Biggest expense for Americans over 50? Not health care

Biggest expense for Americans over 50? Not health care
Out-of-pocket costs on drugs and medical insurance are the second-most-costly item for older folks.
FEB 22, 2012
What’s the biggest expense facing people over 50? Counterintuitively, it’s not health care. Instead, it’s what they shell out for home mortgages and property taxes. While spending drops for most individuals once they’re in retirement, the lion’s share of spending goes toward home-related expenses, according to data from the Employee Benefit Research Institute. The research group analyzed data from 5,000 households across the country between 2000 and 2009. The results showed that while the participants progressively spent less money as they aged, housing-related costs consumed close to half of their total expenses in 2009. Americans 50 to 64 spent a median of $18,828, or 47% of their total expenses, on mortgages or rent, as well as insurance, property taxes and repairs. The dollar figure went down drastically for individuals in the 85-and-over category, falling to $9,533, but still accounted for 43% of their total costs. While expenses generally dropped off as the respondents in the survey aged, health care costs seemed to be the one area where individuals paid more as they got older. For instance, in 2009, people 50 to 64 spent a median of $2,844, or 9% of total expenses, on their health. That number went as high as $3,692 for people 75 to 84, accounting for 15% of their expenditures, and then dropped slightly to $3,000 for the 85-and-over crowd, making up 18% of their total costs. Author Sudipto Banerjee, research associate with EBRI, surmised that even as older people eventually pay off their mortgages, they're still paying a good deal of cash on maintenance costs, utilities and property taxes — which never seem to go away. “The dollar amount spent on homes goes down pretty fast, but in percentage terms, the amounts are still large,” he said. “Property taxes are almost a constant factor." Mr. Banerjee also concluded that expenditures for retired households are about 80% of what they are for a working household. Meanwhile, a retired household’s income is equal to 57% of that of a working household. Though the disparity in expenditures and income may be large, he noted that workers still spend a lot of their money on FICA taxes and retirement plan contributions at the workplace. At retirement, these expenditures change or are eliminated. Thus, provided retirees have saved enough by the time they stop working, they can still live on a lower percentage of pre-retirement income, Mr. Banerjee said.

Latest News

Advisor moves: FiNet practice Merrit Point tucks in $1B Truist team in Florida debut
Advisor moves: FiNet practice Merrit Point tucks in $1B Truist team in Florida debut

Elsewhere, a Commonwealth team in Massachusetts converts to Cetera, while Janney draws four former Wells Fargo advisors to its Radnor, Pennsylvania office.

Trader used firm ties to freeze $3.6 million, investors allege
Trader used firm ties to freeze $3.6 million, investors allege

Clients say he copied the boss on his emails - and now they can't touch their cash.

CFTC alleges North Carolina fund manager faked profits, lost $8.6 million
CFTC alleges North Carolina fund manager faked profits, lost $8.6 million

He wired millions to his own accounts and told investors the fund was winning.

OnePoint BFG taps RISR as advisors chase business-owner clients
OnePoint BFG taps RISR as advisors chase business-owner clients

The partnership arrives as most small business owners near retirement age still don't have a formal succession plan in place.

Trust & Will cuts staff amid restructuring, AI disruption
Trust & Will cuts staff amid restructuring, AI disruption

A spokesperson for the estate planning fintech cited AI's reshaping of the industry as Trust & Will restructures its business.

SPONSORED Who builds the income when the pension disappears?

Dan Biagini of American Equity says the steady decline of pensions, longer lifespans and a reset in interest rates are rewriting how advisors build retirement income

SPONSORED Why direct indexing stopped being optional

Direct indexing is on pace to outgrow ETFs and mutual funds. Northern Trust's Ken Lassner explains why the advisors who get it wish they had started sooner.