compared with 80% of those with $100,000 or more in income.

“This finding highlights the fact that households have some control over when and how much they spend,” the report notes.

Think in terms of ‘access to cash for surprises’

So how much should you have set aside? Depending on a retiree’s individual situation, financial advisors may recommend anywhere from three or six months’ worth of expenses to a couple of years — or a variation of those parameters. Much of it will depend on your individual situation.

“What we usually tell clients is to think less in terms of months of expenses and more in terms of access to cash for surprises — health-care costs, home repairs or family needs,” said certified financial planner Joon Um, a tax advisor with Secure Tax & Accounting in Beverly Hills, California.

“For many retirees, that ends up being one year of core expenses, adjusted for guaranteed income like Social Security or pensions,” Um said.

The right amount depends on health, housing, income stability and how flexible other assets are, Um said.

“Retirees with steady income and liquid portfolios may need less cash, while those with higher medical risk or less flexibility need more,” Um said. “The goal isn’t to maximize cash. It’s to have enough on hand to avoid selling long-term investments at the wrong time.”

In other words, if you don’t have enough cash set aside, you could be put in a position of selling investments when the market is down.

Avoid having too much in cash

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