<p>Most people find out the hard way. They start collecting Social Security at 63 or 64, life keeps moving, bills keep climbing, and going back to work or staying in the workforce a little longer starts to make real financial sense. Then they discover that doing so comes with a catch: earn too much and…</p>
Money & Finance
<p>Most Americans over 55 will tell you they don’t feel like they’re doing particularly well. The retirement anxiety in this country is real and pervasive, and the constant drumbeat of scary statistics about savings shortfalls has a way of making even people in genuinely solid financial shape feel like they’re failing some invisible test. The…</p>
<p>It’s a peculiar kind of argument – one billionaire telling another billionaire that they really should be paying more in taxes. Not in a sotto voce, between-courses, isn’t-that-interesting way. But publicly, loudly, in op-eds and ballot campaigns and congressional testimony, with the kind of conviction that tends to make other billionaires visibly uncomfortable at dinner….</p>
<p>If you’re finishing a degree, weighing a big move, or wondering whether starting over somewhere new could actually change your professional arc, the 2026 data has something useful to say. It’s not what most people expect. For years, the received wisdom was that ambitious people move to New York, LA, or maybe San Francisco –…</p>
<p>The number that stops most retirement conversations cold is not $1 million, or $2 million, or whatever the latest survey says Americans think they need. It’s the actual number, the one sitting in the account when someone finally does the math. For most people, that number is sobering. The retirement savings gap between what people…</p>
<p>If you’ve been watching the California housing market for the last few years, you already know the punchline. A state that once stood as the global symbol of reinvention and opportunity has quietly become the place that earns the most U-Haul trucks heading in the wrong direction. Not because people stopped loving California, but because…</p>
<p>It’s one thing to inherit a billion-pound estate. It’s another to look at it and decide that holding on to all of it isn’t actually the point. That’s essentially where Prince William finds himself right now, and the plan he’s putting in motion marks a genuine departure from how every previous Prince of Wales has…</p>
<p>Most people spend decades doing everything right. They max out their 401(k), resist the urge to dip into savings early, and tell themselves that retirement will be the payoff for all that discipline. What almost nobody talks about is the tax bill waiting at the other end. The rules governing retirement income are a completely…</p>
<p>Most people know death comes with paperwork. What they don’t realize is that in some states, it also comes with a very large bill, one that lands on their family long before the grief has had any chance to settle. The federal government gives estates a generous pass in 2026, so the vast majority of…</p>
<p>Retirement was supposed to mean fewer bills, not a different set of money worries. The mortgage might be behind you, the daily commute long gone. But for millions of older Americans, money still feels tight – healthcare costs keep rising, groceries take a bigger bite every month, and the Social Security check never quite stretches…</p>
<p>Most people arrive at 50 with a vague sense that they should know exactly where they stand on retirement savings but a quiet dread that they don’t. The number seems abstract until suddenly it doesn’t. One conversation with a financial advisor, one glance at a colleague’s portfolio, one late-night internet search and the question snaps…</p>
<p>Older Americans in nearly every state are on track to outlive their retirement income and savings. A new analysis found that across the U.S., older adults face an average gap of about $115,000 between what they’re projected to spend during retirement and what they’re likely to bring in from Social Security, savings, and investments. That…</p>