Just give us your best guess.
Most financial advisors let the software do the heavy lifting when it comes to stress-testing a clientโs retirement income plan with modern tools that can quickly run Monte Carlo simulations to address longevity risks. Useful as they are, though, a common problem has become inputting inaccurate Social Security benefit projections sourced from the Social Security Administration itself. As the agency has admitted, its estimates often cause individuals to either over or underestimate their future benefits, especially younger workers and women. Itโs a problem that advisors will have to address in order to build successful retirement plans.
โWeโve looked into the issue and we do see many traditional planning models struggling with this,โ said Sharon Carson, retirement strategist at J.P. Morgan Asset Management, adding that advisors usually overshoot on the benefit estimate. โItโs a problem when people end up with less income than they were expecting.โ
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If a client is currently earning $150,000 a year, the SSA calculates their primary insurance amount as if theyโll work for the same wage until retirement, plus a small annual inflation adjustment. In reality, they might not work that long or at wages that high.
โMost software either uses your most current salary as the starting point to back into an estimated Social Security benefit, or it asks someone to put in their primary insurance amount from their most recent statement,โ said Marcia Mantell, a Social Security expert and founder of Mantell Retirement Consulting. โIf you arenโt really close to your full retirement age, the numbers can get skewed and become overzealous.โ Mantellโs other chief concern is that income planning tools arenโt inflating Medicare Part B premiums aggressively enough. โBest practice today is to project 8% to 10% Part B annual increases,โ she warned.
The latest Chase consumer banking data shows American households earning $300,000 replace just 55% of their pre-retirement income on average after retirement, with 41% coming from private sources like 401(k) plans and 14% coming from Social Security. It sounds like a dramatic cutback, but a 45% reduction in annual income is not as big a lifestyle change as one might assume. โYou have to keep in mind that these people are entering a stage of life where theyโve already paid off their mortgages, theyโve finished paying for their childrenโs college, theyโre not commuting to work,โ Carson said. โThey donโt need to spend as much.โ