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Financial Planning Insights

By Doug Berti April 13, 2026
How to Know If You’re Ready to Retire (Without Guessing) Retirement isn’t just about hitting a number—it’s about knowing how your income, taxes, and decisions will actually work. Why “Am I Ready to Retire?” Feels So Unclear Most people don’t struggle with saving—they struggle with knowing when it’s enough. You might have strong retirement accounts, a paid-off home, and years of planning behind you… but still feel unsure about making the transition. That uncertainty usually comes down to one thing: there’s no clear connection between your savings and how retirement will actually work. Without a structured plan, it’s easy to second-guess: Whether your money will last How much income you can safely take What taxes will do to your withdrawals Whether you’re making a decision you can’t undo  The good news is that retirement readiness can be measured—you just need the right framework. Retirement Isn’t a Number—It’s a System A common mistake is thinking retirement is about hitting a specific savings goal (like $1M or $2M). In reality, those numbers don’t mean much without context. What matters more is whether your financial system works: How your income will be generated How long that income will last How taxes will affect what you keep How flexible your plan is over time When these pieces are connected, retirement becomes a decision you can evaluate—not a guess you have to make. The 5 Key Questions That Determine If You’re Ready If you can answer these clearly, you’re much closer to knowing whether you’re ready to retire. 1. How Much Income Will You Have Each Month? Start with the basics: Social Security (and when you plan to claim it) Retirement account withdrawals Any pensions or other income sources Then compare that to your expected monthly expenses. The goal isn’t perfection—it’s clarity. You want to know whether your income realistically supports your lifestyle. 2. How Long Will Your Money Last? This is where many people feel the most uncertainty. It’s not just about your total savings—it’s about: Withdrawal rates Market variability Longevity assumptions Flexibility in spending A retirement plan should stress-test different scenarios so you can see how your plan holds up over time. 3. How Will Taxes Affect Your Retirement Income? Taxes are one of the most overlooked parts of retirement planning. Your income may come from: Pre-tax accounts (taxable withdrawals) Roth accounts (tax-free withdrawals) Brokerage accounts (capital gains) Without planning, taxes can quietly reduce how much you actually keep. This is where tax-aware retirement planning becomes critical—coordinating withdrawals so you’re not overpaying year after year. 4. What Is Your Withdrawal Strategy? Which accounts you pull from—and when—can significantly impact both taxes and longevity. A structured withdrawal strategy helps you: Reduce unnecessary taxes Avoid large income spikes Keep your plan sustainable over time This is especially important in the early years of retirement when you have the most flexibility. 5. Are You Making Irreversible Decisions Too Early? Some retirement decisions are hard to undo: Claiming Social Security Large Roth conversions Major lifestyle changes The key is not to rush these decisions without a plan. A strong retirement strategy helps you evaluate tradeoffs before committing. Common Signs You’re Not Ready (Yet) Even with solid savings, these red flags often signal more planning is needed: You don’t know how much income you can safely withdraw Taxes haven’t been factored into your plan Your investments aren’t aligned with your income needs You’re unsure when to take Social Security You’re relying on rough estimates instead of a structured plan These aren’t failures—they’re just signs that your plan needs more clarity. What Confidence in Retirement Actually Looks Like When you’re truly ready to retire, things feel different. You don’t have to guess—you know: Your monthly income and where it comes from How your withdrawals will work over time How taxes will affect your plan What decisions to make (and when) How your plan adapts if life changes That confidence doesn’t come from having more money—it comes from having a plan that connects everything. The Next Step: Turn Your Savings Into a Plan If you’re asking “Am I ready to retire?”, you’re already thinking about the right things. The next step is turning that question into a clear answer. Texas Assured Financial Planning helps individuals and families across Texas build retirement plans that connect income, taxes, and long-term decisions into one structured strategy. Instead of guessing, you can see how your retirement actually works—and what to do next.