How to Pay Yourself in Retirement: Strategies to Help Make Your Money Last
For most of your working life, the financial question is straightforward: earn more, save more, invest wisely. Then retirement arrives, and the question flips entirely. How do you turn decades of saving into a reliable paycheck that lasts as long as you do?
In this episode of Financial Commute, Morton Wealth advisors Chris Galeski and Mike sit down to tackle the retirement income questions clients ask most: the 4% rule, Social Security timing, sequence of returns risk, and the three-bucket strategy that can protect your lifestyle through any market cycle.
QUESTIONS THIS EPISODE ANSWERS
These are the questions people approaching and entering retirement are genuinely asking. We’ve addressed them directly below, and the full conversation is available as a transcript further down the page.
What questions should I be asking my advisor that I’m not?
The most important question isn’t about a number — it’s about the framework: what decisions today will have the biggest impact 10–20 years from now, and what am I not asking that I should be? The right advisor helps you find those blind spots before they become costly gaps.
Does the 4% rule still work today?
A useful starting point, but not a strategy. The 4% rule was designed for simplicity, not sophistication. A real plan accounts for your full picture — Social Security, pensions, annuities, taxable and tax-deferred accounts, real estate — each with different tax treatment. Think of 4% as a floor, not a ceiling, and not a substitute for personalized planning.
When should I take Social Security?
There’s no universal right answer — and regret runs both ways. Timing depends on your health, savings, and other income. Delaying to 70 maximizes your benefit, but if you’ve saved enough to invest early payments and grow them, taking it sooner can make mathematical sense. Run projections across multiple scenarios with your advisor and make the best decision with today’s information.
What is the three-bucket strategy, and why does it matter in retirement?
The bucket approach organizes assets by time horizon rather than treating everything as one pool. Bucket one is your safety net (2+ years of living expenses in low-volatility assets). Bucket two holds income-generating bonds for the medium term. Bucket three is long-term growth — equities you can leave alone through market cycles. When a recession hits, you draw from bucket one, never forced to sell growth assets at the worst possible time.
What is sequence of returns risk, and how does it affect retirement income?
The danger of major market losses early in retirement — right when you start drawing down. If your portfolio drops 30% in year one and you’re selling shares to cover expenses, you lock in losses and permanently reduce future growth potential. The bucket strategy protects against this: draw from your stable bucket in downturns and leave growth assets untouched until they recover.
Which account should I draw from first in retirement?
Order matters enormously for tax efficiency. Assess your account types (taxable brokerage, traditional IRA/401(k), Roth), your current bracket, and expected Social Security income — then “fill” each bracket optimally. Some years that means pulling extra from an IRA; others it means realizing long-term capital gains from a taxable account. There’s no single right answer — revisit it every year.
How often should I update my retirement financial plan?
At minimum, once a year — and after any major life change. Tax laws shift, markets move, and family situations evolve. An annual check-in lets you ask: does last year’s plan still fit this year’s life? Most years you won’t need dramatic changes, but small course corrections prevent big drift over time.