Women receive $4,800 less per year in Social Security benefits than men, AARP research finds
Women tend to earn less and spend more time outside of the work force, which may reduce their Social Security benefits. Here's what to consider before claiming.
Read the full articleYou might also wanna read
Super for under-18s is a gendered issue, costing women up to $11,000 at retirement
The gender pay gap starts early. Research suggests there are even differences in the amount of pocket money girls and boys receive from thei
Women Receive Majority of Long-Term Care Insurance Benefits
More people own Long-Term Care Insurance. In 2021 over $12.3 Billion in benefits was paid to American families providing quality care, reduc
The $12,000 Pay Gap Between Men and Women, and Where It Hides in Your Offer
The gender pay gap costs women about $12,324 a year. See where it hides in your job title, raises, and offer, and how salary research helps
AARP Report: $600 Billion in Unpaid Caregiving Exposes Strain on U.S. Long-Term Care System
AARP research finds that unpaid caregiving is now worth $600 billion annually, exposing the strain that long-term care places on American fa
Men outearn women by more than $12K annually, data shows
“As more women joined the full-time workforce, the per-worker difference compounded into a much larger estimated overall gap,” a career expe
What Is the Estimated Social Security COLA for 2027? Latest Forecast and What It Means for Your Monthly Check
An early AARP forecast estimates a 3.6% Social Security COLA for 2027, potentially increasing monthly benefits for retirees, SSDI recipients

Comments
Sign in to join the conversation.
No comments yet. Be the first.