The Retirement Portfolio Experts Say Works Best After Age 50
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Retirement planning tends to follow a simple formula: save consistently, invest for growth and let time do the heavy lifting. But somewhere in your 50s, that formula needs to shift as retirement comes closer.
GOBankingRates spoke to retirement experts who explained strategies for the right portfolio balance after age 50, which shapes how comfortably you can live for decades after.
Why Your 50s Are A Key Decade For Retirement Planning
Your 50s mark a transition from abstract planning to real deadlines, or as Michael McSweeney, financial advisor at Ascend Wealth Partners, explained, preparing your portfolio at this stage is “when retirement stops being an idea and starts becoming a real deadline.”
Retirees have to look more closely at whether their savings are robust enough to support them later without depending on market upswings every year.
The Shift From Growth To Income Planning
Many investors assume their 50s mean dialing back risk dramatically but Daniel S. Romero, CFP and financial advisor with Romero Wealth Management said, “I push back hard on the idea that age fifty means it’s time to go conservative. You could easily have thirty-five years ahead of you.”
However, it is a good time to shift from accumulation to income planning, McSweeney said. In this decade, your investments need to generate reliable income without forcing withdrawals during market downturns.
What a Typical Portfolio Allocation Looks Like After 50
There is no one-size-fits-all allocation, but McSweeney noted that most people in their 50s should not be as conservative as they think.
Romero said a good starting point is 60% to 70% equities and then gradually walking that back as retirement gets closer.
However, he added that other factors like pensions, Social Security and income needs should guide allocation decisions, not age alone.
Why a ‘Bucket Strategy’ Can Help Balance Growth and Stability
Rather than treating your portfolio as one pool of money, use the “bucket” approach, or give “different parts of the portfolio different jobs,” McSweeney said.
Romero broke it down: “Near-term money in stable, accessible vehicles, mid-term in moderate income-generating investments and longer-horizon money stays in equities because it has time to ride out downturns.”
This structure allows investors to stay invested in stocks while reducing the risk of selling during downturns.
Why Stocks Still Play a Critical Role After Age 50
Despite growing closer to retirement, stocks are still essential for long-term purchasing power.
“If you move everything into conservative investments too early, inflation will slowly eat away at your purchasing power,” McSweeney said.
Romero agreed: “If you retire at 62 and live to 90, the money you won’t touch for twenty years absolutely needs to be working hard.”
Look to greater equity exposure, such as dividend-paying or value-oriented stocks.
Tax Diversification Becomes Critical
In your 50s, diversification should include tax considerations. “Most people will retire with money in different types of accounts … each one is taxed differently. If you understand how to use them together, you can control how much tax you pay,” McSweeney said.
Spreading money across traditional pre-tax accounts, Roth accounts and taxable accounts gives you real flexibility to manage your tax bill in retirement, Romero added.
How Often You Should Review Your Portfolio in Your 50s
Regular adjustments become essential as retirement nears. Review your portfolio at least once a year, every year, McSweeney said, especially since income, tax laws and timelines all evolve.
Review both to rebalance but also to look at the full financial picture, including expenses, Social Security timing and healthcare planning, Romero said.
The most effective portfolios should deliver income, manage taxes and withstand whatever the market does next.
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