Retirement Budget Drift: 4 Small Upgrades That Quietly Add $500-Plus a Month to Your Spending
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Many retirees enter retirement with a carefully planned spending strategy yet still find their monthly withdrawals creeping higher.
Financial planners say the cause is a number of small upgrades that quietly increase your monthly spend, what Kevin Marshall, CPA, personal finance professional at Amortization Calculator, called “retirement budget drift.”
Andrew Latham, CFP, content director at SuperMoney, described it as “that slow, sneaky increase in your monthly spending that happens without any single big decision to blame.”
Here are some small upgrades to keep an eye on.
1. Dining Out More Often
Of all expenses, “the number one offender” in retirement is dining out, Latham said. “When every day feels like Saturday, you eat out like it’s the weekend,” he said.
It’s easy to fall into a habit of convenience, but it comes at a steep cost, he warned.
2. Subscription and Streaming Creep
It’s also easy to accumulate subscriptions in retirement without realizing how quickly the costs accumulate, Latham said.
These recurring expenses often go unnoticed because they are automated. They seem harmless at first, Marshall added, but every little thing adds up: another trip, upgrading your phone, one additional streaming service or meal out.
“If you add several of these, you could be spending $300 or more extra each month,” he said.
3. Convenience Services and Lifestyle Upgrades
Retirement also creates opportunities for convenience upgrades. Services such as grocery delivery, home cleaning or lawn care can gradually become part of a retiree’s routine, Latham said.
“You sign up for a meal kit delivery, add a premium gym membership, upgrade your phone plan, subscribe to two new streaming services and hire someone to mow the lawn,” he said.
Individually, these costs are minor. But stack them up, and you’re looking at $500 to $700 more per month, which is $6,000 to $8,400 extra per year that comes out of retirement savings.
4. Travel, Hobbies and the ‘Grandparent Tax’
Lifestyle spending often increases during the early years of retirement, when retirees have more time and energy for activities and visiting with grandchildren.
“Travel is another big one,” Latham said. “Early in retirement, people tend to book nicer hotels, fly business class for the first time or tack on extra days to trips because they don’t have to rush back to the office.”
Other spending increases can come from family activities. “And then there’s the grandparent tax. I’ve watched people quietly blow through thousands a year on gifts, experiences and trips with grandkids,” he said.
Why Budget Drift Is Hard To Notice
One reason retirement spending increases often go unnoticed is retirees check their investments regularly, but very few do a monthly spending audit, Latham said.
By the time retirees notice the change, the pattern may already be established. Fortunately, there’s an easy fix. “All that’s required is that you start tracking where your money is going once a month,” Marshall said.
Why Inflation Can Make Budget Drift Worse
Small spending increases can also combine with inflation to reduce retirees’ purchasing power.
Steve Charlton, president of Wisdom Financial, said official inflation measures do not always match the price increases households experience.
“In 1983, the Bureau of Labor Statistics introduced hedonic adjustments — the idea that if a product gets better, the price increase doesn’t fully count as inflation,” he said.
He argued that this can create a gap between official inflation numbers and real household costs. “Your Social Security COLA is based on that number. Your actual grocery bill is not,” he said.
Over long retirements, that difference can compound. “The gap is small in year one. By year ten you’re 15% to 20% behind in purchasing power,” he explained.
Make Upgrades Intentional
Retirement budget drift comes from a series of small upgrades that feel harmless at the time. Tracking spending regularly and reviewing financial plans can help retirees enjoy their retirements without slowly eroding the savings meant to support it.
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