More goes into planning for and sustaining a retirement than meets the eye. On the surface lies plenty of generic advice from the financial planning industry. Yet, beneath the surface are a slew of assumptions about a largely unknown future. To understand how to manage your sustainable retirement clearly takes more than simple rules-of-thumb.
It should come as little surprise that your retirement decision may be dominated as much by feelings of insecurity as it is by feelings of excitement. Thankfully, the balance between these two emotional poles can be tilted in your favor with pre-retirement planning.
For example, one critical first step for a soon-to-be retiree is to develop a deeper understanding of your post-retirement budget. During your working years, budgeting is all-too-often dismissed. However, when your income becomes more-fixed and less-active in nature, spending choices take on a new sense of importance.
During meetings with soon-to-be-retired clients, my early fact-finding focuses on gaining a better understanding of the true cost of their lifestyle. Without that understanding, retirement planning – and the day-to-day services that follow from that planning – can feel like stumbling in the dark.
With your lifestyle’s financial obligation defined, the traditional survey of your assets and debts and the review of your various sources of income begin to take on the deeper purpose of building financial sustainability.
Of course, the financial obligation that springs from your choice of retirement lifestyle must be met by sustainable income. For most retirees, at the base rests Social Security and, for a shrinking number, pension income. Together, these are just two legs of the proverbial three-legged financial stool.
The final leg of a sustainable retirement is built from income earned from your personal savings. While some might be generated from real estate or even business interests, it often must be earned from traditional sources, such as IRAs or after-tax savings and investments.
It is here, within this portion of private savings, where you may have a lack of confidence of how much you can safely spend from private savings each year.
This central question about your safe spending rate, known in the industry as the sustainable withdrawal rate, is where financial planners toss around overly-simplistic rules-of-thumb. In reality, the assumptions that underpin rules, like the “4% Rule”, are complex and debatable. For good reason, this subject dominates the thoughts of many financial planners. Honestly, it rarely strays far from my mind when managing my clients’ investment portfolios.
As we enter the new year, it would be wise for you, a current or soon-to-be retiree, to establish your own personalized safe spending rate. Only then will a confident retirement – and, yes, a worthwhile New Year’s resolution – be sustained.
Jason P. Tank, CFA of Front Street Wealth Management will hold a free educational workshop on “Finding Your Safe Spending Rate” on Jan 13th at 6:30pm in the McGuire Room at the Traverse Area District Library. Call (231) 947-3775 with questions.