In the past most people never retired. They died. The average life expectancy was much less than it is these days, and there were no financial planners around to help people save up enough to quit work. As recently as the 1960’s, if you did manage to save up enough money to retire, you’d be lucky to live another 5 or 6 years before you kicked the bucket. This made financial planning for retirement a little easier because you really only needed enough income for a few years.
Nowadays, if you retire, chances are you can live forever. Well, it can seem like forever…especially if you haven’t saved up enough money. It is a daunting task, attempting to set aside enough money to supply an income for 25 or 30 years, in the 15, 10 or 5 years you have before you retire. We say this because most people don’t get really serious about their retirement planning until they hit 50…and realize they had wanted to quit work at 55!
This is the standard model that has been followed since we began living long enough to bother with retirement savings. You set aside enough cash to cover things off at some future distant time. You build the nest egg and then hope it lasts, and the financial planning community is right there to help you. And yet this is not how the most successful people in our community do things at all!
Still, most people are busily trading their time for their money. As an employee, you are limited by how much time you can actually devote to your job, and you are limited by how much time you want to devote to your job. Time you give to your workplace is time you don’t get for yourself. It’s similar for self-employed people such as our selves. The more successful we are as financial advisors, the more ‘in demand’ we become, and the less time we have.
Retirement looks pretty good when you’re an employee, or a self-employed person. You’ll have the money coming in, and the time for yourself. The problem is that it is an awful long way off. Is there another way?
The first time Rick read ‘Rich Dad, Poor Dad’, he just got irritated. After all, this was the book that pointed out how he was locked in the self-employed cycle where success leads to less free time. And he likes his free time. However, author Robert Kiyosaki also proposed ‘an out’. It’s called passive income. Passive income is income you have coming in to the household that you don’t really work for anymore. The key is that it is designed to happen in the near future instead of the distant future.
Since reading his books we have begun to change our financial plan. Instead of continuing to organize our finances around future income for a distant ‘retirement’, we are re-orienting things toward near-future passive income and ‘financial freedom’. We have been doing this by purchasing income-producing real estate and by looking to start internet businesses.
The success of our new ‘passive income’ plan remains to be seen, but it is interesting to note how changing our end result from retirement to financial freedom has completely altered the path we’re taking. These two goals are NOT the same. When you build a retirement nest egg you are looking to draw an income from it at some future time. When you are looking to attain financial freedom, you are looking to purchase or create assets which provide you with ‘passive’ income right away.
Should everybody be changing their financial plan? Of course not. For one thing, many people hate the idea of being landlords, and many others don’t have the stomach for business, let alone the technology business. Retirement planning is still needed. RRSP’s, mutual funds, and other longer term savings programs still have their place. There will always be employees and self-employed people who rather like what they do and are quite okay working until their retirement age.
All the same, if you are wondering if there might be a better way to ensure your future financial wellbeing ‘sooner’, perhaps you should pick up a copy of ‘Rich Dad, Poor Dad’… and get irritated. Either way, it will probably turn out better for you than it did in the past.
In the past most people never retired. They died.
Rick Hoogendoorn has been in the financial services business since 1991. Cheri Crause is a certified financial planner in Victoria, BC. .
www.chericrause.com rick.hoogendoorn@shaw.ca
Thinking About a Resort Retirement Home
Thinking About a Resort Retirement Home
Charlie McHenry
Better Think About Buying Now!
Buying Now Ensures A Choice Location and Rental Income Helps Pay for the Home
As the Baby Boom generation ages, more and more of us are thinking of retirement homes. Dreaming of communities in the country, close to golf, theatre, art galleries and forested hillsides. Or maybe your dream is of Florida sands, palm trees and year-round heat. In either case, you’d be well advised to act on your dream sooner rather than later.
It’s a simple matter of economics and supply and demand. Real Estate prices are trending upwards. Property values appreciate annually. There are only so many award-winning, really choice resort retirement locations. And the baby boomers are getting ready to snap them all up.
Take Mt. Meadows in Ashland, Oregon. This resort retirement community on 31 acres has run out of property with only 26 units left to sell and 14 more on the resale market. Named the "Best Small Active Adult Retirement Community in America" by the National Council for Senior Housing and one of the 100 "Best Master-Planned Communities" by Where to Retire Magazine, Mt. Meadows is a good example of the kind of premier community most retirees are looking for.
In addition to its familiar and comfortable design – just like an old-fashioned neighborhood – Mt. Meadows is special because it offers investors private ownership of its condominium residences. This preserves a buyer’s capital; includes the ability to sell at any time or to enhance income through a reverse mortgage; and, enables purchasers to leave the property to their heirs. The owners also control management of the development. There is no "corporate headquarters" dictating increased fees or changes in popular policies.
Not all retirement properties are structured in this manner. In many cases, investors are buying a "building". In these single-building retirement developments, residents are housed in an apartment with a very small kitchenette. The building has a lobby and a dining room; and, occasionally meeting rooms or a library.
Residents often do not "own" their apartment units, and there can be "buy-in" fees in addition to monthly charges in these buildings. A vast majority of retirement facilities and developments in the country are corporate owned. Changing economic conditions or a change in management can influence staff, policies and fees for facility residents.
It is incumbent on investors to review the many kinds of retirement developments, their management structures and financial models, before deciding where to buy. It is wise to include the family accountant, financial advisor and/or attorney in these considerations. But there’s one more thing to think about…
We’ve all heard real estate’s golden rule: It’s all about location, location, location. And that’s why it’s important to start looking for your retirement home now and to be ready to purchase once you find your match. Premier locations are being developed, and soon won’t be available to buyers. That’s reason enough for most 50 year-olds to start looking tomorrow.
Getting into your dream retirement home with very little down and utilizing rental income to help finance the purchase is an even more compelling reason to consider investing in a retirement home today. There are several scenarios that come to mind. You may have recently become empty nesters and are considering downsizing your long-term family home – in which you have considerable equity. This is one of the very few times in life that the IRS allows you to take your profits, up to $500,000, tax free. You can buy a smaller, more inexpensive home with some of the profits, and use a portion of the remainder as a down payment on your dream retirement home. Depending on the down payment, monthly rental fees may just cover mortgage payments, helping pay for the home until you are ready to move in.
In another scenario, buyers can use the proceeds from a 1031 exchange to fund the purchase price or down payment on a retirement home. To qualify for this tax exemption, you must rent your retirement home out for a couple of years. That fulfills the IRS requirement that you move money from one investment property to another property intended as an investment. At that point, or any thereafter, you can sell your primary dwelling and "convert" your investment property from a rental into your new primary dwelling – thus avoiding any tax on the entire transaction. If you use equity from your existing home, or the proceeds from a refinance to fund the down payment, you get into your dream retirement home without any significant outlay of your personal capital. And if you rent the property until you are ready to retire and move, your renter’s money helps pay for the home.
What should investor’s look for in a retirement home that they intend to rent before occupying? Again, location is a priority consideration. Most retirement homes are located within an hour’s flight from the buyer’s previous, principal residence. Most are located in areas that have a mild climate; outstanding recreation, cultural resources and health care facilities; and, are easy to get to – like many parts of Southern and Central Florida, known for their retirement communities, and like Ashland, Oregon – where Mt. Meadows is located. Ashland is home of the Tony Award-winning Ashland Shakespeare Festival, Southern Oregon University and the Mt. Ashland Ski Resort.
A mountain-side college-town, Ashland has been named one of the Top 10 Small Art Towns by John Villani in his book The 100 Best Small Art Towns in America. It boasts some of the best restaurants in the Northwest. The area is close to nine lakes and three major rivers including the wild and scenic Rogue and Klamath Rivers. And, there’s a major airport served by three airlines just minutes away in Medford. Wal-Mart and a host of other shops, from outlet stores to boutiques and galleries, are just five minutes away.
In addition to location, buyers should consider their own unique financial circumstances. Purchasing a retirement home is a strategic decision with implications for the future. It is important to maximize the flexibility and minimize the financial burden of such a purchase. Resort retirement developments that allow residents to purchase their properties provide superior flexibility and a number of creative ways to allocate the costs.
Sometimes the adult children of a retiring couple will fund the purchase price or down payment for a Mt. Meadows condominium – and their parents pay a monthly "rent" that covers the mortgage payment and fees. In this scenario, the kids share the depreciation of the unit for tax purposes – as well as the appreciation in real dollars for future profit.
In another version of this model, well-off parents gift their adult children and wives with the maximum $10,000 allowed – tax free – on an annual basis. The children then use these funds to make the down payment on the retirement property – which they own. In other cases, residents have "loaned" their adult children the funds necessary to purchase a Mt. Meadows unit, then left the property to their kids in their wills. The value of the property in these cases is calculated based on the day of death, and thus the heirs avoid any previous profits or appreciation.
However you decide to fund your resort retirement home, the time to start looking for a premier property that offers you and your family the maximum in flexibility and investment potential is right now. In fact, savvy buyers can get into a retirement home in a number of creative ways and even leverage rental income to help make monthly mortgage payments until they are ready to move in.