7 Financial Moves American Retirees Wish They Could Undo

News Room

Hindsight costs nothing, but in retirement, it can feel like it costs everything. A handful of decisions made years earlier determine whether your later years offer comfort or constant financial stress.

When researchers ask retirees what they would do differently, a clear pattern of regret emerges. These are not stories of reckless gambling. They are stories of making a very common human calculation: prioritizing what feels urgent now over what matters later.

1. Retiring too early

Leaving the workforce before you are entirely ready is one of the most common financial regrets. According to a study published by the National Bureau of Economic Research (NBER), 37% of older Americans wish they had worked longer.

Every additional year of work means one fewer year drawing down savings and one more year of compound growth. It also opens the door to continued employer matching contributions in retirement accounts.

Dropping out of the workforce at 55 or 60 leaves almost no margin for error, requiring your portfolio to stretch across three decades or more.

2. Claiming Social Security too early

The temptation to take the money and run at age 62 is strong. Most people convince themselves they are getting a head start. In reality, they are locking in a permanently lower payment for the rest of their lives.

Claiming Social Security at 62 locks in a permanent benefit reduction of up to 30%. Hold out until age 70, and those monthly payments can run about 76% higher than the age 62 amount. The math is brutal for those who live into their 80s and 90s and find themselves relying on a severely diminished monthly check.

3. Not saving enough, early enough

The same NBER study found that 57% of respondents deeply regretted not saving more money during their working years. The math of compound interest only lands emotionally when you stare at a balance that should be twice as large as it is.

Workers who delay serious saving until their 40s or 50s face a near-impossible catch-up equation. Even maximum contributions late in your career cannot easily replace the decades of lost compounding growth you gave up in your 20s and 30s.

4. Underestimating health care costs

A 65-year-old who retired in 2025 can expect to spend $172,500 on health care throughout retirement, according to Fidelity Investments. That figure is up more than 4% from 2024 and continues an upward trajectory.

This estimate does not even include long-term care. It simply covers standard out-of-pocket expenses, Medicare premiums, and prescription drugs. Many retirees assume Medicare covers everything. It does not cover most dental, vision, or hearing needs, leaving substantial gaps that quickly drain standard savings accounts.

5. Ignoring long-term care

Most people turning 65 will need some form of long-term care, yet few adequately prepare for it. Assisted living facilities routinely cost tens of thousands of dollars a year, and dedicated memory care can easily exceed a six-figure annual price tag.

Medicare covers almost none of these custodial care costs. Unsurprisingly, 40% of the respondents in the NBER study regretted not purchasing long-term care insurance. Securing coverage or setting aside dedicated funds in your 50s sits near the top of every list of things retirees wish they had handled earlier.

6. Carrying debt into retirement

The traditional goal was always to enter retirement completely debt-free. Today, that ideal is fading. According to the Employee Benefit Research Institute, 68% of retirees with debt reported carrying credit card balances in 2024.

Carrying high-interest debt on a fixed income does not just slow your wealth-building. It aggressively reverses it. When credit card rates hover around 20%, a manageable shortfall quickly turns into a deepening hole with no paycheck available to fill it.

7. Playing it too safe with investments

Shifting your entire portfolio into bonds and certificates of deposit feels prudent at a certain age. The problem is that absolute safety carries its own severe risk — the slow erosion of purchasing power.

If a conservative portfolio earns 3% while inflation runs at 4%, you lose ground every single year. According to the 2025 Natixis Global Retirement Index, 69% of investors report that persistent inflation has already reduced the future value of their retirement savings, and nearly 40% say it is actively killing their retirement dreams. You must maintain enough exposure to growth assets like equities to ensure your money outpaces the rising cost of living over a 25-year retirement.

If you have over $100,000 in savings, consider getting advice from a pro before making any retirement decisions. SmartAsset offers a free service that matches you to a vetted, fiduciary advisor in less than 5 minutes.

The true cost of hindsight

Retirement planning requires you to think in decades, not a year or two. The thread running through all these regrets is a failure to accurately forecast the sheer length and cost of modern retirement.

You cannot change the past, but you can audit your current trajectory. Making slight, uncomfortable adjustments today is the only proven way to buy yourself peace of mind tomorrow.

Regardless of when you retire, you can take advantage of discounts with AARP. Slash expenses on dining, travel, eyeglasses, prescriptions, and more — just $15/year with auto-renewal. Join now and save hundreds.

Read the full article here

Share This Article
Leave a comment

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *