College graduation is an exciting event, but it can be filled with uncertainty with the start of a job that brings new responsibilities and decisions. To help with the transition, it's time to plan your financial future. To get started, here are helpful tips on budgeting and spending money wisely, checking your credit score, saving for retirement, understanding your company’s benefits, monitoring and protecting your online activity (both financials and social posts), building your business skills, and more.
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For young adults, heading off to college often represents a major adjustment to adulthood and independence. One aspect of this transition is understanding the importance of financial well-being. By knowing the basics of personal finances and creating clear goals, students can set themselves up to succeed during and after their college years. Here are some tips for college students to consider, including building a credit history and organizing estate planning and other essential documents.
Families of wealth often want to help their relatives financially but are justifiably concerned about what those individuals will do with the money and how having access to significant sums might affect their values and behavior. While making family trust distributions is a way to provide discretionary income, it’s a framework that gives the trustee control over when and how much money to give to a beneficiary. However, that process is not collaborative.
For high-net-worth individuals, the art of wealth transfer extends beyond merely providing financial assistance to future generations; it’s about strategically positioning the next generation for personal success and knowing how to navigate a complex landscape of income, gift, and estate taxes. And when it comes to providing assistance to help loved ones achieve home ownership or favorable living arrangements, determining the best approach will require consideration of several factors that also include the tax implications and consequences.
Managing multiple short- and long-term financial goals can feel overwhelming at times. With this guide by Vanguard, a three-step financial wellness framework is provided for determining the next best actions you can take to bring you closer to your goals and improve not only your financial situation but also your overall holistic well-being, no matter where you are on your financial journey.
For young adults learning to achieve their financial goals, it's essential to know where their money is going. This is why having a budget is important. And what's even more important is to find a budget that matches your personality. From the first video, it will help you discover the different types of budgets available to fit your personal budgeting style. For more on how to budget based on your ideal preference, watch the video on these budgeting styles:
It’s not uncommon for parents showing signs of mental or physical decline to need assistance from their children from time to time, and today that help primarily comes from their daughters. Daughters spend more than twice the amount of time caring for aging parents that sons do, and women make up 60% of all caregivers in the United States. Here is some guidance on how you can make conversations with your parents about their finances easier and more productive.
It’s both a special and critical milestone when your children turn 18. At that age in the family life stage, they become legal adults with many new rights and responsibilities. While there are certain ways to help them get started on ensuring their financial future, there are also rights that you as a parent lose when they reach adulthood, like guaranteed access to their medical records. With their financial future in mind, there are a few critical things to watch out for to help them with their personal finance and protect their future.
When it comes to budgeting, there are a few basics: track your spending, know where your money goes, and don’t spend more than you earn. These fundamentals can boost your financial well-being and put you on a path toward reaching your goals—but going beyond these basics can help you accomplish so much more. With this easy-to-follow guide and worksheet, you can start to transform your relationship with money and how you feel about budgeting. You'll also learn:
As a young adult moving from college to your first real job and your own apartment, it's time to start adulting and being responsible for your own financial life, insurance coverage, and building your wealth. Here are a few items and easy steps to take that can help make sure you’re ready to succeed in the adult world.