FAQ
What is a withdrawal strategy and why do I need one?
A withdrawal strategy is your retirement paycheck plan the rules you use to determine how much to pull from which accounts, and when. Without one, people tend to guess, which can lead to overspending, underspending, or paying more in taxes than necessary.
Is the 4% rule still safe to follow?
The 4% rule is based on historical data and can be a useful rough guideline, but it assumes a specific portfolio mix and doesn’t adapt to real life changes. Dan’s point in this video is that a flexible, risk-based guardrail approach is often more practical for real retirees with changing needs and markets.
What makes risk-based guardrails different from other strategies?
Guardrails define a “lane” for your spending using upper and lower bounds tied to your plan. When your portfolio hits one of those rails, it signals a clear decision point (raise or reduce spending). It’s dynamic, rules-based, and personalized, instead of being a one-size-fits-all formula.
Do guardrails mean I have to cut my spending a lot if markets fall?
Not automatically. Guardrails are designed to prompt timely adjustments, which can be modest and incremental if addressed early. The idea is to make small course corrections rather than waiting until a crisis forces major cuts.
Can I use risk-based guardrails if I’m already retired?
Yes. Many retirees shift from ad-hoc withdrawals or older rule-of-thumb strategies into a guardrail-based system. The key is to model your current situation assets, spending, time horizon and then set guardrails that fit your plan.