When people imagine retirement, they often picture a specific, age 65 or 67, followed by a well-earned period of rest and enjoyment. What many don’t picture clearly is just how long that period might last.
For today’s retirees, living into their late 80s or 90s is no longer unusual. For those approaching retirement now, longevity is one of the greatest financial blessings—and one of the greatest planning challenges. The risk isn’t simply living a long life. It’s running out of money while you’re still living it.
Why Longevity Risk Feels Different as Retirement Nears
In your working years, longevity is rarely top of mind. Income arrives regularly, savings grow steadily, and the future feels distant. But as retirement approaches, the timeline compresses. Suddenly, your savings are no longer just an account balance; they represent decades of future income.
What makes longevity risk so difficult is that it’s unknowable. You don’t know how long you’ll live, how your health will evolve, or how markets will perform over the course of your retirement. Yet decisions made in the final working years such as how much to spend, how much risk to take, and when to claim Social Security, will shape outcomes for the rest of your life.
Many pre-retirees respond to this uncertainty by becoming overly cautious, cutting spending sharply or shifting investments entirely into conservative vehicles. While understandable, this reaction often creates a new problem: insufficient growth to support a long retirement.
Retirement Is Not a Single Phase
One of the most important mindset shifts for those approaching retirement is recognizing that retirement is not one long, uniform stage. Early retirement often looks very different from later years.
In the beginning, spending may be higher. Travel, experiences, and active pursuits take center stage. Later, spending may slow in some areas but increase in others, particularly healthcare and support services. A retirement plan must be flexible enough to support both phases without exhausting resources too early.
Longevity risk is rarely caused by one bad decision. More often, it’s the result of rigid planning. Treating retirement income as static when life itself is anything but.
The Role of Guaranteed Income in Longevity Planning
As retirement approaches, one of the most powerful ways to manage longevity risk is to establish a reliable income foundation. Social Security plays a critical role here. It provides income for life, adjusts for inflation, and becomes more valuable the longer you live.
Deciding when to claim Social Security is not just a short-term cash flow decision, it’s longevity insurance. Delaying benefits can significantly increase lifetime income and reduce the strain on investment portfolios later in life. For many pre-retirees, using personal savings strategically in the early years to secure higher guaranteed income later can improve long-term confidence.
Beyond Social Security, some retirees explore pensions or carefully selected annuity strategies to ensure essential expenses are always covered. The goal is not to eliminate investment risk entirely, but to reduce the risk that basic needs depend solely on market performance.
Growth Still Matters—Even Late in the Game
Perhaps the most counterintuitive truth about longevity risk is that avoiding growth can make it worse. A portfolio that is too conservative may preserve account balances in the short term but lose purchasing power over decades.
For someone approaching retirement, the challenge is balance. You need enough stability to weather market volatility, but enough growth to sustain a long life. This is not about chasing returns—it’s about aligning risk with reality.
Longevity planning is not about guessing how long you’ll live. It’s about preparing for the possibility that you’ll live longer than expected—and helping to ensure your money can do the same.
Call to Action: Plan for the Full Length of Your Life
If you’re near retirement, now is the time to address longevity risk with clarity and intention.
At Purposeful Wealth Advisors, we help pre-retirees design income strategies that account for long lifespans, changing spending patterns, and market uncertainty. We focus on creating plans that provide confidence—not just at retirement, but decades into it.
Schedule a pre-retirement planning conversation today and make sure your financial plan is built not just to retire, but to last.