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Home»Business & Economy»Why high earners are the most likely to run out of money in retirement
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Why high earners are the most likely to run out of money in retirement

Emirates InsightBy Emirates InsightMarch 16, 2026No Comments
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Why high earners are the most likely to run out of money in retirement
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It might sound backwards, but the people who spent decades earning the most should be the last ones running out of money in retirement.

  • High earners often face retirement fragility because their portfolios fail to match their spending lifestyle, which can require $6.25M+ to sustain $250,000 annual expenses at a 4% withdrawal rate.

  • Six-figure earners typically save less than 5% of gross income proportionally, Social Security replaces almost nothing for high earners, and sequence-of-returns risk hits harder with large withdrawals during market downturns, making intentional portfolio sizing and income-generating assets critical.

  • A recent study identified one single habit that doubled Americans’ retirement savings and moved retirement from dream, to reality. Read more here.

Yet, financial planners will tell you, often with a tired familiarity, that six-figure earners are among the most financially fragile retirees they work with. The reasons are less obvious than you would expect, and it’s more preventable than most people realize.

The single biggest threat to a high earner’s retirement isn’t just a bad investment, it’s the life they have built. A $400,000 annual income doesn’t just fund all your expenses, it also funds a specific standard of living that quietly becomes non-negotiable over time. This includes things like private schools, business class, a certain zip code, club memberships, and maybe even multiple properties. None of these are going to feel like luxuries after 15 years, they just feel like the floor.

Read: Data Shows One Habit Doubles American’s Savings And Boosts Retirement

Most Americans drastically underestimate how much they need to retire and overestimate how prepared they are. But data shows that people with one habit have more than double the savings of those who don’t.

The truly big problem arises when the paychecks finally stop, and the portfolio has to replicate income it was never specifically sized to replace. A householding spend $250,000 a year needs a dramatically larger nest egg than the standard retirement calculator assumes. Consider a 4% withdrawal rate, this lifestyle with a $400,000 income would require $6.25 million just to break even, and this is before taxes, healthcare, and carrying the vacation home as well.

High earners are good savers in absolute terms, but in proportional terms, they often are not as good. Maxing out a 401(k) at $23,000 per year sounds responsible, and it is, but for someone earning $500,000, this is less than 5% of gross income going toward retirement. The rest can be absorbed by taxes, lifestyle, and spending that scale silently with income.

The gap between what high earners save and what they actually need to maintain their lifestyle in retirement is often enormous and goes unexamined for years. Nobody sits down and calculates their $3 million portfolio, which is impressive in isolation, but it is most likely to replace only a fraction of what they currently spend. Once the person in this position retires, the math becomes unavoidable.

For most Americans, Social Security is a meaningful retirement income floor, and for high earners, it’s practically a rounding error. The Social Security formula is deliberately progressive, but it replaces a much higher percentage of income for low and middle earners than for high earners. Someone who earned $500,000 a year for thirty years might collect $3,5000 to $4,000 per month at full retirement age. This is $42,000 to $48,000 annually against a lifestyle that costs five or six times that amount.

The result is that high earners’ entire retirement is with an income gap that Social Security barely dents, and the entire burden falls on whatever portfolio they have managed to accumulate. If this portfolio isn’t large enough or isn’t generating enough income, the gap becomes a slow bleed.

A bad market in the first few years of retirement is damaging for any retiree, and for high spenders, it can be catastrophic. When withdrawals are large and the portfolio drops simultaneously, the math turns brutal very quickly. Selling assets in a down market to fund a high-spending lifestyle accelerates portfolio depletion in a way that’s difficult to recover from, even when markets eventually rebound.

Lower earners with modest expenses have far more flexibility, and they can cut spending, delay withdrawals, or adjust in ways that buy time. High earners who have built fixed, high-cost lives have far less room to maneuver when markets don’t cooperate.

None of this is inevitable, and high earners who recognize the trap early have the income to solve it, they just have to direct it intentionally. This means saving a meaningful percentage of gross income and doing more than just maximizing contribution limits. It also means building a portfolio specifically sized to replace actual spending, not just a generic retirement number.

It also means constructing income-generating assets, such as dividend stocks, REITs, and income ETFs, that produce cash flow without requiring constant selling. The highest earners who retire comfortably aren’t those who made the most; they are the ones who built portfolios that matched the lives they actually planned to live.

The gap between earning well and planning well is exactly where retirement security can be won and lost.

 

Most Americans drastically underestimate how much they need to retire and overestimate how prepared they are. But data shows that people with one habit have more than double the savings of those who don’t.

And no, it’s got nothing to do with increasing your income, savings, clipping coupons, or even cutting back on your lifestyle. It’s much more straightforward (and powerful) than any of that. Frankly, it’s shocking more people don’t adopt the habit given how easy it is.

Courtesy: link

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