CHICAGO – New LIMRA
Secure Retirement Institute (LIMRA SRI) research finds single retirees -
particularly single women retirees - feel less secure about their financial
security in retirement and are more concerned about outliving their savings
than those who are married or have partners.
The study finds only 64 percent of single retirees feel
confident they will be able to live the lifestyle they want in retirement,
compared with 71 percent of married retirees. Four in ten single retirees
believe their savings won’t be enough if they live to age 90 – close to half of
single women are not confident their savings will last through age 90.
“We have long known that longevity risk is greater for
women. Because essential living expenses are proportionally higher for single-person
households than couples’ expenses, the risk of running out of money is greater
for all single people as they age,” noted Jafor Iqbal, assistant vice
president, LIMRA Secure Retirement Institute. “Today, there are 47.5 million
single Americans who are age 65 or older – a third of them live alone and are
solely responsible for their own retirement security.”
One in three women retirees report their basic retirement
expenses are higher than expected, compared to only 1 in 5 men. Single women
typically spend a higher percentage of their income on basic and health care
costs in retirement (68 percent vs. 62 percent) and spend less on discretionary
activities than do single men (15 percent vs. 20 percent). Working with an
advisor to develop a formal retirement plan could help single women have a more
realistic picture of their expenses in retirement.
Annuity Ownership and Working with an
Advisor Drives Confidence
LIMRA SRI finds single retirees who own an annuity are
more likely to believe they can achieve their desired lifestyle in retirement
and their savings will last if they live to be age 90 (chart). The study also shows single
retirees who own an annuity are less likely to withdraw more than they expected
from their savings.
“It is clear that annuity ownership dramatically improves
single retirees’ confidence in their financial security. Our study demonstrates
that single retirees who have a relationship with an advisor are significantly
more likely to own an annuity,” Iqbal observed. “Six in ten single women who
work with an advisor own an annuity and nearly half of single men working with
an advisor own an annuity. This is at least double the rate of single retirees
who don’t work with an advisor.”
Single retired women are more likely to work with an
advisor than their male counterparts (40 percent vs. 30 percent) do, yet these
rates remain far below those of married households (47 percent). For those
working with an advisor, confidence levels soar. Three-quarters of single men
and women retirees who work with an advisor believe they will be able to
achieve the life style they desire, compared with just 66 percent of single men
and 54 percent of women. For single retired women, working with an advisor
significantly improves their confidence that their savings will last if they
live to be 90 –38 percent higher than those who don’t work with an advisor.
Single retirees who work with an advisor also are
substantially more likely to have a formal retirement income plan. One in three
single retirees who work with an advisor have a formal retirement income plan –
more than four times higher than those who don’t work with an advisor.
“Our findings present an opportunity for advisors,” said
Iqbal. “We know that formal retirement income planning is linked with improved
financial outcomes. Yet two thirds of single retirees who work with an advisor
do not have a formal retirement plan. We recommend advisors engage their
clients – married or single – and begin the process of developing a formal
retirement income plan.”
LIMRA SRI surveyed 1,130 single-men-and-women retiree
households, aged 55 to 79; who had been retired for at least one year and had
household incomes of at least $35,000.
https://insurancenewsnet.com/oarticle/single-retirees-feel-more-vulnerable-to-longevity-risk
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