Outrageous Predictions
Executive Summary: Outrageous Predictions 2026
Saxo Group
One of the hardest parts of retirement planning is figuring out how much you can afford to spend. After years of building a pension or investment account, the question becomes unsettling but straightforward: how much can you withdraw each year while managing the risk of running out of money?
That fear never fully goes away, no matter how large the balance looks. Life expectancy keeps rising, market conditions change, and prices never stop moving. A number that once felt reasonable can suddenly look uncertain.
The safe withdrawal rate may bring some structure to that uncertainty. The “safe withdrawal rate” is an industry term used to describe a retirement-planning rule of thumb for estimating how much you can potentially withdraw each year while managing the risk of depleting your savings; it does not guarantee safety.
The safe withdrawal rate (SWR) is the percentage of your savings you can potentially withdraw each year with the aim of making your money last throughout retirement, while recognising that outcomes are not guaranteed. It’s a guide that tries to balance two goals that often pull in opposite directions: maintaining your lifestyle and reducing the risk that your savings runs out too soon.
The idea became popular after US-based historical research suggested that an initial withdrawal of about 4% from a diversified stock-and-bond portfolio, followed by inflation-adjusted withdrawals, could have sustained a 30-year retirement in past market conditions. This finding became known as the ‘4% rule’ and remains a common reference point in retirement planning, though it doesn’t account for all factors, including fees, taxes, future market returns, inflation patterns, or individual spending needs.
Still, no single rate fits everyone. Your personal withdrawal rate depends on several factors:
For some, 4% might be reasonable; for others, a lower or higher rate could make more sense depending on retirement length, portfolio mix, income sources, fees, taxes and spending flexibility. What matters is understanding that your rate should reflect your own financial plan, not a one-size-fits-all rule.
A safe withdrawal rate estimate can give structure to your retirement plan. It shows how much income your savings can potentially support each year and how much you need to save to reach that goal. The process follows three clear steps:
Divide your planned annual withdrawal by your total savings.
For example, if you’ve saved EUR 800,000 and plan to withdraw EUR 32,000 per year, the calculation is EUR 32,000 ÷ EUR 800,000 = 0.04, or 4%.
Reducing the rate to 3% would result in an annual withdrawal of EUR 24,000, while raising it to 5% would increase it to EUR 40,000, but with a greater risk of depleting your funds sooner.
Reverse the formula to see how much you need to save for your target income. To find the desired amount, divide your desired annual income by your chosen withdrawal rate.
For example, to withdraw EUR 40,000 per year at a 4% rate, the calculation is EUR 40,000 ÷ 0.04 = EUR 1,000,000.
This gives an illustrative savings target based on the lifestyle you aim to maintain.
Inflation reduces what your withdrawals can buy over time. One approach is to increase withdrawals roughly in line with inflation while staying flexible, since you might hold them steady after years when markets have fallen.
If inflation averages 2.5%, a EUR 40,000 withdrawal in the first year would become EUR 41,000 in the second year.
The goal is to preserve your lifestyle, not to expand it. In years when markets perform poorly, keeping withdrawals flat can help you extend the life of your portfolio.
These steps can help you build a starting estimate for retirement, but the assumptions should be stress-tested and reviewed over time.
Note: Examples exclude fees and taxes. Both reduce sustainable withdrawal amounts.
A safe withdrawal rate isn’t fixed. The examples below are illustrative only and depend on assumptions such as portfolio mix, fees, taxes, inflation, market returns, retirement length and spending flexibility:
You can also test these illustrative numbers in a withdrawal rate calculator to see how long your savings might last under different market conditions.
A safe withdrawal rate helps retirees manage uncertainty, but no formula can guarantee a perfect outcome.
Below are the main limits that can influence how well this method works:
The 4% rule is based on historical periods and assumptions, but markets are rarely predictable. Returns arrive unevenly. This ‘sequence-of-returns risk’ means substantial early gains can stretch your portfolio, while poor early results can shorten its life even if the total average looks fine.
Rising prices reduce what each withdrawal can buy. Most models assume inflation of around 2–3%, but prolonged periods of higher inflation can erode purchasing power more quickly than expected and put pressure on your spending plan.
Health issues, family support, or home repairs can alter expenses without warning. A static plan can’t adapt to these changes, so it helps to be flexible rather than sticking to a single number.
Lower bond yields reduce the income that used to stabilise portfolios. When safe assets earn less, maintaining a 4% withdrawal rate may require a higher share of equities or lower spending expectations.
Retirement planning today allows for more flexibility. These newer approaches aim to adapt withdrawals to market conditions, personal needs, and income sources, rather than following a single percentage every year.
Here are the most common approaches worth considering:
These adjust spending based on portfolio performance. In good years, withdrawals may rise slightly; in weaker years, they may pause or reduce. The goal is to extend your portfolio life without significant lifestyle cuts.
Instead of taking the same euro-denominated amount each year, some retirees withdraw a fixed percentage of their portfolio’s current value. In this way, your income can fluctuate, but the approach may help limit withdrawals when markets fall and reduce the risk of eroding the principal.
Some retirees mix elements of different withdrawal strategies. For example, they might set a base income using a fixed euro amount for essentials and then add a percentage-based top-up tied to portfolio performance. In strong years, they withdraw a bit more; in weak years, they scale back. This creates a middle ground between predictability and adaptability.
Here are a few steps that may help support your long-term plan as markets and personal circumstances change:
Check your spending, savings balance, and market conditions annually. If your portfolio has fallen sharply or inflation has risen faster than expected, pause any withdrawal increase or reduce spending slightly until conditions stabilise.
Some retirees rely on more predictable income sources, such as pensions, annuities or state benefits where applicable, to cover essentials such as housing, food and healthcare. Portfolio withdrawals can then be used more flexibly for discretionary spending, such as travel or hobbies. This mix may provide more flexibility and reduce the pressure to withdraw too much in bad years.
Health expenses, home repairs, or family support can quickly upset a plan. Keep a separate emergency fund for those moments so your long-term portfolio stays intact.
It can be tempting to change course when markets fall, but reacting too quickly may create additional risks. A plan is more useful when it is realistic enough to follow during difficult market conditions.
No one reaches retirement feeling fully ready. There’s always a mix of relief and doubt about money, health, or life after work in general. A withdrawal-rate framework can help bring some order to that uncertainty. It doesn’t promise anything, but it can give you a way to plan without too much worry.
What matters is finding a withdrawal rhythm that looks sustainable under realistic assumptions, while leaving room to adjust if markets, inflation or personal needs change. Over time, the right rate isn’t the one that looks perfect on paper but the one that remains realistic as your needs, portfolio and market conditions change.