Life expectancies for both men and women are on the rise, but as the population ages, the number of widowed retirees continues to increase. Nearly a quarter of people 65 and older are widowed, according to the Census Bureau, and well over 11 million of them are women.
Given that they outlive men by an average of five to eight years, married women retiring today can expect to spend at least a few years without their husbands. With higher health care costs, lower savings and a likely need for long-term care, it can be tough to plan for those years financially.
Even when they inherit significant assets, widows are often thrust into unfamiliar territory as they organize assets and manage estates – all while grieving, making funeral arrangements and tending to legal affairs.
With these challenges in mind, any advisor working with retired couples should know how to help widows secure their financial futures. Myriad decisions must be made, and even financially savvy survivors will need your help to adjust their plans.
Having the conversation
As much as widows will need your help after their spouses’ deaths, the earlier they plan, the better.
“People are reluctant to plan for a spouse’s death, but part of our role is to walk them through contingencies,” says Jana Lisle Parham, senior vice president of wealth management for UBS Wealth Management. It may be an uncomfortable conversation, but it will provide for sounder strategies and much-needed piece of mind.
To that end, it’s critical to involve both members of a couple in the retirement planning process from the get-go.
“One spouse tends to be much more involved in finances than the other, and in the worst-case scenario, that’s the spouse who passes away before making a plan,” says Michelle Herd, senior client advisor with TFC Financial. “The gap in understanding leads to some very stressful situations, but when someone needs help getting up to speed, advisors can play a huge role.”
Taking stock
Whether they’re prepared or not, recently widowed clients will need to inventory several assets, income streams and obligations. There may be multiple life insurance payouts and annuities for which to account, as well as pension-survivor benefits.
There will also be an immediate change to a widow’s total household Social Security benefit in most cases.
“As a widow, you may have been receiving benefits off your spouse’s record,” says Herd. “The downside is now there will only be one income. The upside is you’ll get 100 percent of the bigger benefit.”
Widows, in fact, can collect survivor benefits as early as age 60 – albeit at a penalty. They’ll still have to wait until full retirement age to get their spouses’ full benefits, but in the meantime, they can collect early on their own at 62 – often a winning strategy for a long-lived widow.
In addition, most widows need to consider multiple qualified accounts. Under the Employee Retirement Income Security Act of 1974, a surviving spouse is the automatic beneficiary of a 401(k). The same protections don’t apply to IRAs, though, and if the spouse wasn’t specifically named as the IRA beneficiary, the funds may instead pass through probate and onto the deceased’s heirs.
Creating a new plan