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Retirement Planning

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Contribute to your company's retirement plan, 401k, 403b, deferred compensation, or other retirement plan when available. If self-employed, you can contribute to a SEP-IRA, Simple-IRA, Keogh, Roth IRA, or regular IRA. (See retirement calculator). Most everyone can contribute to a Roth IRA or Individual Retirement Account (IRA), on their own. Many companies and non-profit organizations will match or partially match an employee's contribution. Also, most retirement contributions are taken from your gross income before taxes; this amounts to a large savings.

Over time, with matching funds from your employer, regular contributions, tax-deductible and tax-deferred retirement accounts, you can build a substantial retirement account, but only if you contribute! So start contributing now, and consider making your maximum allowable contribution. Considering the built-in tax savings and employer matching funds, you can actually lose money if you don't contribute to your company retirement plan, or a voluntary self-employment or small business retirement plan.

Get an estimate of your social security benefits at retirement by contacting the department of social security at www.ssa.gov. The social security administration can mail you a copy of your past earnings and estimated social security at retirement. By getting this report you can verify that you were given credit for every year you paid social security tax. Social Security is not considered a total retirement plan. Instead it is a supplemental retirement plan, to be used in conjunction with a company retirement plan or individual retirement plan.

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