If you’ve ever asked yourself, “Will my retirement savings be enough?” — you are not alone. In fact, this is one of the most common questions people bring to me as a retirement coach.
In a recent retirement Facebook community discussion, I asked:
Did you ever feel like your retirement savings would not be enough?
The overwhelming response?
- “Every day.”
- “All the time.”
- “Still do.”
- “It scares me.”
What surprised me most wasn’t the intensity of the worry. It was who was worrying. Some respondents had:
- Pensions
- Social Security income
- Growing investment accounts
- Rental income
- Paid-off homes
And yet, the anxiety remained.
This tells us something important: this isn’t just about money. It’s about security.
Why Do So Many People Fear Running Out of Money in Retirement?
When people work with a retirement coach, the question “Is it enough?” almost always breaks down into five deeper concerns.
1. Healthcare and Long-Term Care Costs
The single biggest driver of retirement savings anxiety?
Healthcare.
People repeatedly said:
- “One medical crisis could wipe us out.”
- “Long-term care is what scares me.”
- “If I end up in a nursing home, it’s over.”
Even financially stable retirees feel vulnerable here.
Why? Because healthcare expenses are unpredictable — and unpredictability fuels fear.
A retirement coach doesn’t replace a financial advisor, but helps you think through:
- Risk tolerance
- Insurance strategies
- Family conversations
- Contingency plans
- Emotional readiness for care decisions
Planning reduces panic.
2. Inflation and Rising Costs
Inflation quietly erodes confidence.
Retirees mentioned:
- Food prices
- Insurance increases
- Property taxes
- Medicare premiums
- Car replacement costs
When income is fixed but costs rise, retirement can feel unstable.
Inflation doesn’t just affect your budget. It affects your sense of control.
3. Longevity Risk: Living Too Long
Longevity risk shows up frequently in conversations with a retirement coach.
People say:
- “What if I live to 95?”
- “My parents lived into their 90s.”
- “My plan runs out at 83.”
Living longer is a blessing. But financially, it introduces uncertainty.
The deeper question becomes:
How do I create a retirement plan that supports longevity without living in fear of it?
4. Market Volatility and Sequence Risk
Even people who say their projections look solid admit:
“The math says I’m fine… but what if the market crashes?”
Market volatility introduces doubt — especially in the first years of retirement. This is where retirement planning becomes psychological. It’s not just about averages. It’s about confidence during downturns.
5. Life Disruptions That Changed the Plan
Many retirees shared real stories:
- Divorce splitting retirement savings
- Breast cancer diagnosis reducing work capacity
- Disability
- Early forced retirement
- Caregiving years
- A spouse who didn’t save
Retirement planning is often presented as a straight line.
Life rarely is.
A retirement coach helps clients normalize nonlinear paths and build forward from where they are — not from where they “should have been.”
The Hidden Truth: Retirement Anxiety Is Often Psychological
Several respondents said something revealing:
- “My projections show I’ll be fine.”
- “I haven’t touched my principal.”
- “My investments are growing.”
And yet…They still worry.
This suggests:
Retirement savings anxiety is often emotional, not mathematical.
For decades, we are conditioned to:
- Accumulate
- Protect
- Save aggressively
- Avoid touching principal
Then retirement requires a reversal. You must begin drawing down assets.
That shift — from saver to spender — can feel psychologically threatening. This is one of the most common transitions a retirement coach helps clients navigate.
How Much Do You Really Need to Retire?
You’ve likely heard:
- $1 million
- $1.5 million
- $3 million
- 25x your annual expenses
But there is no universal retirement number.
What matters more:
- Lifestyle expectations
- Debt level
- Housing costs
- Healthcare strategy
- Income predictability
- Flexibility
- Adaptability
Interestingly, people with predictable income streams (pensions, Social Security, rental income) consistently reported lower anxiety — regardless of total net worth.
Cash flow stability often matters more than portfolio size.
Why “Enough” Is a Moving Target
Some retirees with substantial savings still worry. Others with modest savings feel calm because they:
- Downsized
- Reduced expenses
- Moved to lower-cost areas
- Supplemented with part-time work
- Built passive income streams
- Live below their means
“Enough” is not just a number. It’s the relationship between:
Lifestyle + flexibility + mindset.
This is where a retirement coach becomes valuable — helping align lifestyle design with financial reality.
How to Reduce Retirement Savings Anxiety
If you’re asking, “Will my retirement savings be enough?” here are practical steps:
1. Identify the Real Fear
- Is it healthcare?
- Inflation?
- Longevity?
- Market crashes?
- Loss of identity?
- Family obligations?
Clarity reduces vague anxiety.
2. Build a Flex Plan
Ask:
- What expenses could I reduce?
- Could I work part-time?
- Could I downsize?
- Could I relocate?
- Could I create a small income stream?
Adaptability increases confidence.
3. Separate the Numbers from the Feeling
Rate yourself:
- On paper, I am financially okay (1–10)
- Emotionally, I feel financially okay (1–10)
If those numbers are far apart, the gap isn’t money. It’s mindset.
That gap is exactly where a retirement coach focuses.
4. Design Retirement Intentionally
Retirement planning often focuses solely on assets. But financial sufficiency is just one domain.
Retirement confidence also requires:
- Purpose
- Social connection
- Identity beyond work
- Housing clarity
- Health strategy
- Meaningful structure
When retirement is intentionally designed, fear decreases. When retirement is passive, fear increases.
Key Takeaways
- Many people worry about whether their retirement savings will be enough, regardless of their financial stability.
- Key concerns include healthcare costs, inflation, longevity risk, market volatility, and unexpected life disruptions.
- A retirement coach helps individuals identify real fears and build adaptability into their plans.
- Retirement confidence comes from clarity, flexibility, and intentional design, not just money.
- Normalizing the transition from saver to spender is crucial for reducing anxiety about retirement.
The Bottom Line
If you worry your retirement savings won’t be enough, you are normal. Most retirees — regardless of net worth — experience some level of fear about running out of money.
But here’s the shift:
Retirement confidence does not come solely from having more money. It comes from having more clarity, flexibility, and intentional design.
The goal isn’t perfect certainty. It’s adaptive confidence.
And that’s where working with a retirement coach can make the difference — not just in your finances, but in how you experience your third act.
# # #
Dr. Kevin Nourse is a certified retirement coach helping people flourish in retirement. He founded Nourse Leadership Strategies, a coaching firm based in Southern California including Los Angeles, San Bernardino and Palm Springs. Kevin also works with clients across the USA via Zoom. Contact him at 760.237.0045 or kevin@nourseleadership.com
(C) Kevin Nourse, 2026
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