Safe Withdrawal Rate For Shorter Retirements

Not everyone needs a 30 year retirement. How does Safe Withdrawal Rate change for shorter retirements?

How Long is Retirement?

30 Years?

Why it Might be Less?


This is Part Two - Please Read Part 1

If you haven’t read our prior posts on SWR and SWR Failure, please do so now. Those posts provides detail about the simulation and charts shown next.


Simulation Results

Reminder of what is shown…

Heatmaps

Historical Data


Charts for a 4.5% SWR for 10, 15, 20 and 25 Year Retirements

See chart titles for details (SWR, retirement years, etc.)

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SWR: 4.5%, Retirement Duration: 15 years

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SWR: 4.5%, Retirement Duration: 20 years

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SWR: 4.5%, Retirement Duration: 25 years

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What these charts show

With an SWR of 4.5% being so successful for short periods, let’s look at a 6.0% SWR and 7.0% SWR for just 10-15 years.


Charts for 6.0% and 7.0% SWR at Shorter Retirement Durations

See chart titles for details (SWR, retirement years, etc.)

6.0% SWR, Retirement Duration: 10 years

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6.0% SWR, Retirement Duration: 15 years

Safe Withdrawal Rate For Shorter Retirements_image_6.jpg

7.0% SWR, Retirement Duration: 10 years

Safe Withdrawal Rate For Shorter Retirements_image_7.jpg

7.0% SWR, Retirement Duration: 15 years

Safe Withdrawal Rate For Shorter Retirements_image_8.jpg

What these charts show

As you might expect, the shorter retirement periods allow for substantially higher withdrawal rates.

The heatmaps use simulated data based on an asset classes real return and stdev. Let’s take a look at how some of these scenarios play out against historic data.


Historic Simulation - 20 Year Retirement, Starting in 1920, 4.5% SWR

See chart titles for details (SWR, retirement years, etc.)

Safe Withdrawal Rate For Shorter Retirements_image_9.png

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These charts are for a 4.5% SWR, for a 20 year retirement, invested 100% in the S&P500. (We simulate a retirement for every year, starting in 1920, until 2015. For years after 2010, less than 20 years are simulated.)

Running against historic data shows the portfolio was a bit more robust than when based on simulated returns.

Historic Simulation - 10 Year Retirement, Starting in 1920, 8.0% SWR

See chart titles for details (SWR, retirement years, etc.)

Safe Withdrawal Rate For Shorter Retirements_image_11.png

Safe Withdrawal Rate For Shorter Retirements_image_12.jpg

These charts are for a 8.0% SWR, for a 10 year retirement, invested 100% in the S&P500. (We simulate a retirement for every year, starting in 1920, until 2015. For years after 2010, less than 20 years are simulated.)


Key Takeaways

“Just because you can, doesn’t mean you should”

Again - these are not recommendations. Just because simulations and historical data suggest you could take on more risk, doesn’t mean you should. The optimal approach is generally to take on the LEAST risk, at a real return required to get to the desired SWR.


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**For Educational Purposes Only:** All content on this site, including articles, tools, and simulations, is for informational and educational purposes only. It should not be construed as financial, investment, legal, or tax advice. The information provided is general in nature and not tailored to any individual’s specific circumstances.

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