Why You Should Solve for Retirement Cash Flow, Not Income

Income, cash flow, and withdrawals are not the same thing

cash flow label on hanging file
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When talking about retirement "income," many people assume that it refers to money from a job they have, Social Security benefits they receive, pension income, or interest and dividends from investments they own. This definition of income tends to match what would show up on a tax return as income. However, this definition of income doesn’t always work for retirement planning.

What you need in retirement is cash flow. Each month you have expenses, and you need cash coming in to meet those expenses. Depending on how you plan for retirement, that cash flow might come from many different places, and not all of it will fit the technical definition of income.

Learn how retirement cash flow is different than income.

Key Takeaways

  • Solving for cash flow means that you plan your retirement investments to be able to withdraw from the principal rather than the interest portion.
  • Cash flow is more important in retirement than income because cash flow isn't always taxed.
  • Try to find retirement plans that provide returns that let you withdraw from your principal and let the interest continue to compound.

Cash Flow vs. Income

Let's say you estimate you will need to buy a car about every 10 years in retirement. At retirement, you buy a CD or a bond that will mature in 10 years to fund your next car purchase.

When it matures, you plan to spend both the principal and interest to purchase the car. You will have the cash flow you need to buy the car, but when the CD or bond matures, it will not be reported as income on your tax return.

Instead, you will report the interest the CD earned as income on your tax return each year along the way—even though you let the interest accumulate. In retirement, you want to plan out your cash flow needs and choose investments that have an appropriate risk level to match those needs. 

Your Cash Flow Needs

The amount of income you report on your tax return may be quite different than your annual cash flow needs. For example, in early retirement, you may report less income on your tax return, and in later retirement, you may report more income—yet your cash flow could remain the same. How could this be?

Suppose you retire at 65, but you make a plan and start Social Security at age 70. To meet your cash flow needs from 65 to 70, you buy an immediate annuity with a five-year payout, and you buy it with non-retirement money.

Note

The monthly annuity payment you receive will provide cash flow, as each payment you receive is a combination of principal and interest. However, only the interest portion is considered taxable income on your tax return. In this situation, you have more cash flow than income.

Now, fast forward seven years. At age 72, you are required to take annual distributions from your retirement accounts. These withdrawals are reported as taxable income on your tax return. Each year you get older, you must withdraw a larger portion of your remaining retirement account. You may not need to spend it all. In this case, you have more income than your cash flow needs require.

Does the Terminology Matter?

Unless you have a lot of money relative to the amount of cash flow you will need in retirement, it is unlikely you will be able to live off your income. Instead, it is likely you will need to use some of your principal by following a plan that allows you to use it at a measured pace so you have a comfortable retirement lifestyle—while at the same time, not running the risk of running out of money. This kind of planning solves for the amount of cash flow you will need.

Now you know why retirement planners don't spend much time discussing with you the rate of return you can plan to see with your retirement accounts. Instead, they talk to you about how much you can draw from the account each month.

Ideally, you will have investments that continue to earn a reasonably impressive return, but plan to draw on accounts more than you earn.

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Sources
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  1. IRS. "Retirement Topics — Required Minimum Distributions (RMDs)." Accessed April 27, 2021.

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