Christine Benz wrote 4 Key Decisions for Early Retirement.
- Will you continue to work?
- What lifestyle changes do you plan to make?
- How flexible are you willing to be with your spending?
- How do you feel about lifetime spending versus leaving a bequest?
Really though, the word early could be removed from the title of her article because they are relevant questions for any retirement age. These are not the only decisions obviously but I agree they are important to sort out for yourself now at 50 or 60 or whatever but then also to be cognizant of any changes later in what you believe you want to do.
Maybe you've always thought you'd take Social Security at 62 but then you hit 60 or so and view it differently. Or maybe you always thought that you'd "hard stop" any work at all but then take a different view of the finality of never working again.
There's no single right path or template for retiring. I believe the questions/decisions can be common like putting in a little work to understand Social Security and then pick when you think is best for you to take it or assessing whether you want to live somewhere else or maybe downsize close to home. With Social Security I try to be consistent in not saying everyone should wait or everyone should take it early. I share my thought process for my wanting to wait, my wife is 6 years younger so she would get a larger survivor payout if I die young but I would encourage her to take it as soon as I do (64 years and two months for her).
Will you continue to work is a question to ask or maybe a better one is what will you do with your time. Maybe you will work, maybe you'll volunteer, do hobbies, hopefully you'd want to do something but I realize not everyone does.
I've been big on cultivating income streams like from monetizing hobbies, monetizing volunteer work or some sort of post-retirement career that is more aligned with your interests. This sort of path provides purpose and relieves some of the burden off of the portfolio which can help with Christine's third question about flexibility. The less reliant a retirement plan is on an investment portfolio, the less need there is for flexibility.
All the articles about the 4% rule and whether it can be nudged higher or not, presume that the majority expenses will be covered by taking 4% from the portfolio. Four percent is of course very reliable but not infallible. I might be the only one who has ever said this and it has been a while, but I don't believe the 4% rule is just about taking 4% in perpetuity. Part of it is sustainability in the face of the occasional, expensive thing that comes along. I don't mean an annual vacation or tires for the car but more like a new roof or some other once (hopefully) in a lifetime expense. I'm saying the 4% rule is about paying for that big thing but still maintaining the same regular withdrawal rate. I say that because the math in most simulations and with several IRL clients, is they die with a lot of money leftover.
A retirement plan that starts out with $600,000 right before a 30% decline in the broad market that then coincides with a $100,000 catastrophe might never recover. This is exactly why I've been preaching for so long about playing a long game to cultivate income streams to build up some resiliency for a retirement that starts out with some insanely bad luck.
I've been cultivating incident management work (fire related) for a while and have worked on a couple of large incidents but I had to change this up. I have a little more going on with my day job (a positive development) so being away on a fire, despite access to the internet all day, doesn't make a lot of sense. The team for which I have been an alternate on said they will still call me when they get assigned to a fire local to the Prescott area which was the end goal and which I will still pursue. When something happens locally, I would like to be able to help, I don't want to be away from home for four months going from incident to incident which some of the guys do. One full two week assignment (close to home) would pay about $14,000 which relative to our annual spending needs would be a lot of money if I was somehow not otherwise working. Something that pays $14,000 like that would be the equivalent of having another $350,000 in the portfolio ($14,000 is 4% of $350,000).
The other one I've been cultivating for a much shorter time is having been a research volunteer for the Del E Webb Foundation. Early on with this, I said there was a chance to become a board member which is a paid position and I have been invited to do so and I said yes. It will pay a little more than what I spelled out above for incident management work. Relative to our spending needs, this would be a lot of money if I was somehow not otherwise working. The difference between volunteer and board member is about an hour a week and having a vote on who gets awarded funding.
I should note that this opportunity came about from people who know me from volunteering with the fire department. I do believe I really have cultivated these opportunities which is why I write about this path so much, play the long game, it can work.
Neither income stream is a lot of money by themselves but would be meaningful in the context of a $100,000 lifestyle (we don't spend anywhere near that much) that relies heavily on an investment portfolio.
We don't spend a lot of time here on having money leftover to bequeath to kids or grandkids. This is a high priority for some people and zero priority to others. But along these lines I recently talked about small inheritances covering the tax on Roth IRA conversions. Are you likely to inherit any money? Counting on an inheritance might be risky but a little bit of planning in case you get one makes sense. There may be the intention, but sometimes life gets in the way. End of life care, assisted living and other types, can obviously be very expensive and you don't know whether you'll need it until you need it. I can't stress enough what a bad idea I think it is to count on an inheritance.
The more time put in to planning retirement, the better the odds that retirement is successful in whatever manner you define success.
The information, analysis and opinions expressed herein reflect our judgment and opinions as of the date of writing and are subject to change at any time without notice. They are not intended to constitute legal, tax, securities or investment advice or a recommended course of action in any given situation.