Elijah has good advice. Having been through this cycle a few years, I would advise similarly with some differences, as below:
1) get their medical expenses covered with medical / hospital plan insurance. Talk to an advisor to select options within the (household) budget, but it will be unwise to skimp on this. It will come in more handy than you think.
2) in terms of financing the hospital plan insurance, usually some portion is payable via Medisave. I recently learned about how CPF interest works, so... Depending on how your family feels about it... If your parents Medisave are near / exceed their BHS, any interest from Medisave will most likely flow to their CPF OA after their RA is setup. This means the 2.5% interest can be withdrawn as though it is a high yield bank account (can take out, very difficult to put in). If your family feels this is something beneficial, you can consider paying the Medisave premiums with yours / sister's Medisave instead so that they have a low-risk high yield bank account to draw on. When paying the medical insurance/Careshield/Eldershield premiums from yours / sister's Medisave, the drawback is you have less interest / Medisave to draw on for your own needs. But your parents would likely pass away first before either of you, so if there's leftover from their CPF, you get the "cashback" earlier in a sort of way. This is debatable and so up to you n family to think about or consult others on the pros n cons.
3) it would be wise to think about the family budget and discuss. Depending on their savings... How will their day to day expenses and the bills be financed - while you are still part of the household and when you have set up your family? When they no longer have employment income, will their passive returns be able to pay the bills? If they have to pay it from their savings or CPF payouts, is it sustainable? This is something to think about. As one of the sandwich generation, I can tell you I am paying for most of the monthly bills, but it's up to each family to decide how their finances run. This could be an important factor that leads to older folks not stopping employment because they don't have enough to maintain everything.
4) in terms of topping up the RA, personally I feel it's a nice to have. The way CPF life payout works now is that the payouts are calculated assuming the retiree lives until 95. So for every 7000 you put into their RA, the actual increase they may get could be somewhere like 10-15 per month (you have to use the CPF calculators or approach CPF to check this). Back to point 3 above, you have to think how the money benefits them if given in cash vs topping up the RA. Because that 10-15 monthly may not matter enough to pay the bills.
5) I think the CPF life payout is decided when they decide to turn it on. May be beneficial to ask them to check how much that payout is at the moment if they start it at 65, or at 70. CPF should be able to help you with that. Deferring the drawdown age to 70 may mean that the monthly payout increases by as much as 50% (compounding interest and not getting payout between 65-70). The life expectancy for males is about 84, and females about 87, though CPF quotes 1 in 5 live past 95. The RSS is probably not enough in addressing longevity risk, and hence CPF life. But if they don't have much of savings, electing to start drawdown at 70 may not even be an option. This may be a lot of information to absorb, but hope u find it beneficial.
I think you can refer back to Elijah's advice for thereafter.
But this is the order I would have told myself 5 years ago.
Elijah has good advice. Having been through this cycle a few years, I would advise similarly with some differences, as below:
1) get their medical expenses covered with medical / hospital plan insurance. Talk to an advisor to select options within the (household) budget, but it will be unwise to skimp on this. It will come in more handy than you think.
2) in terms of financing the hospital plan insurance, usually some portion is payable via Medisave. I recently learned about how CPF interest works, so... Depending on how your family feels about it... If your parents Medisave are near / exceed their BHS, any interest from Medisave will most likely flow to their CPF OA after their RA is setup. This means the 2.5% interest can be withdrawn as though it is a high yield bank account (can take out, very difficult to put in). If your family feels this is something beneficial, you can consider paying the Medisave premiums with yours / sister's Medisave instead so that they have a low-risk high yield bank account to draw on. When paying the medical insurance/Careshield/Eldershield premiums from yours / sister's Medisave, the drawback is you have less interest / Medisave to draw on for your own needs. But your parents would likely pass away first before either of you, so if there's leftover from their CPF, you get the "cashback" earlier in a sort of way. This is debatable and so up to you n family to think about or consult others on the pros n cons.
3) it would be wise to think about the family budget and discuss. Depending on their savings... How will their day to day expenses and the bills be financed - while you are still part of the household and when you have set up your family? When they no longer have employment income, will their passive returns be able to pay the bills? If they have to pay it from their savings or CPF payouts, is it sustainable? This is something to think about. As one of the sandwich generation, I can tell you I am paying for most of the monthly bills, but it's up to each family to decide how their finances run. This could be an important factor that leads to older folks not stopping employment because they don't have enough to maintain everything.
4) in terms of topping up the RA, personally I feel it's a nice to have. The way CPF life payout works now is that the payouts are calculated assuming the retiree lives until 95. So for every 7000 you put into their RA, the actual increase they may get could be somewhere like 10-15 per month (you have to use the CPF calculators or approach CPF to check this). Back to point 3 above, you have to think how the money benefits them if given in cash vs topping up the RA. Because that 10-15 monthly may not matter enough to pay the bills.
5) I think the CPF life payout is decided when they decide to turn it on. May be beneficial to ask them to check how much that payout is at the moment if they start it at 65, or at 70. CPF should be able to help you with that. Deferring the drawdown age to 70 may mean that the monthly payout increases by as much as 50% (compounding interest and not getting payout between 65-70). The life expectancy for males is about 84, and females about 87, though CPF quotes 1 in 5 live past 95. The RSS is probably not enough in addressing longevity risk, and hence CPF life. But if they don't have much of savings, electing to start drawdown at 70 may not even be an option. This may be a lot of information to absorb, but hope u find it beneficial.
I think you can refer back to Elijah's advice for thereafter.
But this is the order I would have told myself 5 years ago.