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Retirement Planning > Saving for Retirement

Older Investors Think They're Ready to Retire. Advisors Disagree.

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Financial advisors have significantly different perceptions of their clients’ retirement readiness than do the clients themselves, according to Allspring Global Investments’ annual retirement survey, released Tuesday.

While some two-thirds of retirees and near-retirees considered themselves ready for retirement, only 40% of advisors, who were included in the survey for the first time, said their clients were ready. 

The disparity was especially acute around specific retirement topics. For example, when asked whether they know enough about Social Security to be prepared for retirement, 44% of near-retirees and 54% of retirees said they did. Only 10% of advisors agreed. 

Similarly, 30% of near-retirees and 46% of retirees said they know enough about Medicare planning. Only 8% of advisors thought they did.

“This report suggests investors are entering retirement less prepared than they think they are,” Ron Cohen, Allspring’s head of defined contribution investment only distribution, said in a statement. “However, only about half of near-retirees have used a paid financial advisor to help plan their retirement journey.”

Escalent conducted the survey in September among 1,515 adult U.S. residents who are primary or joint household financial decision-makers. The sample comprised 752 near-retirees (average age of 61), 763 retirees (average age of 70) and 320 advisors with at least $5 million in assets under management.

Transitioning Into Retirement

The survey analyzed attitudes and behaviors around planning, saving and investing for retirement.

Deciding when to retire is a highly personalized choice that depends on factors including financial resources, health and job satisfaction, according to Allspring. Survey participants’ average retirement age was 62, but their responses turned up mixed opinions and expectations of the right time to leave the workforce.

Thirty-seven percent of retired respondents said they had retired sooner than expected, while 6% had done so later than expected. Thirty-nine percent said they had retired too late and wish they had more time to enjoy retirement.

When it comes to reaching and maintaining financial security, both advisors and investors worried most about three things: inflation, investment performance and retirement planning. 

The survey found that investors are moving money to stable or fixed income investments for financial security, with three-fourths of near-retirees and retirees having done so last year.

Investment choice is important. Fifty-two percent of near-retirees said they preferred a menu of fund options as opposed to a professionally managed account or target date fund.

A significant number of survey respondents reported that they had decided to unretire. Eighty-three percent of these said they returned to work by choice, not necessity, and about 40% did so within the past year. Thirteen percent of near-retirees actually are those who returned to work after they had retired. 

According to Allspring, those who returned to work after retirement are older and less educated than other retirees in the survey, and had lower household income and total savings, as well as lower expected retirement income. 

Allspring noted that over the years, it has measured continued satisfaction and confidence of retirees versus near-retirees as they transition from working to retiring and the fear of the unknown meets a positive reality. Sixty-nine percent of retirees in the new survey said retirement is better than they had expected.


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