A Retiree’s Guide to Key Dates in 2021

It's critical -- and financially sound -- to hit these important financial deadlines spaced throughout the year.

Retiree at table with open laptop looking at a calendar
(Image credit: Getty Images)

Planning is everything. financial strategies can take years to put in motion and even longer to bear fruit. The last thing you want is to sabotage yourself by missing an important financial deadline, like any one of these dates in 2021. Use this guide as a checklist and reminder of what you will need to do.

Jan. 1 A new year is your cue to take stock of your retirement savings. Employees over 50 can contribute up to $26,000 ($19,500 for younger workers) to an employer’s saving plan in 2021, the same amount as last year. Also unchanged are the annual maximums that you can squirrel away in a traditional or Roth IRA: $7,000 for those age 50 and older ($6,000 for everyone else). You’ll need earned income to contribute to an IRA, and the contribution amounts cannot exceed your earnings, though the age limit is gone. Beginning in 2020, people 70½ and older who are still employed can continue socking away money into an IRA.

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Managing Editor, Kiplinger's Retirement Report

Siskos is an old hat with the Kiplinger brand. More than a decade ago, she spent eight years writing about personal finance for Kiplinger's Personal Finance magazine, including a monthly column—Starting Out—that served young adults. That was in her salad days. Now she's turned her attention to an audience she hopes to join in a decade or so: retirees. Siskos is the managing editor for Kiplinger's Retirement Report. In between, she broadened her personal-finance repertoire with real estate and investing stories at Old-House Journal, Investing Daily and U.S. News. She comes to Kiplinger by way of the Newseum, where she worked as an exhibit editor.