Retirement planning is primarily an income-planning exercise. The goal is not to accumulate the largest possible portfolio. The goal is to determine whether future income can support future spending.

Spending drives retirement planning. Two households with identical portfolios may require very different retirement income depending on lifestyle, housing costs, health considerations, family circumstances, and personal priorities.

Most retirees rely on multiple income sources. Retirement income may come from CPP/QPP, Old Age Security (OAS), workplace pensions, RRSPs, TFSAs, non-registered investments, rental income, employment income, or a combination of these sources.

Taxes continue throughout retirement. Pension income, government benefits, and investment withdrawals may all affect after-tax income. Understanding spending power is often more important than understanding gross income.

Inflation changes what retirement income can buy. A retirement plan that appears comfortable today may look very different decades later if purchasing power declines faster than expected.

Retirement planning involves tradeoffs. Retiring earlier may require greater savings. Delaying government benefits may increase future income but reduce flexibility in the short term. There is rarely a universally correct answer.

Retirement projections are planning tools, not predictions. Their purpose is to make assumptions visible and allow different scenarios to be explored. Their value comes from improving understanding, not forecasting the future with certainty.

Strong retirement plans are built on realistic assumptions rather than optimistic expectations. Understanding the assumptions behind a projection is often more important than focusing on the projection itself.