Retirement Resilience: How to Stay Steady in an Unsteady Market
on Jul 25, 2025
Retirement should bring financial freedom and peace of mind—not stress about market swings. But downturns and economic uncertainty are part of the journey. The good news? Your plan can be built to handle it.
Here’s how to build resilience into your retirement plan, no matter what the markets are doing.
- Strengthen Your Foundation First
A resilient retirement starts with the basics:
- Emergency Savings: Keep 6–12 months of expenses in a high-yield savings or money market account.
- Debt: Do your best to minimize high-interest debt before retiring.
- Spending Plan: Know what your retirement life costs and be sure to account for inflation.
- Don’t Rely on Just One- or Two-Income Sources
Having multiple streams of income helps smooth things out when markets get choppy. Think beyond just Social Security and a 401(k):
- Pension or annuity income
- Taxable brokerage account
- Rental income
- Part-time work or consulting
A healthy mix of stable and growth-oriented income gives you more flexibility when times get tough.
- Match Investments to Your Time Horizon
Even in retirement, you’ll likely need your money to last 20–30 years. That means growth still matters. Use a bucket strategy:
- Bucket 1 (Years 1–3): Cash and short-term bonds for immediate needs
- Bucket 2 (Years 4–7): Income-producing investments like dividend stocks or intermediate-term bonds
- Bucket 3 (Years 8+): Stocks or real estate funds for long-term growth
This gives you time to wait out downturns instead of selling your long-term investments at a loss.
- Avoid Emotional Decisions
Market declines are tough—but reacting emotionally can do more harm than good.
- Use your cash and bonds to cover expenses during rough markets.
- Stay invested and rebalance when needed.
- Keep in mind: recoveries usually follow downturns.
- Make Thoughtful Adjustments When Needed
You don’t need to overhaul your plan every time markets dip. Small adjustments can go a long way:
- Pause or reduce discretionary spending
- Postpone major purchases
- Revisit your withdrawal strategy—aim to keep it under 4% annually
- Lean on a Fiduciary Advisor
Having someone who knows your full picture and isn’t emotionally tied to the market can be invaluable. A fiduciary financial planner helps you:
- Stress-test your plan for different market scenarios
- Make tax-efficient choices
- Stay focused on your long-term goals
Final Thought
You can’t predict the market—but you can plan for the unknown. A resilient retirement plan keeps you grounded, even when the headlines feel uncertain. If you’re unsure whether your plan is built for that kind of strength, let’s talk. A retirement check-in could make all the difference.