The most commonly recommended rule of thumb is the so-called 4% rule, which means you spend 4% of your portfolio every year, on an inflation-adjusted basis.
When you die, your nest egg could be almost as large if not larger than it was on your first day of retirement.
For example, Morningstar ran simulations on a $1 million portfolio over 30 years using the 4% rule.
That’s because the rule is based on a very high probability that you never exhaust your nest egg.
“It’s not just about getting employees to retirement but (helping them figure out) what to do once they’re in retirement,” Williams said.
Persons:
you’d, William Bengen, Morningstar, ” Christine Benz, ”, Rob Williams, Charles Schwab, Williams, It’s, Mark Warshawsky, Warshawsky, Craig Copeland, “ It’s, ” Williams
Organizations:
CNN, Social Security, Social Security Administration, Social, American Enterprise Institute, American Council for, Research