How to find someone you trust to help with retirement planning

Prepare for your golden years

Retired couple miniature figurines standing next to a glass car filled with coins marked "Retirement"
It's possible to plan for your retirement on your own, but many find it helpful to get some advice
(Image credit: Peter Dazeley / Getty Images)

Finding a trusted adviser to help you get retirement ready just got a little bit easier. In late April, the Biden administration announced new rules "that will require more financial professionals to adhere to a higher standard when providing financial advice about your retirement money," said The New York Times. "Starting Sept. 23, investment professionals who hold themselves out as trusted advisers will be required to act as fiduciaries — that is, they can't place their interests ahead of the investor — when customers pay them for advice on individual retirement accounts, 401(k)s and similar buckets of tax-advantaged dollars."

While this will help mitigate potential conflicts of interest and ensure an adviser is working in your best interest, it's still important to suss out any professional you are entrusting with retirement planning. After all, these are your golden years you're preparing for.

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Becca Stanek, The Week US

Becca Stanek has worked as an editor and writer in the personal finance space since 2017. She previously served as a deputy editor and later a managing editor overseeing investing and savings content at LendingTree and as an editor at the financial startup SmartAsset, where she focused on retirement- and financial-adviser-related content. Before that, Becca was a staff writer at The Week, primarily contributing to Speed Reads.