A new year means new financial limits.

A new year means new financial limits.

Here’s a list of data for 2019 

Pension and RRSP contribution limits

  • The new limit for RRSPs for 2019 is 18% of the previous year’s earned income or $26,500 whichever is lower less the Pension Adjustment (PA).
  • The limit for Deferred Profit Sharing Plans is $13,615
  • The limit for Defined Contribution Pensions is $27,230

Remember that contributions made in January and February of 2019 can be used as a tax deduction for the 2018 tax year.

Tax YearIncome fromRRSP Maximum Limit
20192018$26,500
20182017$26,230
20172016$26,010
20162015$25,370
20152014$24,930
20142013$24,270
20132012$23,820
20122011$22,970
20112010$22,450
20102009$22,000
20092008$21,000

TFSA limits

  • The TFSA limit for 2019 is $6,000.
  • The cumulative limit since 2009 is $63,500

TFSA Limits for past years

YearAnnual LimitCumulative Limit
2019$6,000$63,500
2018$5,500$57,500
2017$5,500$52,000
2016$5,500$46,500
2015$10,000$41,000
2014$5,500$31,000
2013$5,500$25,500
2012$5,000$20,000
2011$5,000$15,000
2010$5,000$10,000
2009$5,000$5,000

Canada Pension Plan (CPP)

Lots of changes are happening with CPP but here’s some of the most important planning data.

  • Yearly Maximum Pensionable Earning (YMPE) – $57,400
  • Maximum CPP Retirement Benefit – $1154.58 per month
  • Maximum CPP Disability benefit –  $1362.30 per month
  • Maximum CPP Survivors Benefit
    • Under age 65 – $626.30
    • Over age 65 – $692.75

Reduction of CPP for early benefit – 0.6% for every month prior to age 65.  At age 60, the reduction is 36%.

CPP rates for past years:

YearMonthlyAnnual
2019$1154.58$13,854.96
2018$1134.17$13,610.04
2017$1114.17$13,370.04
2016$1092.50$13,110.00
2015$1065.00$12,780.00
2014$1038.33$12,459.96
2013$1012.50$12,150.00
2012$986.67$11,840.04
2011$960.00$11,520.00
2010$934.17$11,210.04
2009$908.75$10,905.00

Old Age Security (OAS)

  • Maximum OAS – $586.66 per month
  • The OAS Clawback (recovery) starts at $77,580 of income.  At $125,696 of income OAS will be fully clawed back.

OAS rates for past years:

YearMaximum Monthly BenefitMaximum Annual Benefit
2019$601.45$7,217.40
2018$586.66$7,039.92
2017$578.53$6,942.36
2016$570.52$6,846.24
2015$563.74$6,764.88
2014$551.54$6,618.48
2013$546.07$6,552.84
2012$540.12$6,481.44
2011$524.23$6,290.76

New Federal Tax Brackets

For 2018, the tax rates have changed.

Lower Income limitUpper Income limitMarginal Rate Rate
$0.00$12,069.000.00%
$12,069.00$47,630.0015.00%
$47,630.00$95,259.0020.50%
$95,259.00$147,667.0026.00%
$147,667.00$210,371.0029.00%
$210,371.0033.00%

Remember these rates do not include provincial tax. For new provincial rates, visit the CRA site.

2018 Financial Planning Guide: The numbers you need to know

2018 Financial Planning Guide: The numbers you need to know

A new year means new limits and data.  Here’s a list of new financial planning data for 2018 (In case you want to compare this to past years, I’ve included old data as well).

If you need any help with your rrsp deposits or clarification on other retirement issues please do not hesitate to contact Henley Financial and Wealth Management, we are here to ensure your financial success.

Pension and RRSP contribution limits

  • The new limit for RRSPs for 2018 is 18% of the previous year’s earned income or $26,230 whichever is lower less the Pension Adjustment (PA).
  • The limit for Deferred Profit Sharing Plans is $13,250
  • The limit for Defined Contribution Pensions is $26,500

Remember that contributions made in January and February of 2018 can be used as a tax deduction for the 2017 tax year.

Financial Planning CalculationMore articles on RRSPs

TFSA limits

  • The TFSA limit for 2018 is $5,500.
  • The cumulative limit since 2009 is $57,500

TFSA Limits for past years

More articles on the TFSA

Canada Pension Plan (CPP)

Lots of changes are happening with CPP but here’s some of the most important planning data.

  • Yearly Maximum Pensionable Earning (YMPE) – $55,900
  • Maximum CPP Retirement Benefit – $1134.17 per month
  • Maximum CPP Disability benefit –  $1335.83 per month
  • Maximum CPP Survivors Benefit
    • Under age 65 – $614.62
    • Over age 65 – $680.50

Reduction of CPP for early benefit – 0.6% for every month prior to age 65.  At age 60, the reduction is 36%.

CPP rates for past years:

For more information on CPP

Old Age Security (OAS)

  • Maximum OAS – $586.66 per month
  • The OAS Clawback (recovery) starts at $74,788 of income.  At $121,720 of income OAS will be fully clawed back.

OAS rates for past years:

Year Maximum Monthly Benefit Maximum Annual Benefit
2018 $586.66 $7,039.92
2017 $578.53 $6,942.36
2016 $570.52 $6,846.24
2015 $563.74 $6,764.88
2014 $551.54 $6,618.48
2013 $546.07 $6,552.84
2012 $540.12 $6,481.44
2011 $524.23 $6,290.76

For more information on OAS Clawback:

New Federal Tax Brackets

For 2018, the tax rates have changed.

 

Planning for the future…

Planning for the future…

I’ve been asked many times about the taking your Canada Pension Plan (or CPP) early. It’s one of the issues facing seniors and income management of their retirement funds, my conclusion is that it makes sense to take CPP as early as you can in most cases.  Again there are a number of factors that can determine this process and they should be considered. We can help you understand which makes the most sense for you. Contact us at Henley Financial & Wealth Management.

In seeking the answer of when to take your CPP – ask yourself these five questions…

1) When will you retire?

Under the old rules, you had to stop working in order to collect your CPP benefit. The work cessation rules were confusing, misinterpreted and difficult to enforce so it’s probably a good thing they are a thing of the past.

Now you can start collecting CPP as soon as you turn 60 and you no longer have to stop working. The catch is that as long as you’re working, you must keep paying into CPP even if you are collecting it. The good news is that paying into it will also increase your future benefit.

2) How long will you live?

This is a question that no one can really answer so assume Life Expectancy to be the age factor when considering the question. At present a Male has a life expectancy of 82 and a female has a life expectancy of 85. These vales change based on lifestyle and health factors but it gives us a staring point.

Under the old rules, the decision to collect CPP early was really based on a mathematical calculation of the break-even point. Before 2012, this break-even point was age 77. With the new rules, every Canadian needs to understand the math.

If you qualify for CPP of $502 per month at age 65, let’s say you decide to take CPP at age 60 at a reduced amount while instead of waiting till 65 knowing you will get more income by deferring the income for 5 years.

Under Canada Pension Plan benefits, you can take income at age 60 based on a reduction factor of 0.6% for each month prior to your 65th birthday. Therefore your benefit will be reduced by 36% (0.6% x 60 months) for a monthly income of $321.28 starting on your 60th birthday.

Now fast-forward 5 years. You are now 65. Over the last 5 years, you have collected $321.28 per month totalling $19,276.80. In other words, your income made until age 60 was $19,276.80 before you even started collecting a single CPP cheque if you waited until age 65. That being said, at age 65 you are now going to get $502 per month for CPP. The question is how many months do you need to collect more pension at the age of 65 to make up the $19,276.80 you are ahead by starting at age 60? With simple math it will take you a 109 months (or 9 years) to make up the $19,276.80. So at age 74, you are ahead if you start taking the money at age 60, you start to fall behind at age 75.

The math alone is still a very powerful argument for taking CPP early.

So, “How long do you expect to live?”

3) When will need the money?

When are you most likely to enjoy the money?  Before the age 74 or after age 74, for most people, they live there best years of their retirement in the early years. Therefore a little extra income in the beginning helps offset the cost of an active early retirement. Some believe it’s better to have a higher income later because of the rising costs of health care and this is when you are most likely to need care.  Whatever you believe, you need to plan your future financial security.  It is hard to know whether you will become unhealthy in the future but what we do know is most of the travelling, golfing, fishing, hiking and the things you want to do and see are usually done in the early years of retirement.

4) What happens if you delay taking your CPP?

Let’s go back to age 60 you could collect $321.28 per month. Let’s you decide to delay taking CPP by one year to age 61. So what’s happens next? $3,855.36 from her CPP ($321.28 x 12 months), but chose not to, so you are able to get more money in the future. That’s fine as long as you live long enough to get back the money that you left behind. Again, it comes back to the math. For every year you delay taking CPP when you could have taken it, you must live one year longer at the other end to get it back. By delaying CPP for one year, you must live to age 75 to get back the $3,855.36 that you left behind. If you delay taking CPP until 62, then you have to live until 76 to get back the two years of money you left behind.

Why wouldn’t you take it early given the math? The only reason I can think of is that you think you will live longer and you will need more money, as you get older.

Any way the math adds up… you can always take the money early and if you don’t need it  put it in a TFSA and let it make interest. You can use it later in life if you choose.

 

A tax-free compounding account… In your portfolio that may have been over looked – $52,000 for each spouse to be exact, start planning now!

The tax-free savings account (TFSA) is starting to grow up.

Introduced in the 2008 federal budget and coming into effect on Jan. 1, 2009, the TFSA has become an integral part of financial planning in Canada, with the lifetime contribution limit now set to reach $52,000 in 2017.

Start taking advantage of this savings today.

Remember when you thought $5,000 did not amount to much as an investment. If you had taken advantage of this program you could have another $60,000 to $70,000 for each husband and wife invested in savings today. That’s $120,00 -$140,000 of Tax free Value based on the average market return since 2009.

Used correctly the TFSA can supplement income lowering your tax base during retirement. The gain made in a TFSA is tax-free, and therefore so are withdrawals — Did you know? That the money coming out of the account does not count as income in terms of the clawback for Old Age Security, which starts at $74,780 in 2017.

The TFSA has also become a great vehicle for dealing with a sudden influx of wealth. For people who downsize and sell their house or receive an inheritance, this money is already tax-free. Do not make it taxable in the hands of the government again.

Contact me for more information regarding this and other investments that have been overlooked. It never hurts to get a second opinion regarding your future.

 

Ask yourself these 10 questions? They will help you decide if you are ready…

1. When do you want to retire?

2. What percentage of your current income do you expect to need in retirement?

3. How do you plan to spend your money in retirement?

4. Have you considered your lifestyle needs in retirement?

5. What guaranteed sources of income can you count on in retirement?

6. Do you plan to work part-time or full-time in retirement?

7. How do health and wellness factor into your retirement plan?

8. Are you ready for the unexpected events in life?

9. How will you keep your money working in retirement?

10. Do you plan to leave a legacy?

Like everyone around you saving has become second nature. You have saved wisely and built a sizeable retirement fund to provide for your retirement.  The next question is one that will confuse many… Are you ready?

imagesThink about how you will keep your money growing. Talk to a financial security advisor about investment solutions for retirees.

Let us help you at Henley Financial & Wealth Management.

Contact us at information@henleyfinancial.ca for more information regarding investment solutions.

Above are 10 questions… Questions that need answers so that you can retire into the lifestyle that you have become familiar with living. Studies show us that you spend more money on the weekends (or days off) because these are generally the days you have time to spend your hard earned money. So consider this in retirement every day is a weekend or a day off.

When do you want to retire? This is a personal question with many variables being attached for each individual. How much money do you have saved? Do you like your job? Are you healthy? When we change over from a saving to spending cycle the timing of your retirement is crucial to building a fund and assessing how long you will need it to last. If you like your job you may want to work longer as a consultant, this will help fund your retirement income. Although health will be the biggest factor to your retirement date, many workers are forced into retirement, not because of age but health issues. I guess it comes down to want to retire or need to retire hopefully the decision is yours to make.

What percentage of your income today will you need in the future to retire? This is a number that needs to be calculated into the retirement plan. Most financial advisors will show you a figure of 75% of today’s income going forward. To be honest that is a generous figure. Most of your big-ticket items will have been paid for by this time. You must remember however that you will are likely to make the most income in your lifetime during the last 5 years of employment before you retire. So your final valuation is something that must be continually updated while planning for the future.

What are your current spending habits? Are you a saver or a spender? Because these habits will not likely change in retirement, and as always you must plan for the unexpected events which will be out of your control. It goes without saying savers are more likely to save more and have more than the spenders, so spenders must work to save more now to have more in retirement. This is a common sense approach but you would be surprized by the lack of respect for compounding interest and how it works in your favor over time.

imagesHow many days a year will you travel or play golf? If you retire at age 65 and live till the age of 90… meaning you will have less than 10,000 days or 9,125 days to be exact. That would be a fair amount of travel and golf for anyone; some planning will have to be involved regarding the answer to those questions. I believe these answers to be the top answers to the question of… what do you want to do when you retire? So to live that lifestyle you will have to plan for future expenses that you may not already have. If you buy a condo in Florida you will have to account for the condo fees and associated upkeep costs of two homes to allow for the travel and golf adventure you have planned. If you plan to travel the world you will have to account for the currency exchange rates and the costs associated with travel to the exotic locations you want to visit.

Calculate how much income you’ll receive during retirement – from sources such as Canada Pension Plan (CPP), Quebec Pension Plan (QPP), and Old Age Security (OAS) payments. Then, determine how much additional income you’ll need and where this will come from. While investment income is a nice bonus, you shouldn’t rely on it to pay for necessities.

When you consider retirement planning, make sure to account for unpredictable events – both financial and personal. As we said before plan for the unexpected. Make sure your retirement savings are strong enough to support you through a future economic downturn, and a rise in the cost of living and a long life.

If you plan for the future you will be able to enjoy life to the fullest, if you fail to plan for the future it will get away from you and your plans will have to be alterred. The choice is yours choose wisely.

 

 

How much money will you need to retire the way you want?

How much money will you need to retire the way you want?

We talk of retirement when you put away your cares and worries, kick back and enjoy the wealth you’ve worked so hard to accumulate over the years.

Retirement for many is an exercise in calculating odds and balancing one probability against another. Should we go on vacation? Or should we stay at home because we need the money years from now to pay for a nursing home? Should we invest aggressively to increase our chances of growing our nest egg? Or play it safe and take as few chances as possible?

The problem is that we are living longer with new technologies and drugs thus increasing our life span. Back in the 1920s, a newborn Canadian could expect to live for less than 65 years. Today, a baby born in Canada can expect to live to 84, that is a 19-year difference and means more money is needed. Our parents and grandparents didn’t spend a lot of time thinking about retirement! Why? They had a pension plan that would take care of them. Well we all know where those pension plans are going, in many cases they no longer exist or have been taken away as cost saving measure for the employers. Meaning you now have to budget and plan for those years after retirement.

A lot can go wrong over time, we don’t have a crystal ball to predict the future. Even if you set things up perfectly for a nice retirement, fate has an odd sense of humor. After years of planning, you may die young—or live long, long past your best before date.

Most people do believe they will live to life expectancy. What you need to know is the average life expectancy is just the median in a huge range of possibilities that the actuary calculates on your behalf.

Life expectancy figures are usually expressed in terms of what a newborn child can expect. It assumes there will be a steady number of deaths at every age along the way—a few people will die in childhood, a few others in adolescence, and so on. Those early deaths drag down the overall figure. So if you’ve dodged disease and accidents and made it to 65, your life expectancy is considerably greater than the average for a newborn would suggest. Someone who is 65 today has a better than even chance of living to 84 and past.

The problem, from a financial perspective, is that there are no guarantees. A 65-year-old man who retires today faces an 10% chance of dying before he turns 70. He also faces the same 10% chance of living past 95. So how do we plan for that discrepancy?

So what if our 65-year-old man may expect to die relatively young. He may burn through his cash and treat himself to lots of expensive indulgences— only to find that, Oops, he has to live the last quarter century of his life trying to make ends meet on a meager budget.

On the other hand, he could play it safe and save his money to ensure he will have enough to last until he meets his maker in years and years to come. But finds himself in a hospital bed at 68 or 69, with a life threatening diagnosis, and cursing because he did not enjoy life more when he had the chance. We all know someone who was waiting to retire to go out and explore and they never made the trip.

So how must you approach retirement?

A smart approach is to think of your retirement plans as consisting of two separate figures: one for things you must have, the other for things it would be nice to have.

The first and most important part of retirement planning is taking care of things you must have. You want to ensure you have enough to live on without feeling deprived of anything vital.

You can estimate this figure by adding up how much you spend in all areas, then deducting the expenses that will disappear in retirement— no more mortgage payments, no more child care or tuition payments, no more retirement savings. You should also deduct any luxuries that you could live without in retirement, such as eating out frequently or having a second car.

The amount that’s left represents what it would cost you to maintain the essentials of your current lifestyle in retirement—and that figure is probably a lot lower than you think. Most middle-class couples are delighted to discover that they arrive at a must-have figure that amounts to just $40,000 to $50,000/ couple a year in after-tax income.

What will you do in retirement?

We all have dreams and you need to budget for them. Maybe you want to golf every day, or winter down south. How much will it cost to retire with these dreams? Figure that out as the second part of your budget for retirement planning.

Remember when assessing your dream list, age takes its toll. Right now you may dream of travelling all the time. Once you’re past your early 70s, however, the lust to travel maybe diminished. Similarly, you may find that golfing every day is no longer a pleasure once you’ve hit 75. So might I suggest when budgeting for luxuries, it may make sense to set a larger budget for your early retirement years, and a smaller one for the later years.

Will the Government contribute?

Yes Canada Pension Plan (CPP) will be around for a while to come. Old Age Security (OAS) will also be around, although OAS benefits have been delayed until age 67 for those born after 1962. If you’ve worked in Canada all your life, you and your partner are each eligible to receive approximately $18,000 a year from those two sources, this will depend on what you earned during your working years, and how early you start collecting your pension. You can start collecting reduced CPP as early as age 60. That money will keep pouring in as long as you live, with no particular planning required on your part.

You should compare what government will provide you with and what you figure your minimum retirement needs will be. If you and your spouse estimate you can maintain the needs parts of your current life, of $50,000 a year, the good news is that retirement becomes a very affordable proposition. You and your partner may have to add only $32,000 a year in after-tax income from corporate pensions or savings to ensure the key components of your retirement plan.

Pensions and RRSPs

You may be fortunate enough, if you’re a public servant or work in the right industry, to be the recipient of a defined benefit pension. If so, you can simply contact your employer’s human resources department to find out the size of the monthly retirement cheque you can expect.

If that amount is enough to bridge the gap between government stipends and your retirement needs, then congratulations—your retirement planning is largely done. You may still want to contribute to an RRSP to finance luxuries, to provide you with a buffer against inflation, and to guard against the possibility that your employer will go bust and renege on its pension promises, but, in all probability, those contributions will simply increase your security, not determine your retirement lifestyle.

Maybe you don’t have a pension plan. Or perhaps your employer’s pension plan is a defined contribution plan that only promises how much your employer will contribute each year you work, but leaves the actual investing up to you. Or maybe your employer’s defined benefit payouts aren’t enough to bridge the gap between government pensions and what you need. In any of those cases, you’re going to have to deal with uncertainty.

What is your risk tolerance?

No portfolio, though, can guarantee a given return. What makes planning during retirement so difficult is that you’re drawing down your portfolio at the same time as the markets are moving up and down. The first few years of your retirement are particularly crucial. If you have the bad luck to retire at just the moment that the markets head into a bear market plunge—as they did in late 2008— your withdrawals combined with market losses could put a hole in your portfolio from which it will never recover. On the other hand, if you retire at the same moment the markets decide to go on a tear, the surging market returns may more than cover your early withdrawals. You may actually end up increasing your net worth in retirement. Unfortunately, this is something you can’t control.

If you want to make your money last for 30 years, count on withdrawing no more than 5% of its initial value each year, adjusted for inflation. You should begin your retirement by withdrawing $5,000 a year for each $100,000 you start with. If inflation were running at 2% a year, you would withdraw $5,100 the next year, $5,202 the following year, and so on.

The 5% figure comes as a shock to many people, who assume that they can count on their portfolio for 10% or more in the way of annual payouts. At such an aggressive withdrawal plan you would need to assume more risk in your portfolio to make up for any shortfall that may happen during the retirement years. This may not be advisable, as you would have to time the market well to support a continued 10% rate of return.

You will require balance.

Here’s where individual preferences become important. While a 5% withdrawal rate gives a well-balanced portfolio an excellent chance of surviving 30 years. Chances are that things will turn out better than the worst case scenario. If they do, you will be leaving behind a small inheritance. Your heirs will no doubt like this arrangement, and if you want to leave them something, that’s fine—but it’s probably not the optimal deal for you. In fact, if you apply the 5% withdrawal figure to your entire portfolio, you’re probably living on a lower income than you could during your retirement years.

An alternative idea is to treat the needs and wants of your portfolio in different ways. When it comes to your needs portion, play it safe and count on a 5% withdrawal rate. If you calculate, for instance, that you’re going to need $30,000 a year on top of CPP and OAS to provide you with the necessities, you should accumulate at least $600,000 in RRSP savings, or the equivalent in corporate pension plans. That $600,000 should be able to fund an inflation-adjusted withdrawal rate of $30,000 for as long as you live.

If you don’t want to worry about the volatility of the market, you can use some of your needs savings to purchase an annuity that will provide you with a guaranteed payout for the rest of your life. Be sure to compare annuities from different companies to get the best possible deal. Look at all the different options available—some annuities pay your heirs a lump sum if you die early; some are inflation-protected; some cover both you and your spouse.

Once you’ve built a fortress around the needs component of your portfolio, you can treat the wants portion with more freedom. You can and should plan to run through a chunk of your wants budget in the early years of retirement, when you’re going to be most active. By the time you turn 75, your appetite for luxuries is likely to diminish, and by the time you hit 85, many of your discretionary expenses will have dropped away completely. If your wants money is running low at that point, so be it—you will have extracted maximum value from your wants money when you were still healthy enough to enjoy it, while protecting your future by ensuring that your needs are well covered.

contact us at http://info@henleyfinancial.ca

Note: The numbers used in this illustration are for the purpose of easy calculations. We do not suggest that these numbers are hard facts but just guidelines to show you how you should think about your retirement and accumulation. The value of your portfolio is directly related to how much you want to save and what your needs and wants will be in the future.

How much money will I need to retire the way I want?

How much money will I need to retire the way I want?

We talk of retirement when you put away your cares and worries, kick back and enjoy the wealth you’ve worked so hard to accumulate over the years.

Retirement for many is an exercise in calculating odds and balancing one probability against another. Should we go on vacation? Or should we stay at home because we need the money years from now to pay for a nursing home? Should we invest aggressively to increase our chances of growing our nest egg? Or play it safe and take as few chances as possible?

The problem is that we are living longer with new technologies and drugs thus increasing our life span. Back in the 1920s, a newborn Canadian could expect to live for less than 65 years. Today, a baby born in Canada can expect to live to 84, that is a 19-year difference and means more money is needed. Our parents and grandparents didn’t spend a lot of time thinking about retirement! Why? They had a pension plan that would take care of them. Well we all know where those pension plans are going, in many cases they no longer exist or have been taken away as cost saving measure for the employers. Meaning you now have to budget and plan for those years after retirement.

A lot can go wrong over time, we don’t have a crystal ball to predict the future. Even if you set things up perfectly for a nice retirement, fate has an odd sense of humor. After years of planning, you may die young—or live long, long past your best before date.

Most people do believe they will live to life expectancy. What you need to know is the average life expectancy is just the median in a huge range of possibilities that the actuary calculates on your behalf.

Life expectancy figures are usually expressed in terms of what a newborn child can expect. It assumes there will be a steady number of deaths at every age along the way—a few people will die in childhood, a few others in adolescence, and so on. Those early deaths drag down the overall figure. So if you’ve dodged disease and accidents and made it to 65, your life expectancy is considerably greater than the average for a newborn would suggest. Someone who is 65 today has a better than even chance of living to 84 and past.

The problem, from a financial perspective, is that there are no guarantees. A 65-year-old man who retires today faces an 10% chance of dying before he turns 70. He also faces the same 10% chance of living past 95. So how do we plan for that discrepancy?

So what if our 65-year-old man may expect to die relatively young. He may burn through his cash and treat himself to lots of expensive indulgences— only to find that, Oops, he has to live the last quarter century of his life trying to make ends meet on a meager budget.

On the other hand, he could play it safe and save his money to ensure he will have enough to last until he meets his maker in years and years to come. But finds himself in a hospital bed at 68 or 69, with a life threatening diagnosis, and cursing because he did not enjoy life more when he had the chance. We all know someone who was waiting to retire to go out and explore and they never made the trip.

So how must you approach retirement?

A smart approach is to think of your retirement plans as consisting of two separate figures: one for things you must have, the other for things it would be nice to have.

The first and most important part of retirement planning is taking care of things you must have. You want to ensure you have enough to live on without feeling deprived of anything vital.

You can estimate this figure by adding up how much you spend in all areas, then deducting the expenses that will disappear in retirement— no more mortgage payments, no more child care or tuition payments, no more retirement savings. You should also deduct any luxuries that you could live without in retirement, such as eating out frequently or having a second car.

The amount that’s left represents what it would cost you to maintain the essentials of your current lifestyle in retirement—and that figure is probably a lot lower than you think. Most middle-class couples are delighted to discover that they arrive at a must-have figure that amounts to just $40,000 to $50,000/ couple a year in after-tax income.

What will we do in retirement?

We all have dreams and you need to budget for them. Maybe you want to golf every day, or winter down south. How much will it cost to retire with these dreams? Figure that out as the second part of your budget for retirement planning.

Remember when assessing your dream list, age takes its toll. Right now you may dream of travelling all the time. Once you’re past your early 70s, however, the lust to travel maybe diminished. Similarly, you may find that golfing every day is no longer a pleasure once you’ve hit 75. So might I suggest when budgeting for luxuries, it may make sense to set a larger budget for your early retirement years, and a smaller one for the later years.

Will the Government contribute?

Yes Canada Pension Plan (CPP) will be around for a while to come. Old Age Security (OAS) will also be around, although OAS benefits have been delayed until age 67 for those born after 1962. If you’ve worked in Canada all your life, you and your partner are each eligible to receive approximately $18,000 a year from those two sources, this will depend on what you earned during your working years, and how early you start collecting your pension. You can start collecting reduced CPP as early as age 60. That money will keep pouring in as long as you live, with no particular planning required on your part.

You should compare what government will provide you with and what you figure your minimum retirement needs will be. If you and your spouse estimate you can maintain the needs parts of your current life, of $50,000 a year, the good news is that retirement becomes a very affordable proposition. You and your partner may have to add only $32,000 a year in after-tax income from corporate pensions or savings to ensure the key components of your retirement plan.

Pensions and RRSPs

You may be fortunate enough, if you’re a public servant or work in the right industry, to be the recipient of a defined benefit pension. If so, you can simply contact your employer’s human resources department to find out the size of the monthly retirement cheque you can expect.

If that amount is enough to bridge the gap between government stipends and your retirement needs, then congratulations—your retirement planning is largely done. You may still want to contribute to an RRSP to finance luxuries, to provide you with a buffer against inflation, and to guard against the possibility that your employer will go bust and renege on its pension promises, but, in all probability, those contributions will simply increase your security, not determine your retirement lifestyle.

Maybe you don’t have a pension plan. Or perhaps your employer’s pension plan is a defined contribution plan that only promises how much your employer will contribute each year you work, but leaves the actual investing up to you. Or maybe your employer’s defined benefit payouts aren’t enough to bridge the gap between government pensions and what you need. In any of those cases, you’re going to have to deal with uncertainty.

What is your risk tolerance?

No portfolio, though, can guarantee a given return. What makes planning during retirement so difficult is that you’re drawing down your portfolio at the same time as the markets are moving up and down. The first few years of your retirement are particularly crucial. If you have the bad luck to retire at just the moment that the markets head into a bear market plunge—as they did in late 2008— your withdrawals combined with market losses could put a hole in your portfolio from which it will never recover. On the other hand, if you retire at the same moment the markets decide to go on a tear, the surging market returns may more than cover your early withdrawals. You may actually end up increasing your net worth in retirement. Unfortunately, this is something you can’t control.

If you want to make your money last for 30 years, count on withdrawing no more than 5% of its initial value each year, adjusted for inflation. You should begin your retirement by withdrawing $5,000 a year for each $100,000 you start with. If inflation were running at 2% a year, you would withdraw $5,100 the next year, $5,202 the following year, and so on.

The 5% figure comes as a shock to many people, who assume that they can count on their portfolio for 10% or more in the way of annual payouts. At such an aggressive withdrawal plan you would need to assume more risk in your portfolio to make up for any shortfall that may happen during the retirement years. This may not be advisable, as you would have to time the market well to support a continued 10% rate of return.

You will require balance.

Here’s where individual preferences become important. While a 5% withdrawal rate gives a well-balanced portfolio an excellent chance of surviving 30 years. Chances are that things will turn out better than the worst case scenario. If they do, you will be leaving behind a small inheritance. Your heirs will no doubt like this arrangement, and if you want to leave them something, that’s fine—but it’s probably not the optimal deal for you. In fact, if you apply the 5% withdrawal figure to your entire portfolio, you’re probably living on a lower income than you could during your retirement years.

An alternative idea is to treat the needs and wants of your portfolio in different ways. When it comes to your needs portion, play it safe and count on a 5% withdrawal rate. If you calculate, for instance, that you’re going to need $30,000 a year on top of CPP and OAS to provide you with the necessities, you should accumulate at least $600,000 in RRSP savings, or the equivalent in corporate pension plans. That $600,000 should be able to fund an inflation-adjusted withdrawal rate of $30,000 for as long as you live.

If you don’t want to worry about the volatility of the market, you can use some of your needs savings to purchase an annuity that will provide you with a guaranteed payout for the rest of your life. Be sure to compare annuities from different companies to get the best possible deal. Look at all the different options available—some annuities pay your heirs a lump sum if you die early; some are inflation-protected; some cover both you and your spouse.

Once you’ve built a fortress around the needs component of your portfolio, you can treat the wants portion with more freedom. You can and should plan to run through a chunk of your wants budget in the early years of retirement, when you’re going to be most active. By the time you turn 75, your appetite for luxuries is likely to diminish, and by the time you hit 85, many of your discretionary expenses will have dropped away completely. If your wants money is running low at that point, so be it—you will have extracted maximum value from your wants money when you were still healthy enough to enjoy it, while protecting your future by ensuring that your needs are well covered.

Note: The numbers used in this illustration are for the purpose of easy calculations. We do not suggest that these numbers are hard facts but just guidelines to show you how you should think about your retirement and accumulation. The value of your portfolio is directly related to how much you want to save and what your needs and wants will be in the future.