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One of retirement’s biggest psychological challenges is replacing a predictable paycheck with income drawn from investments that rise and fall.
According to research from the Stanford Center on Longevity, retirees generally prefer predictable income to flexible lump sums.
The usual answers for income certainty — such as bonds, CDs and annuities —come with tradeoffs.
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- Lock in too much guaranteed income at today’s rates and inflation can erode purchasing power
- Avoid volatility entirely, and it’s harder to keep pace with rising costs over a multidecade retirement
The goal is not to choose safety or growth. The goal is a strategy that produces reliable cash flow now while staying flexible later.
1. Build a tiered bond ladder
Example: Hold bonds maturing in one, three, five, seven and 10 years. When a bond matures, you can use the principal for spending or reinvest it into a new 10-year bond to extend the ladder. This spreads interest rate risk across time.
One advantage over bond funds is that individual bonds have a maturity date. Bond funds don’t mature, so their price can drop when rates rise. With a ladder, you know when principal is scheduled to return, assuming no default.
For higher tax brackets, municipal bonds might be attractive because interest is generally exempt from federal income tax, and might be exempt from state income tax when the bonds are issued in your state.
2. Create a Social Security bridge with short-term investments
The practical issue is funding the gap between retirement and when you claim. A Social Security bridge sets aside several years of spending in low-risk, short-term instruments that mature in sequence, such as Treasury bills, CDs or short-term bonds.
If you retire at 65 and plan to claim at 70, estimate the annual income you need after any pension or other guaranteed income. Then earmark five years of that gap in a dedicated account with maturities aligned to each year.
This turns the delay decision into a more conservative move. You aren’t forced to sell stocks in a down market to cover the gap, and you’re effectively buying more inflation-adjusted lifetime income through Social Security.
3. Use a strategic dividend stock allocation
Dividend-focused stocks and funds can provide an income stream with long-term growth potential. According to research from Hartford Funds, dividend-paying stocks have historically shown lower volatility and higher total returns than nondividend payers.
A practical approach is to allocate a portion of the portfolio to diversified dividend focused funds or a broad set of high-quality companies with consistent dividend histories. The income comes from the dividends, and the underlying holdings can provide growth over time.
Two factors matter:
- Dividends can be reduced, so diversification is essential
- Dividend income should not be the only income source
If the dividends are qualified, they might receive favorable tax treatment compared with ordinary income.
4. Use target date funds in reverse
Instead of owning one target date fund, consider holding several with staggered dates. A near-date fund is typically more conservative and can support near-term withdrawals. A later-date fund typically holds more equities and can support longer-term growth.
A disciplined withdrawal plan might spend from the most conservative fund first while letting the longer-dated funds compound. This can create a simple, rules-based glide path without constant rebalancing decisions.
Limitations include less customization and ongoing fund expenses, but the simplicity might be worth it for some retirees.
5. Implement a percentage withdrawal with guardrails
Fixed withdrawal rules can be too rigid. A dynamic approach uses a starting withdrawal rate, then adjusts spending when the portfolio moves outside pre-set boundaries.
Research summarized by financial planner Jonathan Guyton suggests this type of approach can improve sustainability vs a fixed rule because it responds to market conditions.
The key is that the rules are set in advance. That helps reduce emotional decision-making during volatility.
Putting it together: Reliability without giving up flexibility
The most resilient income plans layer multiple sources.
- Social Security forms an inflation-adjusted foundation
- A bond ladder supports predictable cash flow for scheduled needs
- Dividend-focused equities can provide income growth potential
- A guardrail-withdrawal plan adds flexibility
- Cash reserves can buffer near-term volatility
This creates a practical balance. Essential expenses can be supported by more predictable sources, while growth assets remain available for discretionary spending and longer retirement horizons.

