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Deed Fraud
In the realm of property-related crimes, deed fraud stands out as a particularly alarming trend. This sophisticated scam involves criminals using forged documents to steal homeownership right from under the legitimate owners’ noses. While it may sound like something out of a crime novel, deed fraud is a very real and growing threat in today’s…
Continue ReadingThe Grandparent Scam
The grandparent scam is a cruel tactic used by fraudsters to exploit the love and concern of older adults for their grandchildren. In this scheme, scammers pose as grandchildren in distress, seeking immediate financial help. Despite seeming obvious from the outside, these scams continue to succeed due to their emotional manipulation. Here’s how it typically…
Continue ReadingNavigating the Medicare Sign-Up Process: A Guide for Newbies
Signing up for Medicare can seem daunting, but understanding the process is crucial for ensuring you receive the health coverage you need. This guide will walk you through the essentials of Medicare enrollment, from eligibility to avoiding common pitfalls. Eligibility Medicare is generally available to individuals 65 years or older, younger people with certain disabilities,…
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Financial Clean-Up Season
The end of the year tends to push people into two camps – those ready to sprint toward resolutions, and those too exhausted to think about it. Instead of resolutions we like to use December as a time for maintenance. No matter where you are in your financial journey, clearing out the clutter can help…
Continue ReadingMoney Mindset: Tis the Season of Spending Traps: How to Protect Your Wallet When Everything Says “Buy Now”
If you’ve joined one of our Behavior and Budgeting sessions, you’ve heard us talk about how money stress drives decision-making, and how biases – especially around scarcity and self-worth – shape the choices we make. As we head into peak holiday shopping season, in what remains a deeply challenging economic environment, this is the moment…
Continue ReadingThe Real Cost of Kids: Plans, Boundaries, and Holiday Sanity
When people think about starting a family, the big financial questions usually come to mind first: Do we need a bigger home? Can we afford daycare? Should we start saving for college? Those are huge, and they matter. But what most parents discover once kids hit school age is something different – the slow, steady…
Continue ReadingMoney Milestones
Over the past few weeks we’ve been laying a foundation. Money Without a Map was about finding your bearings, and The Debt Dilemma dug into how to get out from under the weight of balances. Once you’ve done even a little of that work, the next logical question is: how do I know if I’m…
Continue ReadingThe Debt Dilemma: Why the ‘Solutions’ Don’t Add Up
Debt…it’s everywhere, it’s confusing, and it’s dangerous because desperation can make anything look like a solution. Even people who are trying to be careful – who shop on reputable loan sites, who see “FDIC insured” attached to a bank name – can still end up in a mess. FDIC coverage only protects deposits if a…
Continue ReadingMoney Without a Map: A Guide to Staying Afloat
Money and health are two of the biggest parts of our lives. But only one of them comes with a system. If you wake up with chest pain, you don’t have to decide on your own whether it’s indigestion or a heart attack. You know you can walk into an emergency room and be told…
Continue ReadingIdentity Theft 2.0: Why It’s Getting Worse, Not Better
Last year, we did a subscriber-only issue on identity theft. Since then, the problem hasn’t slowed – it’s escalated. In the past few months alone, several data breaches have been reported, including TransUnion – one of the very credit bureaus that sells consumers monitoring services. At My Retirement Network, track this space closely. We deliver…
Continue ReadingLife Insurance and Long-Term Care: More Connected Than You Think
Life insurance is usually framed as protection for the people you leave behind. It pays a death benefit to your family, helping them cover bills, pay off a mortgage, or replace lost income. But when you look at long-term care, life insurance can sometimes become a tool for the living – a way to access…
Continue ReadingWhat Long-Term Care Really Looks Like
When people hear “long-term care,” they picture a nursing home late in life. A vague image of wheelchairs and hospital beds, something that only matters in your 90s. The reality is more complicated, more expensive, and much closer than most people think. Long-term care is any help with the basic activities of daily living –…
Continue ReadingFinancial Rules of Thumb: Guidelines, Not Guarantees
Rules of thumb exist for a reason. They’re quick, simple, and easy to remember – “save 10% of your income,” “spend no more than 30% on housing,” “withdraw 4% in retirement.” The problem is, life rarely fits into neat percentages. What works as a guidepost can fail completely once you apply it to real situations,…
Continue ReadingDon’t Let Your Financial Recovery Make You Vulnerable: When Help Searches Become Targets
Most people know not to click unknown links or download attachments from strangers. What’s harder to see is how scammers find you in the first place. They don’t need to hack your computer or break into your accounts. They watch your online behavior — the searches you run, the forms you fill out, the ads…
Continue ReadingThe Mental Weight of Holding the Line
In every family, someone ends up being the person who keeps an eye on the budget. Sometimes it’s one parent, sometimes it’s both, and sometimes the role shifts depending on the season. But whoever is holding the line knows how heavy it feels. It’s not just about numbers on a spreadsheet. It’s about emotion, timing,…
Continue ReadingBeyond Policies: Building a Real Long-Term Care Plan
Last week we looked directly at long-term care: what it really looks like, how much it costs, and the hidden burden on families. This week we’ve focused on how insurance connects to that reality – life insurance with its riders and cash value options, and disability insurance that protects income long before retirement. But here’s…
Continue ReadingThe Hidden Price of Family Caregiving
When most people think about long-term care, they imagine bills from nursing homes or assisted living facilities. But in the United States, the majority of care is not provided by professionals. It is provided by family. According to AARP, nearly 38 million Americans serve as unpaid caregivers for an adult relative each year. Collectively, they…
Continue ReadingWhy Quick Financial Fixes Feel Good – and Why Algorithms Keep Serving Them Up
If you’ve ever searched “how to get out of debt” or “best savings account,” you know what happens next. Your social media feed magically shifts. Suddenly the videos and ads look tailored to your situation: debt relief programs, credit repair offers, high-yield savings accounts, investing hacks. It feels like coincidence, but it isn’t. The algorithms…
Continue ReadingThe Risks Your Portfolio Can’t Cover
A retirement plan can tell you how to replace a paycheck, cover your bills, and keep your investments on track. What it can’t do is make sure someone shows up when you need help getting dressed, recovering from surgery, or making it to a doctor’s appointment when you can no longer drive. We like to…
Continue ReadingKeeping Up Without Jumping First
Finance isn’t fashion. You don’t get points for being the first to try the newest thing, and rushing into untested strategies can do real damage. But pretending the landscape isn’t changing is just as risky. The challenge for professionals and do-it-yourselfers alike is knowing when to move from “watch and learn” to “time to act.”…
Continue ReadingAnnuity Riders: What They Add, What They Cost, and Who They’re For
Annuity riders get pitched like optional upgrades – just add this feature and your contract does more. More income, more growth, more protection. But what they really do is add complexity and cost, and often shift the conversation from “What does this contract do?” to “What might this contract eventually do under specific conditions?” That’s…
Continue ReadingMind the Healthcare Gap: Tools for Planning, Catching Up, or Hanging On
Healthcare in the U.S. is expensive, often unpredictable, and full of blind spots – even when you technically have coverage. For some, the challenge is figuring out how to prepare for the what-ifs. For others, it’s about staying afloat when you’re already facing bills and stress you didn’t plan for. Let’s walk through a few…
Continue ReadingPre-IPO Scams: What Looks Exclusive Is Often Just Fraud
Pre-IPO investing has become a popular marketing pitch – especially over the last year. The idea is simple: get access to a company before it goes public. The SEC has issued repeated warnings about so-called “pre-IPO” opportunities being offered to individual investors. They’re still seeing complaints. And they’re still taking enforcement actions. These are not…
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