Taxes Are the Biggest Threat to Your Retirement, According to Grant Cardone

Commitment to Our Readers
GOBankingRates' editorial team is committed to bringing you unbiased reviews and information. We use data-driven methodologies to evaluate financial products and services - our reviews and ratings are not influenced by advertisers. You can read more about our editorial guidelines and our products and services review methodology.
20 Years
Helping You Live Richer
Reviewed
by Experts
Trusted by
Millions of Readers
Retirement planning is full of unknowns, from how long you’ll live to how much you’ll spend. But according to Grant Cardone, there’s one threat that could quietly sabotage your future: taxes.
Here’s why the private equity fund manager and real estate investor believes that taxes can easily derail your retirement plans.
Why Future Tax Rates Could Crush Your Nest Egg
Many of us plan for retirement under the assumption that tax rates will be close to what they are right now, but Cardone — who recently launched the 10X Wealth Plan, a personalized financial coaching program — said this is an assumption we should not be making.
“Everybody assumes their retirement account’s going to handle them, but they don’t know what their tax [burden will be] when they’re 73 years old,” he told GOBankingRates. “In the year 2061, you have no clue what the taxes will be. Taxes could be 90%, which means is 90% of your retirement withdrawal will go to the federal government.”
Spending Is Optional — Taxes Aren’t, Cardone Warned
Cardone believes that taxes are such a threat to your retirement because they’re an expense that’s out of your control.
“Expenditures are a choice,” he said. “Taxes are a mandate. I don’t have a choice, and I don’t control how much it is. That pair of shoes, I could buy them or not buy them. The withholding tax, I cannot [control].”
If tax rates increase, even those who planned ahead and have millions of dollars saved may not be able to have a secure retirement.
“At 73 years old, you’re forced by the IRS to withdraw 4%, so for every million dollars [you have in retirement savings], you’re required to pull out $40,000 a year,” Cardone said. “If that’s taxed at 60%, you don’t have enough money to go to the retirement house.”
Given Cardone’s warning, you shouldn’t just plan for what you can control — you also need to prepare for what you can’t. That means building income streams that are tax-advantaged or tax-free, and staying flexible as laws change.