One of the most common concerns in retirement is running out of money. It's valid — but often framed in a way that creates unnecessary stress.
The fear of outliving your money is one of the most common concerns in retirement. It's valid — but it's often framed as a math problem when it's really a planning problem. The goal isn't to eliminate uncertainty; it's to build a plan that can adapt to it.
This isn't just a math problem. It's also a planning problem, a behavior problem, and an uncertainty problem.
Markets fluctuate. Expenses change. Lifespans vary. No projection — however sophisticated — can account for all of these variables with certainty. The goal of retirement planning isn't to eliminate uncertainty; it's to build a structure that can absorb it.
Instead of trying to eliminate uncertainty, focus on managing it. That includes:
Flexible spending: Having a spending plan that can adjust — spending a bit less when markets are down, a bit more when they're up — significantly extends portfolio longevity without requiring a larger starting balance.
Diversified income sources: Relying on multiple income sources (Social Security, portfolio withdrawals, part-time income, rental income) reduces the risk that any single source disruption derails your plan.
Periodic adjustments: A retirement plan that gets reviewed and adjusted annually is far more resilient than one set in stone at retirement. Circumstances change — your plan should too.
Review your current spending and identify which expenses are fixed (mortgage, insurance, utilities) and which are flexible (travel, dining, entertainment). Knowing which expenses you could reduce — and by how much — if needed gives you a clearer picture of your actual risk exposure.
Then consider: if your portfolio dropped 20% in the first year of retirement, what would you do? Having a pre-planned response to that scenario — rather than making an emotional decision in the moment — is one of the most valuable things a retirement plan can provide.