Retirement Living Options OPTIONS
& INFORMATION RESOURCES by Ellen Hoffman Betsy McCreary, who has
lived in New York City for fifty years and worked in the publishing
industry, decided to use her retirement to explore and enjoy all of the
neighborhoods and activities she didn’t have time for when she was
working. She resides in the same rent-controlled, midtown Manhattan
apartment where she has lived for thirty-four years. In contrast, her
brother John, who retired from a military career, moved to an old
farmhouse in the Virginia countryside where he spent the first decade of
his retirement creating and operating a vineyard and a winery. Now
John’s moved on to video production, but he still chooses to live in
this rather isolated but beautiful spot. Before you make a
decision about where to live in retirement you need to consider many
factors—the daily lifestyle you want; proximity of children,
grandchildren, or other relatives and friends; the type of climate you
enjoy; and your health or medical needs. Ideally you should consider these
personal and lifestyle factors first. Then you need to face reality. What
can you afford? As usual, when it comes to financial issues, Uncle Sam
enters the picture. Because tax impact can be crucial when you’re
analyzing the pros and cons of where and how to live, this section
combines the discussion of “Decisions You Need to Make” with
information on the potential tax impact of your decisions.
Should I continue to live in my current home after retirement?If your answer is yes,
based on personal issues like those mentioned above, then you need to
calculate whether your income will be sufficient to keep up the mortgage
and/or expenses and taxes, and whether you need to remodel the home to
make it safer or more comfortable. Staying in your current
home will probably be much more economical if the mortgage is already paid
off. If you don’t own the house free and clear, you’ll need to figure
out if your retirement income will be high enough for you to continue the
payments. Regardless of whether you are retiring soon or a decade from
now, don’t forget that mortgage interest can provide a big deduction on
your federal taxes. However, if you’re close to paying off the house,
most of your monthly payment is likely to be principal, which is not
deductible. And even if you will not have to make mortgage payments,
you’ll need to make sure that your retirement income will cover the cost
of utilities, repairs, insurance, and property taxes. State and local
property taxes are deductible on your federal return, but you’ll only
really get the benefit if your total deductions exceed the standard
deduction, which was $4,400 for a single individual and $7,350 for a
married couple filing jointly in 2000. (If you’re 65 or older, the
respective rates are $5,000 and $8,200.) People who take out a
reverse mortgage in order to stay in their home will not benefit from the
mortgage interest deduction until and unless they sell the property. If a
property with a reverse mortgage has not appreciated enough to cover the
interest on the loan, you may not get a tax break on it at all. However,
you generally will not have to pay income tax on the money you receive
from the reverse mortgage—whether it’s in a lump sum, a monthly
payment, or some other form of payment. The main exception to this is if
you take the money in the form of annuity payments, which may be partially
taxable.
Should I stay in my current home, but make it safer or more energy-efficient?If you want to continue
living in your home—as most people do—you should evaluate whether it
meets your current and future physical needs. If it requires repairs or
remodeling, do you want to undertake these projects, and can you afford
the cost? If you or your spouse has a medical problem, you may be able to
take some or all of the cost of some capital improvements to your home as
a medical deduction on your federal form. However, to deduct any medical
expenses at all, the annual total of those expenses must exceed 7.5
percent of your adjusted gross income. Also, if the improvements you make
increase the value of the home, IRS will reduce your deduction by the
amount of increase in the value in your property. IRS offers this example
of how the medical deduction for capital expenses might work: Your doctor
recommends that, because of a heart ailment, you install an elevator to go
up the stairs. The elevator costs $2,000, and increases the value of your
house by $1,400. You will be able to deduct only $600 as a medical
expense. Internal Revenue
Service Publication 502 lists the following improvements to your home as
acceptable medical deductions “if their main purpose is medical care for
you, your spouse or a dependent” (for a complete list, order this
publication by calling 1-800-429-3676): ·
Constructing entrance or exit
ramps; ·
Widening doorways at entrances
or exits, or inside the house; ·
Modifying stairways; ·
Installing railings, support
bars, or other modifications to bathrooms; and ·
Grading the ground to provide
access to the house. Should I sell the home I own?A few years ago, The New York Times reported that a doctor and his wife, who had
bought an entire island for $1 million, were expecting to sell it soon for
$1.75 million—and pay little or no capital gains tax. How could they
qualify for such a windfall? The explanation is that, like many other
people who are close to retiring or already retired, they’re taking
advantage of a tax law that allows a married couple to exempt up to
$500,000 in profit on the sale of a primary residence. For the doctor and
others who made savvy real estate investments in their homes and have
avoided selling because they didn’t want to pay the capital gains, the
Taxpayer Relief Act of 1997 brought significant relief indeed. If you’re
in this category, the law could mean extra cash in your pocket to use as
you please—for example, to buy another retirement home or to travel—as
well as increased freedom to think about selling the house without feeling
constrained by a tax bite you can’t afford. Previous requirements
that you had to be at least fifty-five years old to benefit from the
capital gains exclusion and/or roll the gain into purchasing a new
residence within two years of selling the old one are no longer in effect.
Under the new law, when you sell your house, you may exclude the capital
gains of up to $250,000 for an individual and $500,000 for a couple from
your federal tax. To qualify for the exclusion, you must have owned and
lived in the residence for at least two of the last five years prior to
selling it. You may also sell a home and benefit from the exclusion as
many times as you want, as long as you live in each residence you buy for
at least two years before selling it. (However, if you lived in the house
for less than two years due to a change in your health or your job, you
may still qualify for a tax break. See IRS Publication 523 for details.) For people who might
want to stay in their home, but would also like to benefit from an
increase in value and from the tax break, Washington, DC, real estate
lawyer Benny Kass suggests this strategy: Sell your house to your child or
children, but continue to live in it and pay the rent to your kids.
You’ll get some extra cash, because you can keep the profit up to the
limits of the exclusion. Your children will receive the rental
income—hopefully, enough to pay the mortgage and other expenses of
maintaining the house—and, if the value of your estate will exceed more
than $675,000 (this is in 2001; the figure will be $700,000 for 2002 and
2003) for each child, this will reduce or prevent your kids from having to
pay inheritance taxes on the house in the future.
Should I buy a new home for my retirement years?Let’s say you and
your spouse own and live in a four-bedroom house in the city, which has a
market value of $300,000, compared to the $200,000 it cost when you bought
it. You want to retire to a two-bedroom condo in the suburbs or in a beach
community. With the $300,000 from selling the city house—free of capital
gains tax—you can undoubtedly purchase a very nice two-bedroom condo and
still have money left over. There will be no tax penalty for the
downsizing. You’ll have to figure out, however, whether it makes more
sense to keep the proceeds of selling your house and get a mortgage, if
you qualify for one, and benefit from the mortgage interest deduction, or
to buy the new home outright. Because this type of calculation requires
analysis of all sources of your retirement income and their tax
consequences, ask your financial or tax advisor to help you figure this
one out.
Should I move into a CCRC?This choice is, first
and foremost, a lifestyle decision: Do you want to live in a community
where you will have easy access to various levels of medical and other
services that you need now or may need in the future? If the answer is
yes, and if you can afford a CCRC that appeals to you (a recent government
study cited their cost as ranging from $34,000 for a studio apartment for
one person to $439,600 for a two-bedroom home for a couple) and want to
buy your CCRC home rather than rent it, be sure to consult an expert on
the tax implications of both the home purchase and the fees you will have
to pay for health and other services. The condo, co-op, or other home you
buy in a CCRC carries with it the same obligations and risks as any other
real estate purchase. When you move to a CCRC you may also purchase
pre-paid health care coverage, and some of the cost of this fee may be
deductible as a medical expense.
Should I be (or become) a renter in my retirement years?Renters reap few, if
any, tax benefits from Uncle Sam—but they also don’t have to worry
about the expense and hassle of home maintenance, real estate taxes, and
property insurance. If you’re tired of doing all of this yourself, look
for a building or a development with a superintendent and let someone else
take care of it.
I’ve always wanted to live in another country. what federal policies do I need to know about before making a decision?Nicole Mewhinney of
Winston-Salem, North Carolina, lived in France for twenty years. When she
became eligible for Social Security, she had her benefits deposited in a
bank account in the U.S. that she could draw on in France. She never had
problems getting her Social Security or paying her taxes from overseas,
but there was one problem that played a big role in her decision to return
to live in America: not being eligible for Medicare. Mewhinney is healthy,
but after several years of paying for private health insurance, she says,
she re-evaluated her situation. “I’m sixty-nine, and going to be
seventy next July,” she explained. “At some point you have to plan for
the future.” Retirement should be a
time when you can live out your fantasies and experiment with experiences
that were not available in your working years. High on that list of
experiences may be living in another country. Thousands of Americans have
retired in Mexico, for example, which offers the advantage of having a
common border and being close enough to keep in touch with relatives and
friends in the U.S. But if moving overseas is on your retirement radar
screen, you need to be aware that Uncle Sam has a lot to say about the
potential impact on your finances. “Generally speaking,
pensions and annuities that are U.S.-based will be free from tax in a
foreign country,” says Jane Bruno, a Fairfax, Virginia, lawyer who
worked for the IRS in Germany and who has written a book about U.S.
citizens’ overseas tax obligations. “Find out if the country (you are
moving to) has a treaty with the U.S. If they don’t, it is more likely
that they will tax any sort of income.” You may qualify for a credit on
your U.S. taxes for the amount you pay to another country, Bruno says, but
there is a catch: “If the other country taxes you at a higher rate than
the U.S. would, you will only get a credit up to the (comparable) U.S.
rate.” Robert F. Keats, a
financial planner in Phoenix, Arizona, warns that, especially if you have
a lot of assets, you should make what he calls a “cross-border plan”
to avoid potentially exorbitant or “double” taxation that could result
if a U.S. citizen retires and lives permanently outside the country. He
points to the example of one couple who realized that, unless they made
changes in the legal status of their $3.2 million in assets, if one of
them passed away, the surviving spouse could be liable for $4 million in
estate taxes, part in the U.S. and part in the foreign country. Here are some of the
basic issues affected by federal laws and policy that you should be aware
of before taking off to live on your desert island:
BasicsYou will, of course,
need a U.S. passport as well as a visa from the country in which you want
to live. You must apply for the visa before leaving the U.S. When you
check with the embassy or consular officials in your future home about a
visa, also ask about driver’s license requirements. Once you are living
overseas, the 260 U.S. consular offices around the world can help you with
serious legal, medical, or financial difficulties that may arise. You may order two free
pamphlets, “U.S. Consuls Help Americans Abroad” and “The Office of
Overseas Citizens Services,” through the Bureau of Consular Affairs of
the State Department’s fax, 202-647-3000. You may also read these and
find many other useful publication at this address on the State
Department’s website: http://travel.state.gov/acs.html
Income TaxThe taxes you must pay
will depend on whether your new home is one of the more than fifty
countries that have tax treaties with the U.S. According to the IRS, most
tax treaties allow you to exempt nongovernment pensions and annuities, and
some investment income, from taxes you must pay to the foreign country.
Treaties also help you avoid having some or all of your income taxed
twice. In many cases you will qualify for the Foreign Tax Credit, which
allows you to deduct some or all of the income taxes you have paid in
another country from taxes you owe to Uncle Sam. Be aware that some
countries require you to pay income tax on your U.S. Social Security
benefits. If you decide to live
in a country that does not have a tax treaty with the U.S., you will be
subject to that country’s tax laws, so be sure to inform yourself about
them before making your final decision on moving. Call the Internal Revenue
Service’s toll-free order line, 1-800-829-3676, to request Publication
54: “Tax Guide for U.S. Citizens and Resident Aliens Abroad.” On the
Internet, check the publications list at www.irs.gov
for additional guidance on information and forms that address international
tax issues.
MedicareYou will not be covered
by Medicare if you live outside the U.S. To get health coverage, you’ll
need to seek out a private insurance company. Some Medigap policies offer
emergency coverage while you are traveling overseas, but this will not
apply to your routine care if you actually live abroad.
Mortgage DeductionYou may deduct the
mortgage interest you pay on your overseas home from your U.S. taxes, just
as you would if the house were in the U.S.
Social SecurityYou may collect your
Social Security benefit almost anywhere in the world. (Exceptions are
countries with which the U.S. has strained relations, such as North Korea
or Cuba.) Depending on where you live, you may choose whether to have your
benefit deposited in a U.S. account, in a foreign account, or to receive a
check in the mail. Many retirees who live overseas have their benefit
deposited into a U.S. bank or brokerage account and draw on it using
checks or other types of money transfers. While living overseas you must
file regular reports to Social Security on your address, changes in family
status, and other relevant topics. If you are under seventy and work more
than forty-five hours per month, Social Security will withhold your
benefit for every month that your earnings are not subject to U.S. Social
Security taxes. Order the free pamphlet
“Your Social Security Payments While You are Out of the Country” from
their toll-free line: 1-800-772-1213.
VotingAs a U.S. citizen, you
may vote in federal, state, and local elections even while living outside
the country.
Withholding TaxThe IRS requires
brokerage houses or other agents to withhold 30 percent of your dividends
and interest when they send you the money you’ve earned on investments.
You can avoid this withholding, however, by writing a letter to the agent,
explaining that you are a U.S. citizen living abroad and are not subject
to the withholding rules that apply to nonresident aliens.
Wills and EstatesPeople who are living
overseas or who own property overseas need to consult with a lawyer who
specializes in that country’s laws to learn how you can leave your
foreign property to heirs in the United States. This may depend on whether
the country where you plan to live has signed an international agreement
called “Providing a Uniform Law on the Form of an International Will,”
which governs these situations. *
* * Before you retire, your
decisions about where to live most often depend on the requirements or
options offered by your employment. Other financial, legal, and personal
considerations play a role, but they don’t necessarily dominate your
decisions. When you retire,
however, the balance among these factors shifts. You’ll probably
experience a change in the sources and amount of your income, and you may
be concerned about physical limitations you have now or may have in the
future. But best of all, if you have adequate retirement savings, you will
have new freedom to choose your lifestyle based on what you
really want to do, rather than what your job requires you to do.
Instead of limiting your choices, start with an open mind and think about
the type of environment that would make you happy and allow you to pursue
your personal interests and dreams. Then go to work on your
financial plan, which should include a thorough analysis of the tax and
other financial implications of government policies that can make a
difference in the type and location of a home you can afford. In that
plan, be sure you remember and consider the following ways the federal
government may affect your options and, ultimately, your decision: ·
Uncle Sam has a myriad of tax
rules related to your residence, whether you are buying or selling a home,
keeping your current home, or moving to a foreign country; ·
Federal law protects you against
discrimination on the basis of disability, perceived disability, or in
securing financing for a home in the U.S.; and ·
No decision you make on a
residence is irrevocable. However, before making an investment or
completely disrupting your current lifestyle, you should inform yourself
about the financial problems you could encounter if you change your mind. INFORMATION
BY TELEPHONE: AARPCall 1-800-424-3410 to
order a free copy of “Housing” (D 15561), a fact sheet, which explains
low-cost housing options and tells you where you can find information
about them. You may also order “Selecting Retirement Housing” (D
13680), which describes each type of housing, and “Doable, Renewable
Home” (D 12470), which lists ways to make your home more comfortable if
you have physical limitations. Also ask for these two helpful brochures:
“Home Safe Home: How to Prevent Falls in the Home (D16598),” and
“How Well Does Your Home Meet Your Needs?” (D12670).
AARP Home Equity Information Center (HEIC)To request a free copy
of the forty-eight-page guidebook “Home-Made Money: Consumer’s Guide
to Home Equity Conversion” (No. D 12894), which discusses the risks and
benefits of home equity conversion, call the Publication Hotline at
202-434-6042. You can also order the “Reverse Mortgage Kit,” which
contains several fact sheets and a current list of reverse mortgage
lenders and counselors. HEIC also sells a “Reverse Mortgage Choices
Videotape Package” (D 16402), which includes two fifteen-minute,
closed-captioned video programs and a resource guide for $5.
American Bar Association Commission on Legal Problems of the ElderlyIf you are considering
buying or renting a home in a Continuing Care Retirement Community, order
a pamphlet, “Retirement Housing Options,” which includes an article on
“Consumer Contracts for Continuing Care Facilities,” by Charles
Sabatino. The article will help you evaluate the contract you are being
asked to sign. The publication costs $5.00. Call 202-662-8690 for ordering
information.
Center for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), National Center for Injury Prevention and ControlThis government agency
publishes a free brochure, “Check for Safety: A Home Fall Prevention
Checklist for Older Adults.” You
can order this and other related information from the SAFE USA Hotline, at
1-888-252-7751.
Fannie Mae (FNMA)To learn about this
agency’s two types of reverse mortgages, and get a list of lenders who
offer them, call 1-800-732-6643 for these free pamphlets: “Home Keeper:
It Pays to Keep You in Your Home” and “Home Keeper for Home
Purchase.”
Federal Trade Commission (FTC)This government agency
will send you the brochures “Credit and Older Americans” and “Facts
for Consumers: Reverse Mortgages.” Call 202-326-2222.
Internal Revenue Service (IRS)In addition to
Publication 502, “Medical and Dental Expenses,” and Publications 54
and 776 (see the box on page 201 for key references on living overseas),
you may also order a free copy of “Tax Guide for U.S. Citizens and
Resident Aliens Abroad” (Pub. 54); “Investment Income and Expenses”
(Pub. 550) and “Selling Your Home” (Pub. 523) for information on the
new tax rules; and “Home Mortgage Interest Deduction” (Pub. 936) by
calling the IRS at 1-800-829-3676 (TDD 1-800-829-4059).
Social Security Administration (SSA)To order the free
pamphlet “Your Social Security Payments While You Are Outside the United
States (S-10137),” call 1-800-772-1213 (TDD 1-800-325-0778).
U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD)This government agency
operates several telephone information lines for people interested in
various aspects of federal housing programs. ·
HUD-approved housing counseling
agencies: For
the name of an agency near you that will provide free or low-cost advice,
call the HUD Housing Counseling Clearinghouse at 1-800-217-6970 (TDD
1-800-927-9275). ·
Reverse mortgages and other
HUD-insured mortgages: Call the above number to receive a
free “Reverse Mortgage Package,” which includes a fact sheet on
reverse mortgages, a list of HUD-approved housing counseling agencies and
lenders for your state, and the three fact sheets mentioned above under
AARP HEIC, or to request information on lenders and other sources of
information about HUD-insured mortgages in your community. ·
Senior housing: HUD’s
MultiFamily Housing Clearinghouse and Complaint Line at 1-800-685-8470
can send you information on “Section 202 housing” for senior citizens
and the disabled. ·
Fair housing: For
a free copy of the brochure, “Fair Housing—It’s Your Right,” which
describes illegal housing practices, special protections for people with
disabilities, and how to file a charge against someone you believe has
discriminated against you, call HUD’s Distribution Center at
1-800-767-7468. ·
Other HUD information and programs:
Call HUD’s Community Connections, 1-800-998-9999. INFORMATION
BY MAIL: IRSYou can order the
following publications that offer advice to Americans residing abroad by
writing to: Assistant IRS Commissioner (Int’l.), Att’n: CP:IN:D:CS,
950 L’Enfant Plaza, South, S.W., Washington, DC 20024. The publications
are: Pub. 54, “Tax Guide for U.S. Citizens and Resident Aliens
Abroad”; Pub. 514: “Foreign Tax Credit for Individuals”; Pub. 593:
“Tax Highlights for U.S. Citizens and Residents Going Abroad.”
U.S. Department of State (DOS)Two free State
Department pamphlets that will help you plan for retirement overseas are
available from the Bureau of Consular Affairs: “U.S. Consuls Help
Americans Abroad,” which describes services that consular officials can
provide while you are traveling or residing abroad; and “The Office of
Overseas Citizens Services,” which explains how that agency can help you
with problems including processing claims for federal benefits if you live
outside the country. To order these publications, contact the U.S.
Government Printing Office, Superintendent of Documents, Mailstop SSOP,
Washington, DC 20402-4328. Copies are also available from Consular
Affairs’ automated fax at 202-647-3000. INFORMATION
ON THE INTERNET: www.aoa.dhhs.gov/eldractn/homemodif.html Check here to read
information on how to modify your home to make it safer. At AARP’s home page,
search under the word “housing” to find a variety of useful articles
on housing options for retirement. At AARP’s Home Equity
Information Center home page, choose “Basic Facts about Reverse
Mortgages,” which describes how to compare the costs of these loans.
Clicking on “Home Equity Conversion” at the home page, you can find
out about property tax deferral for older homeowners and deferred-payment
loans for repairing or improving your home. Operated by Fannie Mae,
this site provides information on reverse mortgages and other options that
could be used to finance or remodel your retirement home. On the home page of the
Department of Housing and Urban Development, click on “senior citizens”
to find extensive information about housing for seniors, including housing
rights and options for financing purchase or remodeling your home. This is one of several
sites you can refer to if you need to chat with Americans living abroad or
seek information about taxes and other rules for retiring overseas. Others
are www.expatexchange.com and www.liveabroad.com This website, sponsored
by the National Center for Home Equity Conversion, allows you to calculate
and compare the costs of reverse mortgages offered by different lenders. At the home page of the
DOS Bureau of Consular Affairs’ website, click on “Travel
Publications” to read “Tips for Americans Residing Abroad,” “U.S.
Consuls Help American Abroad,” and other publications with tips on
living overseas. From
Bankroll Your Future Retirement with
Help from Uncle Sam by Ellen Hoffman. Copyright © 1999, 2001 Ellen
Hoffman. Excerpted by arrangement with Newmarket Press. $16.95. Available
in local bookstores or call 800-669-3903 or click here.
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