A generation ago, it wasn鈥檛 uncommon to spend your entire career with the same company, building a pension that when paired with your Canada Pension Plan and maybe some RRSPs, would provide for a comfortable, well-earned retirement.
Today, we鈥檒l often work with multiple companies over the course of our career 鈥 a shift accelerated by factors like the pandemic. Others might take the self-employment route for a while 鈥 couples navigating the high cost of childcare, for example. Pension funds might be shifted to other investments or there may be less money available for retirement savings during these mid-career years, especially for those affected by the high cost of housing.
The result is that have no savings set aside for retirement and 57 per cent have doubts they鈥檒l save enough to retire comfortably.
The solution? It begins with planning, says Charles Barton, a Wealth Advisor with Valley First Credit Union in the Okanagan. And the good news is that while earlier is better, it鈥檚 never too late to start.
Step 1: Start the conversation with your partner
What kind of retirement do you want? While some aim to completely quit work and travel, many choose to reap the financial and social benefits of semi-retirement first. Fine-tuning your goals makes it easier to determine the best way to reach them.
鈥淗ave that honest conversation with each other, review your goals and really understand what it is you鈥檙e trying to accomplish, long term,鈥 Barton says.
That includes goals you may have for your family, such as helping children purchase a home in a difficult housing market 鈥 decisions that could have implications later on, especially as we need our retirement savings to do more for longer.
鈥淲e鈥檙e not only seeing greater wealth transfer, but it鈥檚 happening earlier than it ever has. I see members who want to pass on their investable assets to their children but when we run the numbers, it鈥檚 too early, especially since people are living longer now.鈥
Step 2: Sit down with your financial planner
A financial planner can look at all the pieces of your financial puzzle 鈥 savings, investments, pensions, debts, goals 鈥 and help you chart a course forward.
That may mean putting more into savings, or more aggressively paying down debt. No single answer is right for everyone, but having someone who can see all the pieces, and understand how they fit together, is essential.
Whether you aim to reduce debt or boost savings 鈥 or simply have a better grasp on your spending habits before retirement, it鈥檚 never a bad idea to look at your spending. Netflix鈥檚 standard subscription might be just $16.49 per month, but add all the other streaming services and suddenly you鈥檙e topping $100.
鈥淚t can really chip away at your ability to start that savings plan,鈥 Barton says. 鈥淧eople will say, 鈥業 don鈥檛 have money to put away.鈥 But they haven鈥檛 even really paid attention to where their money鈥檚 going.鈥
The takeaway: Don鈥檛 wait. 鈥淭he more time we have to work with people, the better off they鈥檙e going to be when we鈥檙e trying to meet all of their goals,鈥 Barton says, urging the balance between rational decision-making and emotional response, which, admittedly, can be difficult to navigate.
鈥淭his whole process is supposed to be so rational, yet we鈥檙e human and we鈥檙e emotional,鈥 he reflects. 鈥淏ut the more rational and the more comfortable a family is with their value-based system, those are the people I typically see being more successful in their retirement years because they really pride themselves on understanding where their money goes and how to use it effectively.鈥
To take the next step 鈥 or the first step 鈥 on , contact to make an appointment with an advisor at your local branch today.