MM Answered this already:
You don’t need to keep paying in if deferring. The two are not connected. You could stop at 60 if you like. Or contribute to 65 voluntarily if not working..
MM Answered this already:
Your compulsory contributions stop at 60.hbd wrote: ↑Thu Dec 28, 2023 12:54 am Thankyou Moneymatters. Yes, those sums certainly add up. I think perhaps my question wasn't well worded, so here's another way of putting it: Would one get 142 from age 70 by deferring, merely waiting (while living off other means) those 5 years from retirement at 65, but not contributing a single yen more? Or does the 142% at age 70 figure assume continuing contributions have been made from ages 65 to 70? If one stops work at 65 but pays no more into the system, will the pension amount received every two months be 142% higher than it would be if one started receiving the money at 65?
Yes.hbd wrote: ↑Thu Dec 28, 2023 12:54 am Thankyou Moneymatters. Yes, those sums certainly add up. I think perhaps my question wasn't well worded, so here's another way of putting it: Would one get 142 from age 70 by deferring, merely waiting (while living off other means) those 5 years from retirement at 65, but not contributing a single yen more?
No.Or does the 142% at age 70 figure assume continuing contributions have been made from ages 65 to 70?
Yes. (From age 70..)If one stops work at 65 but pays no more into the system, will the pension amount received every two months be 142% higher than it would be if one started receiving the money at 65?
Hopefully it is a form of diversification, ie you have plenty of investments in NISA and iDeCo, and nenkin is something completely uncorrelated to them.