By using this site, you agree to the Privacy Policy and Terms of Use.
Accept
News as they happen
  • News
  • Canada
  • Business
  • Politics
  • Science
  • World News
  • Isness
Reading: How Spending Shocks Affect Retirement Planning
Sign In
Font ResizerAa
News as they happenNews as they happen
  • News
  • Canada
  • Business
  • Politics
  • Science
  • World News
  • Isness
  • News
  • Canada
  • Business
  • Politics
  • Science
  • World News
  • Isness
Have an existing account? Sign In
© Foxiz News Network. Ruby Design Company. All Rights Reserved.
how-spending-shocks-affect-retirement-planning
How Spending Shocks Affect Retirement Planning

How Spending Shocks Affect Retirement Planning

Last updated: April 11, 2026 1:49 pm
By The Associated Press
2 Min Read
Share
SHARE
How Spending Shocks Affect Retirement Planning

Longer retirements and costly late-life care can force retirees to withdraw more and weaken their financial plans. Garun .Prdt/Shutterstock

Market performance tends to dominate the conversation about risks to a retirement plan. But spending shocks can also curb a retirement portfolio’s longevity. We examined the implications of two major types of spending shocks: unanticipated early retirement and uninsured long-term care expenses at the end of life. The former may necessitate spending over a longer period, often with higher healthcare costs in the pre-Medicare years, while the latter can translate into an effective “balloon payment” toward the end of life.

Early Retirement

Early retirement—before the standard age of 65—is an increasingly common scenario. While Social Security’s full retirement age is currently between 66 and 67, the average retirement age is 62, according to a study from MassMutual. That’s corroborated by Social Security filing data, which show that roughly 25 percent of retirees take Social Security when it’s first available at age 62, and 15 percent file at 63 or 64. Nearly half of the retirees surveyed by MassMutual said they had retired earlier than planned; commonly cited reasons included layoffs, being able to retire sooner than expected, or illness or injury.

Early retirement has significant implications for retirement spending, with longer drawdown periods necessitating lower spending to maintain a high likelihood of not running out later on. In our base-case spending simulation, expanding the drawdown period from 30 to 35 years reduces the starting safe withdrawal rate from 3.9 percent to 3.5 percent. Stretching the time spending horizon to 40 years takes the starting safe withdrawal rate to 3.2 percent.

Don’t Make These Estate Executor Mistakes
UAE Says It Has Pulled All Troops From Yemen as Crisis Escalates
USA Rare Earth Considers Building Magnet Plant in France
Minister Confirms ‘ISIS Brides’ and Children Still Hold Australian Passports
How Major US Stock Indexes Fared April 23
TAGGED:BrightBusinessPersonal FinanceRetirement
Share This Article
Facebook Email Copy Link Print
Subscribe to Our Newsletter
Subscribe to our newsletter to get our newest articles instantly!

    5 + 6 =

    You Might Also Like

    the-prime-minister-who-opposed-confederation-(part-1)
    Arts & CultureBrightCanadaHistoryOpinionUncategorizedViewpointsWorld News

    The Prime Minister Who Opposed Confederation (Part 1)

    By C.P. Champion
    1 Min Read
    32-liberal-mps-sign-letter-calling-for-safety-of-jewish-people-in-canada
    CanadaCanadian PoliticsFeatured Canadian NewsTop Canadian NewsUncategorizedWorld News

    32 Liberal MPs Sign Letter Calling for Safety of Jewish People in Canada

    By Noe Chartier
    1 Min Read
    winter-storm-bomb-cyclone-could-hit-east-coast-after-arctic-blast
    EnvironmentScienceScience NewsUncategorizedUSUS News

    Winter Storm Bomb Cyclone Could Hit East Coast After Arctic Blast

    By T.J. Muscaro
    1 Min Read
    News as they happen

    We influence thousands of users and are the number one business and technology news network on the planet. Newsguard delivers everything you need to know to live your best life, best tech trend, traveling passion and more…

    Categories

    • The Escapist
    • Entertainment
    • Bussiness

    Quick Links

    • Advertise with us
    • Newsletters
    • Complaint
    • Deal

    @Newsguard – Codeus Design. All Rights Reserved.

    Welcome Back!

    Sign in to your account

    Username or Email Address
    Password

    Lost your password?