Investment & Retirement

42 articles about investment & retirement

When should I claim Social Security?
Financial Toolset Team

When should I claim Social Security?

Delaying from full retirement age to 70 increases benefits about 8% per year. If longevity is likely and you have sufficient savings, waiting often boosts lifetime income and reduces pressure on po...

Read more
How do spousal benefits work with Social Security?
Financial Toolset Team

How do spousal benefits work with Social Security?

A spouse can receive up to 50% of the higher earner's benefit at Full Retirement Age, even if they never worked. You must be married for at least 1 year. If you claim spousal benefits early (before...

Read more
Will my Social Security benefits be taxed?
Financial Toolset Team

Will my Social Security benefits be taxed?

Possibly. If your combined income (AGI + nontaxable interest + half of Social Security) exceeds $25,000 (single) or $32,000 (married filing jointly), up to 85% of benefits become taxable. This does...

Read more
How are Social Security benefits calculated?
Financial Toolset Team

How are Social Security benefits calculated?

Benefits are based on your Average Indexed Monthly Earnings (AIME) from your highest 35 years of earnings. The Social Security Administration applies bend points to your AIME: 90% of the first $1,2...

Read more
What is Primary Insurance Amount (PIA)?
Financial Toolset Team

What is Primary Insurance Amount (PIA)?

Your PIA is your base Social Security benefit at Full Retirement Age (FRA). It's calculated using: Your highest 35 years of earnings (adjusted for inflation), Average Indexed Monthly Earnings (AIME...

Read more
What is my Full Retirement Age (FRA)?
Financial Toolset Team

What is my Full Retirement Age (FRA)?

Your FRA depends on birth year: Born 1943-1954: Age 66 | Born 1955: Age 66 + 2 months | Born 1956: Age 66 + 4 months | Born 1957: Age 66 + 6 months | Born 1958: Age 66 + 8 months | Born 1959: Age 6...

Read more
What is dividend reinvestment (DRIP)?
Financial Toolset Team

What is dividend reinvestment (DRIP)?

Dividend Reinvestment Plans (DRIPs) automatically use cash dividends to purchase additional shares of the same stock. Instead of receiving dividend payments as cash, the dividends are reinvested to...

Read more
Should I always reinvest dividends?
Financial Toolset Team

Should I always reinvest dividends?

It depends on your goals and life stage. Reinvesting is ideal for long-term wealth building (10+ years) when you don't need the income. If you're retired or need cash flow, taking dividends as inco...

Read more
What is dividend reinvestment (DRIP)?
Financial Toolset Team

What is dividend reinvestment (DRIP)?

DRIP automatically uses your dividend payments to buy more shares of the same stock, including fractional shares. This creates a compounding effect where dividends buy more shares, which pay more d...

Read more
Do I pay taxes on reinvested dividends?
Financial Toolset Team

Do I pay taxes on reinvested dividends?

Yes, even if you reinvest dividends, you still owe taxes on them in taxable accounts. Qualified dividends are taxed at 0-20% (long-term capital gains rates), while ordinary dividends are taxed at y...

Read more
How much difference does DRIP make over time?
Financial Toolset Team

How much difference does DRIP make over time?

DRIP can make a significant difference over decades. For example, a $10,000 investment with 4% dividend yield and 3% dividend growth can be worth $50,000+ more after 30 years with DRIP vs taking ca...

Read more
What's a good dividend yield for DRIP?
Financial Toolset Team

What's a good dividend yield for DRIP?

Look for dividend yields of 2-4% with consistent dividend growth of 3-5% annually. Companies with 25+ years of consecutive dividend increases (Dividend Aristocrats) are ideal for DRIP. Avoid very h...

Read more
Do ESG funds really underperform traditional funds?
Financial Toolset Team

Do ESG funds really underperform traditional funds?

Recent 10-year data shows the performance gap is minimal (0.1-0.2% annually). The main difference is often just slightly higher expense ratios, not the ESG holdings themselves. Some ESG funds have ...

Read more
What's the real cost of ESG investing?
Financial Toolset Team

What's the real cost of ESG investing?

The cost varies by fund type. Low-cost ESG options like ESGV (0.09%) and VOTE (0.05%) are only slightly more expensive than traditional index funds (0.03%). The main cost is the opportunity cost of...

Read more
Should I choose ESG funds with the lowest fees?
Financial Toolset Team

Should I choose ESG funds with the lowest fees?

Yes, prioritize low expense ratios (under 0.20%). Vanguard's ESGV and VFTAX are good options. Higher fees can significantly impact long-term returns. The ESG criteria matter less than keeping costs...

Read more
What's the difference between ESG fund types?
Financial Toolset Team

What's the difference between ESG fund types?

Negative screening excludes controversial industries (minimal performance impact). Positive screening selects best ESG companies within sectors (very small impact). Thematic funds focus on specific...

Read more
Is ESG investing just 'greenwashing'?
Financial Toolset Team

Is ESG investing just 'greenwashing'?

Some funds are more marketing than substance. Look for funds with clear ESG criteria, third-party ratings, and transparent holdings. Vanguard's ESG funds and Engine No. 1's VOTE are examples of gen...

Read more
Is the 4% rule still safe in today’s markets?
Financial Toolset Team

Is the 4% rule still safe in today’s markets?

Research suggests 3.5–4% remains reasonable for 30‑year retirements with diversified portfolios, but flexibility helps. Dynamic guardrails and temporary cuts after large drawdowns can improve succe...

Read more
How do taxes affect my withdrawal amount?
Financial Toolset Team

How do taxes affect my withdrawal amount?

Withdrawals from tax‑deferred accounts are taxed as ordinary income, while qualified dividends/long‑term gains may be taxed at lower rates. Your effective tax rate (e.g., 12–24%) reduces take‑home ...

Read more
What if I want a specific monthly income target?
Financial Toolset Team

What if I want a specific monthly income target?

Use the Reverse Calculator to see the portfolio size required for your target at your chosen withdrawal rate. For example, $5,000/month at 4% requires roughly $1.5M; at 3% it requires about $2.0M.

Read more
What is a portfolio stress test?
Financial Toolset Team

What is a portfolio stress test?

A stress test simulates how your portfolio might perform during historical crises (e.g., 2008, COVID‑19). It highlights potential drawdowns and recovery times to assess resilience and suitability.

Read more
How can I reduce drawdown risk?
Financial Toolset Team

How can I reduce drawdown risk?

Increase diversification (add bonds, international, real assets), use rebalancing bands, and ensure your equity allocation matches your risk tolerance and time horizon.

Read more
Should I change strategy during a crash?
Financial Toolset Team

Should I change strategy during a crash?

Avoid panic selling. Ensure your emergency fund is adequate, rebalance to targets if within your plan, and focus on long‑term goals. Knee‑jerk shifts often lock in losses.

Read more
How long do markets typically take to recover?
Financial Toolset Team

How long do markets typically take to recover?

Recoveries vary. After the Global Financial Crisis, U.S. equities recovered in ~4–6 years depending on the index; COVID‑19 recovered faster. Balanced portfolios typically recover quicker than all‑e...

Read more