Ten New Year’s Financial Resolutions Clients Can Keep

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The calendar has flipped to another new year, filled with hope, excitement, and for many, resolutions to improve an aspect of their life. Too often these goals are unrealistic. Attempting to achieve them is daunting. Ask a local gym owner how many memberships they sell the first week of January and how many are still around come April Fool’s Day.

I offer my top 10 roster of realizable and important financial resolutions to start your year off on the right foot!

1. Take it to the max

Whether you contribute to an employer 401(k) or an individual retirement plan, put in the maximums this year. Start by calculating the monthly amount it would take to accomplish that goal, update your deferral amount, and get saving! The new 401(k) employee max contribution is $20,500 (plus $6,500 catchup if you’re over 50) with traditional and Roth IRAs maxing this year at $6,000 ($7,000 if over 50). You will be amazed what a few years of hitting these figures will do for your retirement goals.

2. Two certainties in life

Nobody likes to think of their own mortality, but I can assure you leaving your loved ones with no instructions or guide to your intentions is borderline cruel. Take this opportunity to create, review, or update your will, trust, medical directives, and durable power of attorney. Also, life happens – children are born, folks get divorced or remarried – so be sure to review your listed beneficiaries; if you have taxable accounts, consider a transfer-on-death designation. It's an easy (and free) way to direct assets and avoid probate. Finally, for those with minor children, be sure to name a guardian!