Is a financial plan enough?

Maintaining quality of life throughout increasingly long retirements brings a new set of challenges for advisers and their clients.
OCT 12, 2015
To live well in retirement, clients and their advisers have to embrace change —and longevity planning. As clients get older, their circumstances will continue to change, sometimes rapidly. What doesn't change is their desire to be independent, to have social connections that enrich their lives and to participate in activities that bring them joy. Financial planning that can meaningfully address these quality of life issues can make all the difference. By embracing the realities — and rewards — of longevity in your clients' financial plans, you can help them sort through their possibilities and offer advice designed to guide them up to and through the retirement they've envisioned. Here are some topics to help you start the longevity planning conversation. HOUSING Even in retirement, housing remains the largest spending category. Most retirees want to age in place. In a recent AARP survey, 89% of those 50 and older said they want to continue living in their homes indefinitely. However, there are a number of other options in retirement, and it's best to encourage clients to think about the issue before it becomes an immediate need. Questions to ask: • Do you want to stay in your home? Will it need to be modified for aging? • What other housing options are available to you, and what will they cost? • Would you want to downsize? Relocate to a pedestrian-friendly neighborhood? • What is your family situation: Are there children you could live with harmoniously? HEALTH CARE As clients age, health care costs tend to add up. Consider that the average couple at age 65 can expect health care costs of $266,000 over a 20-year retirement — and that number doesn't include any chronic conditions or health emergencies, according to the Employee Benefit Research Institute. An important part of financial planning is to help ensure that health care costs don't become a drain on clients' quality of life. • Questions to ask: • What will the treatment of existing medical conditions cost over the long term? • Do you know what costs Medicare will cover? • Should you consider long-term-care insurance? • Are there existing conditions that prevent the purchase of LTC? • What health care facilities and providers are there locally? CAREGIVING It's a sobering statistic: 70% of Americans age 65 (in 2014) will need some kind of long-term care during their lives, according to the Department of Health and Human Services. At some point, your clients may be providing or receiving care, so this must be taken into account in long-term financial planning. Of the 10 million adults age 50 and above caring for aging parents today, those leaving their job to do so will be affected by lost wages and future Social Security benefits. Questions to ask: • Do you understand the full impact of being a caregiver? • How will you get the care you need as you age? • Is long-term care insurance a good idea for you? TRANSPORTATION It may come as a surprise, but transportation is the second largest expense for individuals older than 65 and accounts for about 15% of their annual expenditures, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics. That's why advisers should make sure to account for it as part of their clients' long-term financial plans. Questions to ask: • How will you get to your favorite places in retirement? • Who will assist you if you can't drive yourself somewhere? • What transportation options are available in your area? Maintaining quality of life throughout increasingly long retirements is becoming a growing challenge for millions of Americans. With expanded longevity comes a whole new set of challenges, and your clients may find sorting through all of the choices themselves to be overwhelming. Your role as a financial adviser is integral. Managing your clients' assets, in tandem with helping them manage their lives, is of ultimate importance. Initiating these quality-of-life conversations with your clients and guiding them toward individualized solutions is a way to differentiate yourself as an adviser. Frank McAleer is director of retirement solutions at Raymond James.

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