Few things are as satisfying as a well-made egg salad — creamy, tangy, and simple to throw together with ingredients you almost always have on hand.
Few things are as satisfying as a well-made egg salad — creamy, tangy, and simple to throw together with ingredients you almost always have on hand.
Retirement. For decades, it's been the finish line — the reward at the end of a long career. But here's the truth that more and more retirees are discovering: retirement isn't an ending at all. It's one of the most exciting new chapters you'll ever write.
So you've handed in your badge, said goodbye to the Monday morning commute, and slept past 6 a.m. for the first time in years. Now what?
Retiring and claiming Social Security are two completely separate decisions. Treating them as the same thing could cost you tens of thousands of dollars so getting it right matters.
Retirement is one of the most significant financial and personal decisions you'll ever make. There's no universal "right age" — the best time to retire is deeply personal, shaped by your finances, health, lifestyle goals, and emotional readiness. That said, there are key factors and milestone ages that can help guide your thinking.