Monthly Social Security checks aren't enough for most baby boomers to get by, further fueling a retirement crisis.
A prenuptial agreement can be helpful, but it typically doesn't protect wealth built after the couple ties the knot, like retirement savings.
Men's monthly retirement incomes are nearly $600 more than women's — $2,610 to $2,042 — and they're more likely to have a balance in a retirement account.
Overall, divorced women like Clark see lower monthly retirement incomes than their male counterparts — and peers who have remarried.
One of Mintzer's greatest divorce regrets is that she didn't safeguard her retirement savings.
Persons:
—, Libby Mintzer, Mintzer, she's, Melody Evans, Evans, Roth, couldn't, didn't, Kathryn Clark, Clark, Clark didn't, Clark's, it's
Organizations:
Service, Social Security, Social, Gerontology, —, Roth IRA, SNAP, allisonkelly
Locations:
Florida, Tampa, California's Bay