Is Analysis of Retirement Spending Habits All Wrong?

Spending down 401(k)s in retirement may not be what we thought.
Spending down 401(k)s in retirement may not be what we thought.

As 401(k) advisors know, households spend less once they retire—or so we thought.

Recent research from the Employee Benefit Research Institute finds that it’s a bit more complicated. While average spending in retirement falls in the first two years in retirement, nearly half (45.9 percent) of retired households actually spent more than they did just before retirement. That declines over time, and by the sixth year of retirement, just a third (33.4 percent) spend more than they did preretirement.

However, if a down market occurs during periods of high-consumption, it could exacerbate sequence of return risk.

“We also found that households that spent more in the first two years of retirement were not exclusively high-income households,” said Sudipto Banerjee, research associate at EBRI and author of the report. “Rather, they were distributed across all income levels.”

Among the major findings in the EBRI report:

  • In the first two years of retirement, median household spending dropped by 5.5 percent from preretirement spending levels, and by 12.5 percent by the fourth year of retirement.
  • But the spending reduction slowed down after the fourth year.
  • In the first two years of retirement, two in five households (39.3 percent) spent less than 80 percent of their preretirement spending. By the sixth year of retirement, a majority (53.1 percent) of households did so.
  • In the first two years of retirement, 28 percent of households spent more than 120 percent of their preretirement spending. By the sixth year of retirement 23.4 percent of households still did so.
  • The median household has a home mortgage payment before retirement but none after retirement, indicating paying off mortgage could be a factor in the timing of retirement.

EBRI’s analysis examines how household spending changes in the immediate years following retirement by analyzing the spending patterns of a fixed group of households up to six years after they retire. It uses data from the Health and Retirement Study (HRS), which is a survey of a nationally representative sample of U.S. households with individuals over age 50 and is the most comprehensive survey of older Americans in the nation and covers topics such as health, assets, income, and labor-force status in detail.

Additional data come from Consumption and Activities Mail Survey (CAMS), which was started in 2001 as a supplement to the HRS and contains detailed household spending information.

John Sullivan
+ posts

With more than 20 years serving financial markets, John Sullivan is the former editor-in-chief of Investment Advisor magazine and retirement editor of ThinkAdvisor.com. Sullivan is also the former editor of Boomer Market Advisor and Bank Advisor magazines, and has a background in the insurance and investment industries in addition to his journalism roots.

Related Posts
Total
0
Share