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For many successful business owners, planning for retirement probably feels pretty basic.
They’ve built something valuable that will eventually be sold. And that sale will fund the next chapter of their life. Boom. Done.
That assumption is understandable. But it’s also incomplete.
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In my experience, entrepreneurs who have excelled in business thanks to discipline, intelligence and effort often struggle with readiness when transitioning to retirement.
Here are four blind spots that can quietly undermine even the most successful business owners — not because they’ve failed to build the wealth they needed, but because they weren’t prepared for the unique challenges (and opportunities) that life outside the business can bring.
1. A valuable business is not the same as a usable retirement plan
For most business owners, the majority of their net worth is tied up in one asset: The company itself.
On paper, that may look impressive. In reality, it creates a concentration risk that few owners fully appreciate.
A business is illiquid by nature, and its value often depends on factors that are outside the owner’s control — including market conditions, buyer demand, industry trends, key employees, health and timing. Yet many owners assume the business’s value will be available precisely when they want or need it.
The question is not whether the business has value — the question is how reliably that value can be converted into income on your timeline, without forcing compromises.
Employees accumulate retirement assets gradually and diversify over time. Business owners often do the opposite, building wealth in one place and hoping everything aligns at the finish line.
How to prepare: Hope is not a strategy. Don’t assume your business alone will fund your future. Several retirement account options are available for business owners, including SEP IRAs, Solo 401(k)s and SIMPLE IRAs. A financial adviser can explain the pros and cons of each account type based on your circumstances and help you find ways to contribute to your personal retirement savings regularly while also investing in your business.
Diversifying into other assets, such as stocks, bonds, real estate or alternative investments, can provide added financial stability and security as you move into retirement.
2. Most tax planning happens too late to matter
Ask a business owner when he or she plans to focus on taxes, and the answer is usually when the business is sold. Unfortunately, that’s often when the most meaningful opportunities are already gone.
Many of the decisions that influence the eventual tax outcome of a sale are made years before a transaction occurs, sometimes without the owner realizing it.
Entity structure, ownership arrangements, compensation strategies, charitable intent, estate planning and timing all play a role. Waiting until there’s a signed letter of intent can severely limit options. At that point, the conversation shifts from how to optimize the sale to how to minimize the damage.
How to prepare: Your financial adviser can introduce you to strategies designed to help minimize capital gains taxes and other tax implications when you sell your business. This isn’t about chasing loopholes or aggressive strategies — it’s about understanding that tax efficiency is rarely a last-minute decision.
3. Net worth doesn’t measure exit readiness
Most owners know their net worth. Very few know how ready they actually are to step away.
Readiness has little to do with the balance sheet and everything to do with exposure.
- How dependent is the business on the owner personally?
- How transferable is leadership?
- How concentrated is risk?
- How clear is the plan for life after ownership, both financially and personally?
An owner can be wealthy on paper and still be unprepared to exit without disruption. Employees can retire gradually. Owners often face a cliff: One moment they’re running everything, the next they’re trying to replace the structure, income and identity their work provided … all at the same time.
Planning that transition requires a different lens than traditional retirement planning.
How to prepare: Don’t wait until the last minute to prepare your exit plan. Know what your goals are for the company and for yourself. Put it in writing and discuss your plans with your attorney and financial adviser, as well as key players at work and in your private life.
4. The emotional transition is often ignored until it’s too late
For many business owners, their company is more than an asset — it gives them purpose, routine and relevance. That’s why some owners delay selling even when the numbers suggest it makes sense. Or they might sell quickly and then struggle with a sense of loss they didn’t anticipate.
While the financial side of a sale can be modeled, the personal side often is not. Who are you when you’re no longer the decision-maker? How do you replace structure with intention? How does your role change within your family? Ignoring these questions doesn’t make them go away.
How to prepare: Whether you’re volunteering, traveling, golfing or grandparenting, a retirement plan that enables you (financially) and encourages you (emotionally) to pursue your passions can make moving forward into retirement exciting and fulfilling. Don’t leave this important element out of your readiness process.
Coordination is the real challenge
Successful business owners often have excellent accountants, attorneys and advisers — each focused on a particular specialty. But without a unifying framework, decisions are made in a vacuum. All those pieces never fully fit together.
Retirement planning for business owners isn’t about doing more — it is about doing things in the right order and early enough to preserve choice.
The good news is that awareness changes outcomes. The earlier business owners begin thinking about retirement readiness, not just valuation, the more control they can retain over their wealth, timing, taxes and life after ownership. And in retirement, control is often the most valuable asset of all.
Kim Franke-Folstad contributed to this article.
The appearances in Kiplinger were obtained through a PR program. The columnist received assistance from a public relations firm in preparing this piece for submission to Kiplinger.com. Kiplinger was not compensated in any way.

