Retirees Should Anchor Budgets to $80,000 Spending, Not Chase 12% Yield
Updated
Updated · 24/7 Wall St. · Jul 11
Retirees Should Anchor Budgets to $80,000 Spending, Not Chase 12% Yield
3 articles · Updated · 24/7 Wall St. · Jul 11
Summary
$80,000 in annual spending—not portfolio yield—should be the starting point for retirement planning, the report argues, because future purchasing power matters more than minimizing today's capital target.
At that spending level, a 3.5% yield requires about $2.29 million, a 7% yield about $1.14 million, and a 12% yield roughly $667,000—making high-yield strategies look efficient upfront.
The trade-off is inflation and payout growth: with PCE inflation at 4.1% and the 2026 Social Security COLA at 2.8%, a flat $80,000 income would buy only about $53,500 of today's goods after 10 years.
By contrast, an $80,000 income stream growing 8% annually could reach roughly $172,700 nominally, or about $115,500 in today's dollars, showing why dividend growth can outweigh a bigger initial yield.
The piece says the right mix still depends on age, outside income and risk tolerance, with many retirees better served by blending current income, dividend growth and high-quality bonds.