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Description

Most retirement budgets are built around a method that almost guarantees an error. You sit down with a spreadsheet, write out every category you can think of, and estimate a number for each line. Research shows people who go through that exercise estimate what they think they can live on, not what they spend. Real retiree spending can run 20 to 30% higher than those estimates. On a $75,000 target, that's $15,000 to $22,000 per year, the plan never accounted for.

In this episode, Brett walks through a different approach: the Subtract-and-Replace Budget. Two halves, eight lines, and a starting point that's already in your paycheck.

Brett covers:

If you're within five years of retirement, this framework is worth understanding before you build the plan.

#CRNAs #NursePractitioners #RetirementPlanning #RetirementIncome #FinancialPlanning

Key Timestamps:

(0:18) Probability of success based on retirement spending accuracy

(2:03) Ineffectiveness of the traditional line item approach for future budgeting

(3:08) Discrepancy between imagined discipline and real retiree spending habits

(4:53) Identification of major work expenses that disappear after retirement

(6:06) Determining a real lifestyle baseline using current paycheck data

(7:39) Average total healthcare expenditures for retired couples over a lifetime

(9:03) Impact of healthcare inflation on long-term retirement planning

(10:33) Financial value of strategic tax control and withdrawal timing

(11:33) Moving from guessing to financial clarity with the paycheck method 


For more information and resources related to this episode, please visit the show notes