A Midyear Retirement Readiness Check

For many investors, retirement planning becomes most tangible at the start and end of the year. Goals are set in January, then revisited during year-end tax and financial planning discussions. But the middle of the year offers an equally valuable opportunity: a chance to evaluate progress, reassess assumptions, and make adjustments before small issues become larger challenges.

At Sequoia Financial Group, retirement readiness is never treated as a standalone calculation. It is part of a broader financial strategy that connects investment management, tax planning, cash flow analysis, estate considerations, insurance review, and long-term family goals into one coordinated approach. That level of integration becomes increasingly important as retirement grows closer and financial complexity increases.

A midyear retirement readiness check can help ensure your strategy remains aligned with both your long-term objectives and the realities of today’s environment.

Reevaluate Spending Expectations

One of the most common retirement planning risks is underestimating future spending needs. Inflation, healthcare costs, lifestyle changes, and support for family members can all reshape retirement projections over time.

The Bureau of Labor Statistics estimates that households age 65 and older spend an average of more than $57,000 annually, with housing and healthcare representing significant portions of those expenses.1 Meanwhile, Fidelity estimates that a 65-year-old retiring today may need approximately $165,000 in after-tax savings to cover healthcare expenses during retirement.2

Midyear is an ideal time to revisit assumptions around spending, inflation, and lifestyle expectations. For some families, this may reveal opportunities to increase savings. For others, it may confirm that they are already positioned well to meet long-term goals.

At Sequoia, these conversations extend beyond portfolio projections. They often involve coordination between advisors, tax professionals, estate attorneys, and insurance specialists to evaluate how retirement decisions affect the broader financial picture.

Read more: The Hidden Cost of Financial Fragmentation: Why Investment Decisions Cannot Happen in Isolation