Women face a unique set of challenges when it comes to retirement planning.
Unfortunately, research shows female workers are coming up short compared to their male counterparts.
The good news is there is room for women workers to take steps now to improve their prospects for a better-quality retirement, according to Catherine Collinson, CEO and president of Transamerica Institute and Transamerica Center for Retirement Studies.
“Our research consistently finds action steps that are within reach for most women, and they may even seem somewhat basic,” she said, starting with saving and budgeting. “But many women are not yet doing them.”
To be sure, men are guilty of not taking some of these steps, too. But women fall short to a larger degree, she said.
Women workers have less than half of the total household retirement savings than men do, with an estimated median of $57,000 versus $118,000, a recent report from Transamerica Center for Retirement Studies found.
Women are less likely than men to have $250,000 or more saved in total household retirement accounts, with 24% versus 35%.
Notably, 24% of women and 14% of men have less than $10,000 saved or nothing at all. Women are paid 83 cents for every dollar men earn. And that gap is even bigger for women of color.
“The gender pay gap leads to an even greater retirement savings gap,” Collinson said.
Moreover, women also confront unique challenges when it comes to planning for their non-working years. For one, they tend to live longer than men.
Additionally, they are more likely to take time out of the work force to care for children or loved ones. That can lead to reduced retirement savings and eventually less in Social Security benefits based on their own work record.
For female workers, having access to a retirement plan at work is key to boosting their retirement savings.