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March 7, 2024 • 6 minutes
Do you actually know how much you spend every day now? What about every week? Throughout your life, you have probably at least looked backward to assess how much you have spent, even if it is just a running tally in your head. However, figuring out much you will consume in the future can be a lot more complicated.
Do you have any idea of what your average retirement spending will be over the 20 to 30 years you will be living a life of leisure in retirement?
The odds are that you probably haven’t quite yet figured that out. However, it is useful to know. How much you want to spend is the key determinant to a huge number of important retirement planning questions: how much savings you need, how those savings should be invested, and more.
But, you are probably curious about how your spending projections compare to everyone else’s.
According to the most recent data from the U.S. Bureau of Labor and Statistics (BLS), average retirement spending by households led by someone 65 or over was:
However, it varies tremendously across income levels and ages.
The BLS data reports average retirement spending by category:
On average, households over 65 spend:
Most standard economic models assume that over your lifetime, the amount you spend is continuous and relatively stable and doesn’t even drop during retirement. That being said, the rule of thumb used by lot of financial advisors is to plan on spending 20% less in retirement than what you spent while working.
However, research suggests that the 20% rule is not necessarily the best benchmark. And, it is important to note that spending does not typically fall by 20% in the first year of retirement and stay steady.
The reality for most people is that spending varies over time.
According to the Employee Benefit Research Institute (EBRI), retirement spending varies over an individual’s lifetime.
ERBI research suggests that household spending drops at the beginning of retirement. In the first two years of retirement, median household spending drops by 5.5 percent from pre retirement spending levels, and by 12.5 percent by the third or fourth year of retirement. But the spending reduction slows down after the fourth year.
However, although average spending in retirement fell, a large percentage of households experienced higher spending in the first few years following retirement.
Retirement can be broken into stages. And, each stage has very different spending patterns.
Stage 1: For many people, the first stage of retirement is the transition to retirement. In the transition, you may work part-time or switch to a retirement job. For many people, spending during this stage stays roughly the same as it always has been.
Stage 2: This is the stage where you have officially stopped working and the focus is on leisure. During this stage, your spending might increase as you suddenly have a lot of extra time and your time is spent spending money instead of earning it.
Stage 3: As you get older, your health might decline and you may find that you want to slow down. Spending may really decrease during this phase.
Stage 4: For many people, the last two years of life are the most expensive. Long-term care and medical costs spike for most people at the very end. The fact is that dying is very expensive. Some researchers suggest that if you need long-term care at the end of your life, your healthcare costs might be in the hundreds of thousands of dollars.
To make your money work for you during retirement, you need to track your spending now and make guesses about how your spending habits will change.
“A person’s financial success in retirement depends on two key components – savings accumulated during working years, and spending during retirement years,” EBRI writes. “Quantifying these two components and the underlying behavior patterns is essential to understanding how people are likely to succeed in retirement.”
Pay particular attention to the biggest budget items:
Future healthcare costs can be difficult to predict, especially when trying to factor the possibility of a long term care need.
However, on average, healthcare is one of the three biggest retirement spending categories and the one area where costs rises consistently as you age.
Fidelity estimates that the average 65-year old couple will need $300,000 to spend on out of pocket healthcare costs, not including long term care.
Annually, your healthcare expense will rise as you age. Fidelity reports the following annual healthcare costs by age per person:
NOTE: The Boldin Retirement Planner can help you estimate your Medicare costs based on your age, location and the type of coverage you will have. The powerful tool can also help you plan for long term care expenses.
Your housing costs could plummet in retirement if you get your mortgage paid off or downsize.
And, the data on average housing expenditures by age suggest this to be true for most households. Annual housing expense trends lower as you age. The average housing expenses are:
A few things to think about regarding retirement spending:
The research is clear – different people have vastly different spending habits in retirement. You cannot create a solid retirement plan by relying on someone else’s assumptions. You need a retirement plan that fits your own spending.
The Boldin Retirement Planner enables you to put in different retirement spending for different stages of your life. This can give you a much more accurate retirement plan. The system also helps you get a personalized estimate for your future medical costs.
Best of all, the system is designed for you to create and maintain your retirement finances. So, as your plans change, you can update your information and get complete analysis about how much money you have and how much you will need to stay financially solvent.
Take financial wellness into your own hands and do it yourself retirement planning: easy, comprehensive, reliable.
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