Posted on 02/06/2026 4:00:17 AM PST by where's_the_Outrage?
By the time you reach your mid-70s, your financial life often looks very different from what it did a decade earlier. Work is usually behind you, priorities have shifted, and your money is no longer just about growing. It's about sustaining the life you want to live, especially if you're trying to maximize your senior benefits and get the most value out of every dollar you've earned.
If you're 74 (or getting close), this is a natural moment to check up on your retirement readiness and see how your own situation compares to other Americans in the same age range.
Net worth is simply the total value of what you own minus what you owe. That includes things like savings and investment accounts, home equity, vehicles, and other assets, minus any remaining debts such as a mortgage, credit cards, or medical bills.
At 74, net worth often looks different from what it did earlier in retirement. Many people have started drawing down savings, some have downsized or paid off their homes, and others may still be carrying a mortgage.
According to the Federal Reserve's Survey of Consumer Finances, households headed by someone aged 75 or older (the closest public data bucket to 74-year-olds) have an average net worth of roughly $1.6 million. The median net worth, which is a better reflection of the typical household, is much lower, around $335,000.
The gap between these two numbers tells an important story. A relatively small group of very wealthy households pulls the average up, while many retirees have a far more modest balance. If your own number is closer to the median, you're not unusual.
(Excerpt) Read more at msn.com ...
At 74 in the USA, the life expectancy is 87.
Bravo! I’m unemployed. I’ll die in my trailer house on a worn out sofa with the garbage can in front of it watching Turner Classic Movies. I’m living the dream.
-PJ
What do you contemplate as a new active phase in your life?
Not working 5 to 3 and 12 hour overtime shifts along with changing scedile.
Leading a new bible study and helping coach my granchildren. Taking the vacations with my wife long overdue becuase work scedules did not allow such unavailability.
Weekday outings with my wife.
After I retired I started to realize it’s what I don’t have to do on a daily basis that is the most rewarding. The ultimate luxury is having enough to not have to work.
I often think hey no meeting today or any day. No expense report this week. No drive in traffic. Then I smile.
Again for me it’s not what I am doing that is important it’s what I am not doing that I relish.
“...I’m 67 and am asked “you aren’t retired yet”? People have been conditioned to think that you’re incapable after 65. Nonsense. ....”
______________________________
It seems that I often have to forcefully defend my decision to continue working, I’m also 67. I often get lectured on the social security “break even” age and reminded that life can change in a blink of the eye. It’s as if they think I’m stupid or something. I notice however that all those people who question working past 62 or 65 are not ready financially to retire. It appears that they are relying on the weight of numbers, meaning if everyone that is retired is broke, the government or family will have to step in and help.
Quite right.
Congress is 100% responsible for debauching our currency.
We do not hate Congress enough.
I can retire now, but I worry about what I will do to give my life a sense of purpose if I do.
I generally enjoy the work I do now, and it will feel unnatural to me not to do it anymore.
But if the things you named will keep you happy, then you are blessed.
I often think hey no meeting today or any day. No expense report this week. No drive in traffic. Then I smile.
Again for me it’s not what I am doing that is important it’s what I am not doing that I relish.
What you have said here appears to me to be the most positive things of which I can say about retirement. Not having to be at any particular place at any particular time has a high value to me.
I can retire now, but I don't want to. My work gives me a sense of purpose, and I worry about what I will find to do to keep myself sane in the absence of my work.
My current plan for retirement is to just work at restoring antique cars, but I fear it won't be sufficiently fulfilling to keep me happy.
But i'm glad others have found a way to enjoy life after a career.
Retire if you can. You will be totally messed up for about 3 months but then u realize work is not everything.
Nope. Every mother loving last one of them deserves malice.
You are correct. I realized that after I walked away from my computer. :-(
Easy to do. They only people who do not make mistakes are those who do nothing.
It is the biggest mistake of all!
I whole-heartedly agree.... Yet, many are planning just what you have warned your kids against (wise counsel, by the way)
James Dobson co-authored a series of fiction books that tell this very tale. I believe the title of one was "Fatherless" - interesting insight.
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