Episode Details
Back to Episodes
The Right Withdrawal Rate?
Description
Tom and Don tackle one of retirement’s hardest questions: how much can you safely spend from your portfolio without blowing up the rest of your life? They walk through the familiar 4% rule, flexible withdrawal strategies, why a flat 10% withdrawal is usually fantasyland, and why the “right” spending rate depends heavily on your age, timeline, and tolerance for adjusting in bad markets. They also answer a listener question about a 22-year-old’s investment allocation and close with a timely discussion of the latest Social Security trust fund warning, what it actually means, and the only real ways Congress can fix it.
00:12 — How much can you safely spend in retirement? Tom and Don tee up the big question: 4% rule, 5% flexible rule, or something more personalized.
02:08 — Survey shocker: many people think they need 30 years of income saved before retiring comfortably.
03:03 — Longevity math: how long retirement might actually last, and why that matters for withdrawal rates.
04:40 — Can you really withdraw 10% a year? Tom and Don push back on overly aggressive retirement spending assumptions.
05:59 — Why generic withdrawal rules fall apart in real-life retirement planning.
06:25 — Every retiree needs a personalized withdrawal strategy based on their own timeline and circumstances.
07:17 — Retiring at 60 vs. 70: why earlier retirement makes even “safe” withdrawal rates riskier.
09:04 — Why it’s worth having a professional review your retirement withdrawal plan, even if you’ve used calculators.
09:58 — The case for flexible withdrawals: spending more in strong markets and less in weak ones.
10:20 — Three common retirement planning mistakes: not saving enough, not knowing your needed return, and taking the wrong amount of risk.
12:16 — Listener question: a 22-year-old with $28,500 invested wants to know if his allocation makes sense.
13:28 — Breaking down DFAW, VT, and VTI: overlap, diversification, and whether the portfolio is too complicated.
16:21 — The bigger story: a 22-year-old already has a terrific head start on retirement savings.
17:56 — Social Security update: the trust fund could run short in 2032 if nothing changes.
18:37 — The only real ways to fix Social Security: raise taxes, cut benefits, or some combination of both.
19:52 — Why scary Social Security headlines should not automatically push people to file early.
21:22 — One possible fix: raising or removing the payroll tax cap.
23:27 — The demographic problem under Social Security: too few workers supporting too many retirees.