Let me paint a picture for you.
You're in your fifties. Maybe the kids are out of the house,
or close to it. Maybe you've started noticing that "someday" when it
comes to retirement is starting to feel like "somewhere in the
not-too-distant future." Maybe you've even done the mental math, roughly, and
come away with more questions than answers.
If that sounds familiar, you're not alone. In fact, you're
in very good company.
The World Has Changed
Here's something worth understanding. The retirement your
parents had, the one with the gold watch, the defined benefit pension, the
comfortable certainty, that world mostly doesn't exist anymore.
Somewhere over the past few decades, the responsibility for
retirement planning shifted from employers to individuals. Quietly, gradually,
and with very little fanfare, the burden landed on our shoulders.
What does that mean for you? It means that having a plan
isn't optional anymore. It's essential.
What Most People Don't Know (And Why It Matters)
The research tells us some interesting things about where
Canadians stand with retirement planning. But let's skip the percentages and
get to what really matters.
Most people don't fully understand the retirement plans
they already have. They have money accumulating somewhere, a workplace
plan, an RRSP, maybe a forgotten account from a job ten years ago, but they
couldn't tell you exactly how it works or what it will mean for their future.
This is not a character flaw. It's a sign of how complicated
things have become.
Most people haven't asked themselves the big questions. How
much will you actually need each year to live the life you want? Where will
that money come from? What happens if the market drops the year before you
retire? What about healthcare costs? What about simply living longer than you
expect?
These aren't scary questions. They're just questions. And
they have answers.
Most people carry worry they don't need to carry. That
nagging feeling that you're behind, that you should know more than you do, that
you might not be able to retire at all, that weight is real. And it's heavier
than it needs to be.
The Truth About Your Fifties
Here's something I want you to hear, maybe for the first
time.
Your fifties are the absolute sweet spot for retirement
planning.
You're old enough to take it seriously. You're young enough
to actually do something about it. You have perhaps twenty years of earning
ahead of you, and twenty years of retirement after that. Those two decades of
preparation will determine everything about those two decades of living.
Think of it this way. If you were going to build a house,
you wouldn't wait until the framing was up to start thinking about the
foundation. Your fifties are the foundation years. Get them right, and
everything else gets easier.
What a Good Plan Looks Like
A solid retirement plan isn't about predicting the future
perfectly. It's about covering your bases so that whatever happens, you're
ready.
A good plan accounts for:
- Where
your income will come from (and there are more sources than you might
think)
- What
taxes will look like (because they don't disappear just because you stop
working)
- How
long you might live (and yes, you should plan for a long time)
- What
could go wrong (markets, health, unexpected expenses)
A good plan also changes as you do. It's not a document you
write once and file away. It's a conversation you have with yourself, and with
someone who knows what they're talking about, every year or two.
Why Go It Alone When You Don't Have To?
Here's the part that surprises people. The ones who work
with someone, a financial advisor, a planner, someone whose job is to know this
stuff, report something interesting.
They feel better. Not just about their money. About their
lives.
They understand what they're working toward. They know their
plan has been tested against the things that could go wrong. They have someone
to call when the market drops or when they're considering a big decision.
The numbers back this up, but the feeling is what matters.
It's the difference between driving through fog with your high beams on and
driving through fog with someone who knows the road.
You don't need to have all the answers today. You don't need
to know exactly how much you'll spend on groceries in 2035 or what the exchange
rate will be when you finally take that trip to Ireland.
You just need to start. To ask the questions. To find
someone who can help you answer them.
The worst position to be in is not "behind on
savings." The worst position is "avoiding the conversation
entirely." Because time passes either way. The years will keep coming. And
one day, you'll wake up and retirement won't be a distant concept anymore, it
will be next year.
What You Can Do This Week
Here's a simple path forward, no pressure attached.
This week, gather. Find the statements. Dig out
the workplace pension information. Locate the RRSP account you opened a decade
ago and haven't thought about since. Just gather. That's all.
Next week, ask. Talk to someone who knows. A
financial planner, an advisor at your bank, or even a trusted friend who seems to
have their act together. Ask the basic questions: Am I on track? What should I
be thinking about? What am I missing?
The week after, decide. Not forever. Just for
now. What's one thing you could do differently? One adjustment? One
conversation you could have with your spouse about what retirement actually
looks like to both of you?
That's it. Small steps. But steps that move you forward.
You've spent your whole life figuring things out. New jobs.
New challenges. Raising kids. Navigating marriages and mortgages and everything
else life throws at you.
Retirement is just another thing to figure out. And like
everything else, it's easier when you don't do it alone.
The fifties are your runway. Use them. Because the takeoff
is coming either way, and how smoothly you fly depends entirely on how well you
prepare.
You've got this. And there are people ready to help.