The decades-old 4% rule for retirement withdrawals is giving way to dynamic strategies that adjust spending based on portfolio performance and life expectancy.
The 4% rule, devised by financial adviser William Bengen in 1994, instructs retirees to withdraw 4% of their portfolio in the first year and adjust that amount for inflation annually. The approach was designed to ensure a balanced stock-and-bond portfolio would last 30 years based on historical data since 1926. But researchers have been revising the figure for years — Morningstar's estimate ranged from 3.3% in 2021 to 3.9% this year, while Bengen himself has said a safe number could now be 4.7%.
"The 4% rule's deeper problem is its rigidity," said Peter Coy, a writer at the Wall Street Journal. "Your portfolio amount could double in a market boom during retirement and the rule would still limit you to the same inflation-adjusted amount, which would be unnecessarily frugal."
An actuarial approach offers one alternative: divide the current portfolio balance by remaining life expectancy each year. A 70-year-old woman with a 16-year life expectancy would spend one-sixteenth of her portfolio annually, recalculating each year as her balance and life expectancy change. This method allows spending to rise when markets perform well and fall during downturns, reducing the risk of outliving savings. The Social Security Administration's life tables, updated annually, provide the life expectancy data.
The guardrails fix
The actuarial method introduces a new problem — spending can swing too sharply. A 30% market drop would cut spending by roughly 30% in a single year. The fix involves setting upper and lower bands around the 4% rule as an anchor, typically 3% of assets on the low end and 6% on the high end. If the actuarial calculation produces a withdrawal rate outside those bands, spending is capped at the boundary.
A shock absorber can further smooth the ride by limiting year-to-year spending changes to plus or minus 5%, even when the guardrails call for deeper cuts. The trade-off is that in a sustained downturn, the portfolio faces more drawdown than a stricter rule would allow, making this approach best suited for retirees with discretionary spending cushion above their essential needs.
Essential vs. discretionary separation
The most refined strategy separates essential expenses — food, health care, rent — from discretionary spending. Essential costs are covered by guaranteed income sources such as Social Security or an annuity, while the remaining portfolio follows the dynamic withdrawal strategy with guardrails and shock absorption. This structure allows retirees to take more risk with their discretionary portfolio since the basics are secured.
The shift away from the 4% rule reflects a broader recognition that retirement is not a fixed 30-year period. A retiree at 65 has a life expectancy of about 19 years for men and 21 for women, according to Social Security data, but roughly one in three 65-year-olds will live past 90. A static withdrawal rule that assumes a 30-year horizon can leave those with longer lifespans exposed.
None of these strategies is perfect, and each retiree's circumstances — tax situation, health status, risk tolerance — change the math. But a dynamic approach using the 4% rule as a reference point rather than a rigid mandate offers a practical middle ground between enjoying retirement savings and outliving them.
This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice.