Most investors spend their whole life scared of one thing. They fear running out of money in old age.
The bigger fear might be the wrong one. A new study found that a third of retirees still have all their savings by their mid-80s.
They saved for a life they were too scared to live.
The Underspending Trap
Advisors call this underspending. It gets far less attention than the fear of going broke.
But the cost is real, from trips never taken to gifts never given.
The EBRI study that flagged this drew on 30 years of data. It found that many people never spend their savings down at all.
Some even end up with more than they started with. That is the opposite of what most people fear.
Going from saver to spender is hard. For decades, you watch your money grow.
Then retirement asks you to watch it shrink on purpose. That shift messes with your head.
It can feel less like freedom and more like risk. Old habits are hard to break.
It helps to know how your asset mix should change as you age. A clear plan makes it easier to spend without fear.
Many of today's retirees also lived through strong stock gains after the 2008 crash. That made it easy to keep building wealth instead of using it.
Every morning, Market Briefs breaks down money moves like this in about five minutes, and you get a free investing masterclass when you join.
How Much Can You Spend?
The most common guide is the 4% rule. You take out 4% of your savings in year one.
Then you give yourself a small raise each year to keep up with rising costs. Say prices rise 2% in a year.
Your next pull goes up about 2% too. The idea is to keep your buying power steady over time.
On a $1 million nest egg, that comes to $40,000 the first year. The rule leans on careful math.
That same safety is what leaves so much money on the table.
Some advisors prefer a flexible plan instead. You pull out more in strong market years, then pull back in weak ones.
That way your spending bends with your savings, rather than ignoring them.
Worth Noting
Picture your spending like steering a boat down a narrow channel. Drift one way and you run out of money.
Drift too far the other way and you crash into a life you were too scared to enjoy.
Earlier generations leaned on a pension. It handled this math for them.
Most investors today manage a 401(k) on their own. That makes the spend-down call even harder.
After you are gone, the money gets spent anyway. Heirs or charities will use it.
By then, the choice is out of your hands. The only question is whether you were around to enjoy it.
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