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Returning to work after retirement can impact your Social Security and 401(k). It’s important to assess how your finances will change before making any adjustments to your investment strategy.
The Motley Fool surveyed retirees about the 2025 Social Security cost-of-living adjustment (COLA) and found 51% are considering reentering the workforce because their benefits aren’t cutting it.
Social Security benefits aren’t the only financial aspect that are affected by a retiree choosing to go back to work. There are other things, like 401(k)s and taxes, that should be considered.
Roughly 1.5 million retirees have unretired and reentered the U.S. labor market over the past year, Nick Bunker, the director of economic research at Indeed Hiring Lab, told Yahoo Money.(Photo ...
For the next three decades, projections of Social Security's finances would show large, long-term deficits, and in the early 1980s, the program flirted with immediate insolvency. From this point on, amendments to Social Security would take place in odd numbered years (years that were not election years) because Social Security reform now meant ...
The future of the Social Security program as we know it remains uncertain, and many Americans are aware that the program could look different by the time they retire. More than 40% of Americans can...
Social Security benefits can be a great help for retirees, but knowing exactly when to claim them can also be confusing. This is particularly true if you claim your benefits but then get a good ...
Unsurprisingly, this generation is preparing to make do with less financial support from U.S. Social Security: just 11% reported they will wait until age 70 to receive maximum Social Security ...