Will Inflation Shrink Your Retirement Income?
Here's How to Prepare
Inflation can quietly reduce your purchasing power over time, but a thoughtful retirement income plan can help you stay ahead.
In this video, Mark Burgdorf of Burgdorf Wealth Managers explains how inflation affects retirees in everyday life—from groceries and gas to insurance and healthcare. You'll learn why fixed income alone may not be enough, how to structure your retirement income in layers, and which investment strategies may help your savings keep pace with rising costs.
Video Summary
Inflation is one of the most important retirement planning risks because it affects real-life spending power. Even when inflation seems modest from year to year, rising costs can gradually reduce what a fixed retirement income can buy. Expenses such as groceries, gasoline, insurance, and healthcare can all increase over time, making it essential to plan for more than just today's budget.
In this video, Mark Burgdorf of Burgdorf Wealth Managers explains why retirees should think about inflation in practical terms. Social Security does include cost-of-living adjustments, but those increases may not always match the actual expenses retirees face, especially when healthcare costs rise faster than general inflation. That means relying on Social Security alone may leave gaps in future income.
One helpful strategy is to build retirement income in layers. The first layer should provide a reliable income foundation, ideally with some ability to adjust over time. The second layer can come from savings and investments, giving retirees flexibility to cover changing expenses or supplement income when needed.
Mark also discusses investment options that may help respond to inflation. These can include dividend-growing stocks, Treasury Inflation-Protected Securities, I Bonds, and other assets designed to support long-term purchasing power. While every strategy should be personalized, the key idea is to balance stability with growth potential.
A bucket strategy may also help. By separating short-term cash needs from longer-term investments, retirees can create a plan that supports current spending while still allowing part of the portfolio to grow for the future.
Finally, Mark emphasizes the importance of regular reviews. Inflation changes, markets change, and personal expenses change. An annual retirement income review can help identify small adjustments before they become larger problems.
Key Takeaways
- Inflation can gradually reduce the buying power of fixed retirement income.
- Everyday expenses like groceries, gas, insurance, and healthcare may rise over time.
- Social Security includes cost-of-living adjustments, but they may not fully cover real-life cost increases.
- A layered income plan can combine reliable income with flexible investment withdrawals.
- Dividend-growing stocks, TIPS, and I Bonds may help address inflation risk.
- A bucket strategy can separate short-term cash from long-term growth assets.
- Retirement plans should be reviewed regularly as inflation and expenses change.
- Annual check-ins can help make small adjustments before larger issues develop
FAQs
What is inflation risk in retirement?
Inflation risk is the possibility that rising prices will reduce what your retirement income can buy over time. Even small annual increases in costs can have a meaningful long-term impact.
Why is inflation especially important for retirees?
Retirees often live on a combination of Social Security, pensions, savings, and investments. If income does not increase as expenses rise, it can become harder to maintain the same lifestyle.
Does Social Security keep up with inflation?
Social Security includes cost-of-living adjustments, but those increases may not always match the actual expenses retirees face, particularly healthcare, insurance, and housing-related costs.
How can I protect my retirement income from inflation?
A strong retirement plan may include income sources that adjust over time, flexible withdrawals from savings, and investments with growth potential. The right mix depends on your goals, risk tolerance, and income needs.
What investments may help during inflation?
Some commonly discussed options include dividend-growing stocks, Treasury InflationProtected Securities, I Bonds, and other assets that may respond to rising prices. These should be evaluated within your overall financial plan.
What is a bucket strategy?
A bucket strategy divides retirement assets into different time horizons. Short-term money may be kept in cash or conservative investments, while longer-term assets may be invested for growth.
Why not keep all retirement money in cash?
Cash can provide stability, but it may lose purchasing power when inflation rises. Many retirees need a balance between safety, income, and long-term growth.
How often should I review my retirement income plan?
At least once a year is a good starting point. You may also want to review your plan after major life changes, market shifts, tax changes, or significant increases in expenses.
Can inflation affect healthcare costs in retirement?
Yes. Healthcare is one of the areas where retirees may feel rising costs most directly. Planning for medical expenses is an important part of retirement income planning.
Expanded Transcript
Introduction
Hi everyone, my name is Mark Burgdorf with Burgdorf Wealth Managers. Today, let's talk about inflation—not as it plays out in theory, but in real life, when groceries, gas, and insurance start costing a bit more each year.
Why Inflation Matters in Retirement
Over time, even modest inflation rates can chip away at what a fixed income can buy. But with a little planning and perspective, you can prepare for the impact of inflation and help keep your retirement goals on track.
Understand How Your Income Adjusts
Start by understanding how your income adjusts. Social Security includes a cost-of-living increase, but it doesn't always keep pace with real-life increases in expenses, especially healthcare. That's why it can help to build your plan in layers: a reliable base of income that adjusts with inflation, and a flexible layer from your savings and investments to fill in the gaps when needed.
Consider Your Investment Strategy
From there, consider your investment strategy. Assets like dividend-growing stocks, Treasury Inflation-Protected Securities, or even I Bonds can help your portfolio grow with rising prices. Additionally, using a time-segmented or "bucket" approach—where you keep short-term cash separate from long-term growth—can provide both stability and flexibility.
Revisit Your Plan Regularly
Finally, revisit your plan regularly. Inflation changes, and your plan should, too. Annual checkins can help you stay confident and make small adjustments to help prevent big issues.
Next Steps
If you'd like to see how your plan holds up under different inflation scenarios, reach out to the office. I'd be happy to walk through it with you and help ensure your income keeps you living comfortably in the retirement lifestyle you've worked hard to build
Is Your Retirement Income Ready for Inflation?
Rising costs do not have to catch you off guard. A personalized review can help you see how your income plan may perform under different inflation scenarios and identify adjustments that could help protect your retirement lifestyle.