7 retirement planning tips for regular income and long-term financial security

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    Build a retirement corpus that matches your lifestyle
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    Build a retirement corpus that matches your lifestyle

    Your retirement corpus should be large enough to support your lifestyle for at least 20–25 years after retirement. While estimating the required amount, consider not only your regular expenses but also major responsibilities such as home loan repayments, children's education or marriage expenses.

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    Factor inflation into retirement planning
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    Factor inflation into retirement planning

    Inflation can significantly reduce the purchasing power of your savings over time. For example, if your monthly expenses are Rs 50,000 at age 40, you may need around Rs 1.09 lakh per month at age 60 and nearly Rs 2.40 lakh per month at age 80 to maintain the same lifestyle, assuming 5% annual inflation.

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    Create a separate medical emergency fund
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    Create a separate medical emergency fund

    Healthcare expenses tend to rise with age, and medical insurance may not always provide complete coverage. Some policies have age restrictions, sub-limits or exclusions for specific illnesses. Maintaining a dedicated medical emergency fund can help meet unexpected healthcare expenses during retirement.

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    Give your retirement corpus some equity exposure
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    Give your retirement corpus some equity exposure

    Keeping the entire retirement corpus in low-risk assets may not generate returns sufficient to beat inflation. Allocating a portion to equities can help create long-term growth. One approach is to invest money needed after 5–7 years in equity and gradually shift gains to safer debt investments to meet near-term income needs.

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    Adjust asset allocation as you age
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    Adjust asset allocation as you age

    Risk appetite generally declines with age. While equities can support long-term growth, debt investments provide stability and liquidity. For example, a retiree may keep 40% of the corpus in equities at age 60 and gradually reduce it to 25% over the next 15 years while increasing debt exposure.

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    Separate retirement needs from inheritance planning
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    Separate retirement needs from inheritance planning

    If you intend to leave part of your wealth to your heirs, clearly identify the amount required for your own retirement and the portion meant for succession. Investments such as SCSS, RBI Floating Rate Savings Bonds and Monthly Income Schemes can provide regular income while preserving the principal amount for beneficiaries.

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    Keep an emergency liquidity backup
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    Keep an emergency liquidity backup

    Retirees should have access to emergency funds if their regular retirement corpus falls short. Assets such as gold can be monetised, while property can be used for a reverse mortgage to generate periodic income. Having a liquidity backup can help meet unforeseen financial requirements without disturbing long-term retirement plans.

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