The 4% rule is done — 5 signs your $1 million retirement portfolio can survive the new withdrawal reality
Published: March 3, 2026
For decades the 4% rule guided retirees: withdraw 4% of your portfolio in year one, adjust for inflation each year, and a diversified $1,000,000 portfolio should last roughly 30 years. For a $1 million nest egg, the math is simple — $40,000 in the first year. That simplicity helped generations of savers plan income. But economic realities have shifted the assumptions behind the rule.
The 4% rule remains a useful benchmark, but it is not a guarantee. The rule relies on historical market returns, inflation assumptions and a 30-year time horizon; when those inputs change, the safe withdrawal rate can change too. Below are five concrete, planner-tested signs that a seven-figure retirement account is positioned to endure the modern withdrawal reality.
1. You treat $40,000 as a reference, not a rigid plan
Quotable: “The $40,000 figure is a starting point, not a promise.”
If your retirement income plan treats the traditional 4% ($40,000 on a $1M portfolio) as a floor to be adjusted by spending flexibility, you are in a stronger position. That means:
- Using $40,000 as a planning benchmark while maintaining flexibility to reduce withdrawals in market downturns.
- Having a clear priority list for discretionary spending so cuts can be made quickly without undermining essential expenses.
2. You have a diversified total-return approach and manage sequence-of-returns risk
Quotable: “Survivability is driven more by sequencing and diversification than a single percent.”
Survivability depends on portfolio construction and the order of returns in the early retirement years. Indicators to watch:
- A diversified portfolio policy that allocates across equity, fixed income, and liquidity buckets.
- A plan to protect income in the early years of retirement (for example, using cash buffers or short-term bonds to cover the first 2–5 years of withdrawals).
These practices reduce the risk that a market drawdown early in retirement forces permanent portfolio damage.
3. You have explicit contingency plans (income floors and dynamic withdrawal rules)
Quotable: “A durable plan names an income floor and a playbook for when markets deviate.”
A robust retirement strategy defines a minimum necessary income — the amount you must cover to maintain essential living standards — and a hierarchy of adjustments if portfolio sustainability is threatened. Contingencies can include:
- Temporary suspension or reduction of discretionary withdrawals.
- Gradual spending adjustments tied to portfolio performance (dynamic withdrawal rules).
- Non-portfolio income options such as phased work, rental income, or partial annuitization.
4. You control costs, taxes and concentration risk (including single-stock positions like FA)
Quotable: “Lower fees, sensible tax management, and avoiding single-stock concentration extend portfolio life.”
Small differences compound over decades. Meaningful indicators that improve survival probability:
- Low-cost investment vehicles and tax-efficient placement to keep net returns higher.
- An explicit plan to reduce concentrated positions, including company stock (for example, holdings in FA), to lower idiosyncratic risk.
- Strategic asset location and efficient withdrawal sequencing to minimize taxes on distributions.
5. You stress-test your plan and update assumptions regularly
Quotable: “Stress testing turns uncertainty into actionable choices.”
Routinely validate your withdrawal plan under a range of scenarios: prolonged low returns, higher inflation, sequence-of-returns shocks, and changes in spending needs. Practical steps:
- Run simple stress scenarios: what happens to your portfolio under prolonged market weakness or higher inflation?
- Revisit assumptions annually or when materially relevant events occur (major market moves, changes in health costs, or when Social Security claiming decisions change).
Practical next steps for sophisticated investors and planners
- Treat the 4% rule as a planning starting point. Use $40,000 on a $1M portfolio as an initial guideline while building flexibility into spending.
- Build a near-term liquidity cushion to insulate withdrawals from market timing risk.
- Reduce fees, manage taxes, and address concentrated holdings (including ticker FA where applicable) to preserve compounded returns.
- Define an income floor and a documented contingency playbook for downturns.
- Re-run stress tests annually and after major financial events, adjusting the withdrawal strategy when assumptions materially change.
Quotable close: “A seven-figure portfolio still buys options — not guarantees. The difference between lasting and failing is proactive planning, not a fixed percentage.”
Key takeaways
- The 4% rule remains a useful reference but is not universally safe under new economic conditions.
- Clear, measurable planning practices — flexibility, diversification, cost and tax control, contingency rules, and regular stress testing — are the strongest signals that a $1M retirement portfolio can endure.
If you or your clients hold concentrated positions (including FA) or rely heavily on the 4% heuristic, re-evaluate allocation, liquidity and withdrawal contingencies now rather than later.
