Most people believe that saving $3 million for retirement guarantees financial freedom.
But in reality, many people who reach this milestone still hesitate to retire.
Why?
The answer isn’t financial—it’s psychological.
The $3 Million Retirement Scenario
In this case study, Tom and Sharon:
- Are in their late 50s
- Have saved ~$3 million
- Want $12,000/month in retirement
On paper, they’re more than ready.
In fact:
- If they wait until 65 → ~$5M+ portfolio
- If they retire now → still highly sustainable
So what’s the issue?
The Illusion of “Not Enough”
Even with strong financials, many retirees feel:
- Uncertain about market conditions
- Fearful of running out of money
- Uncomfortable drawing down assets
This creates a dangerous mindset:
“Just a few more years…”
The Hidden Risk: Working Too Long
Delaying retirement doesn’t just add money.
It creates trade-offs:
- Lost healthy years
- Less time with family
- Reduced ability to travel
- Increased stress
Ironically, the “safe” decision can reduce life quality.
The RMD Problem (Most People Miss This)
When you delay retirement and keep accumulating:
- Your portfolio grows larger than needed
- Required Minimum Distributions (RMDs) force withdrawals later
- This creates unnecessary taxable income spikes
Result:
- Higher taxes
- Less control
- Reduced efficiency
Stress Test Results (The Eye-Opener)
After running thousands of simulations:
- Retiring at 65 → 100% success rate
- Retiring today → 99% success rate
Even in worst-case scenarios:
- They still don’t run out of money
- They may still end with more than they started
The Over-Saving Problem
This is rarely discussed—but critical.
Over-saving leads to:
- Excess taxes later
- Missed life experiences
- Capital inefficiency
In this case:
- Waiting → ~$26M projected legacy
- Retiring now → ~$11M
Neither scenario risks failure.
What Actually Matters
The real question isn’t:
“Do I have enough?”
It’s:
“What am I waiting for?”
Retirement planning should optimize for:
- Time
- Health
- Experiences
- Relationships
—not just account balances.
Smarter Strategies to Consider
If you’re in a similar position:
- Roth conversions before RMD age
- Strategic withdrawals early
- Lifestyle optimization planning
- Tax bracket management
Final Takeaway
You don’t get extra points for dying with the most money.
You get one retirement.
Make sure you actually live it.