
During your working career, the financial goal is simple: Accumulation. You save, you invest, and you watch the numbers grow.
But as you cross the finish line into retirement, you hit the biggest hurdle in personal finance — the transition to decumulation.
Suddenly, you aren’t living on a paycheck; you’re living off your portfolio. Does this mean you should automatically become a more conservative investor?
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Probably not. While your goals might shift slightly, your asset allocation shouldn’t be a knee-jerk reaction to your age.
Instead, it should be a deliberate strategy designed for sustainability, tax efficiency and, perhaps most important, emotional resilience.
How things change, how they stay the same
Any sound investment evaluation starts with a simple question: What should this money do?
For most retirees, the answer shifts toward generating income. To find your new “sleep-at-night factor,” you need to look beyond the spreadsheet and consider:
- Net income needs. How much annual income, after taxes, do you need to maintain your lifestyle?
- Fixed income sources. What is the baseline provided by Social Security, pensions or annuities?
- Account diversity. What is the breakdown between your taxable, tax-deferred and tax-free accounts? How much do you have in each?
The real enemy: Sequence of returns risk
During your working years, your average annual return was king. In retirement, average return takes a backseat to timing of returns. A major market dip in the first few years of retirement — known as sequence of returns risk — can be devastating if you’re forced to sell equities to fund your living expenses.
To mitigate this, we recommend a liquidity buffer of 18 to 24 months of anticipated distributions. By carving out two years of planned expenses into high-quality, liquid assets such as CDs or money market funds, you ensure the stock market doesn’t dictate your monthly “paycheck”.
This buffer acts as a shield, giving your growth-oriented investments the time they need to recover from a downturn without being liquidated at a loss.
The withdrawal road map: It’s not what you make, it’s what you keep
Distributions from retirement accounts are often a retiree’s largest tax event. Managing the “tax bite” requires strategic sequencing across your different “buckets”:
Effective tax bracket management allows you to fill lower tax brackets while avoiding “tax spikes” that can trigger higher Medicare premiums (IRMAA) or unnecessary capital gains taxes.
Tax planning also needs to be a multiyear exercise. Some investors focus on taking assets from taxable accounts first, believing it’s better to let tax-deferred accounts grow.
This can often result in two mistakes:
Why all accounts are not created equal
One of the most common misconceptions is applying a uniform allocation identically to every account. For a truly optimized plan, you must consider both asset location and tax treatment:
- Roth accounts. These should hold your more aggressive, high-growth assets to maximize tax-free growth in the long term.
- Traditional IRAs. These are often best suited for income-producing assets like bonds or real estate investment trusts (REITs), as the distributions will be taxed as ordinary income anyway.
- Taxable accounts. Prioritize tax-efficient ETFs or municipal bonds here to minimize the annual tax drag on your portfolio.
While managing to a comprehensive asset allocation is sound, each type of account should have its own asset allocation that is tax optimized with the larger picture.
Beyond the spreadsheet
Retirement isn’t a signal to abandon equities; it’s a time to be more strategic. Your portfolio allocation shouldn’t be an arbitrary rule — it should be a customized allocation built around your specific goals, cash flow needs and tax situation.
As you near retirement, a review of your investment strategy makes sense. For some, the transition from your “years to retirement” to your “years of retirement” might require an overhaul, and for others, just a tune up.

