According to the Social Security Administration, taking your benefits as early as possible (age 62 for those born after 1960) ...
The average retiree's 401(k) balance may surprise you. See how your savings compare and learn strategies to grow or stretch ...
If you work and receive Social Security before your full retirement age, the earnings test limit is increasing in 2026. Learn ...
Smart year-end moves—like upping retirement contributions, using new OBBA tax breaks, and spending your FSA money—can strengthen your financial position heading into 2026.
You should expect to need a decent amount of retirement savings to supplement your Social Security. Fidelity recommends saving 15% of your income for your senior years. New data shows that the typical ...
President Donald Trump has promised to stop taxing Social Security benefits, pitching the idea as a sweeping break for ...
Many retirees are unprepared for the switch from saving to spending. Here’s how to turn your retirement savings into steady, ...
When saving for retirement, the first decision is how much. But the next decision is where: Do you contribute to a ...
Leslie Harris has missed most milestones in his daughter's life while serving a decades-long sentence in Louisiana for armed ...
A long-standing change to the rules is taking effect in 2026 and affecting when you can claim full Social Security benefits.
You can, technically, retire whenever you like, but the age you do it at can have a big impact on collecting Social Security benefits.