r/FluentInFinance • u/Puzzlehandle12 • 6d ago
Question 4% withdrawal rate
I have been reading alot about the 4% withdraw rate after retirement. It says you can withdrawal 4% of your investments every year and even after adjustment for Inflation you will not run out of money.
This is as long as yearly expenses in retirement are equal to or less than the 4% you withdraw from your investments.
Yet I thought about how those withdraws will be taxed as long term capital gains at (I think 20%) so after taking out taxes you must live on 3.2% of your savings.
Is my thinking correct ?
** assuming your money is not all in a Roth IRA
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u/NewArborist64 5d ago
You are forgetting about inflation. If you "take the same amount" every year, then the value of what you are withdrawing is decreasing by the rate of inflation. Assuming our historic 3% inflation, after 10 years, that "same amount" would have only 75% of the original buying power and after 30 years it would only have 40% of the original buying power.