4% Rule Falls Short for Retirees With Big Health Care Expenses

Senior couple looking at documents

What You Need to Know

Annual health care expenses tend to grow sharply toward the end of life, HealthView Services data shows.
Strategies that rely on a consistent rate of withdrawal may not be the best way to cover these growing costs.
HealthView Services argues that its automated system can help advisors keep retirees on track.

While retirees are grappling with inflation across the board, health care cost inflation is seen by experts as one of the biggest challenges facing older Americans who have left the workforce.

Adding to the sting of inflation is the fact that many older Americans find their health care spending needs grow sharply toward the end of life, whether due to hospitalizations for acute illnesses associated with advanced age or due to chronic conditions that require long-term care in a nursing home or clinical setting.

In fact, as explored in a new white paper published by HealthView Services, a couple on average can anticipate annual health care expenses of about $14,700 in their first year in retirement, and this grows to about $54,500 in the last year of retirement (at expected longevity).

Projections by Fidelity show a typical individual can expect to spend nearly $160,000 on health care and medical expenses through their retirement.

According to the new paper, these ballooning costs mean the 4% “safe” withdrawal rule and other fixed approaches to decumulation can fall short when it comes to the health care expense distribution curve. That is, when expenses spike toward the end of life, clients who haven’t prepared for this possibility could see their portfolio fall short.

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A better approach, the authors argue, is to utilize more advanced planning techniques and automated liability-matching investing technology to help put retirees in a better position to meet their anticipated health care expenses — while also providing reliable income for the rest of their spending needs.

“Decumulation is arguably the most complex phase of retirement, with multiple factors including rising health care expenses, health-related events, portfolio performance and withdrawals all impacting the ability of a portfolio to meet future needs,” says Ron Mastrogiovanni, founder and CEO of HealthView Services.

Integrating more automation and proactive goals-based communication into portfolio management, Mastrogiovanni argues, provides a path for firms and advisors to efficiently meet clients’ decumulation needs at scale, all in a manner that is consistent with regulatory best interest requirements.

What the Data Shows

To develop its analysis, HealthView Services applied proprietary algorithms to 530 million actual health care claims (supplemented by government and private data) to provide health care cost projections for clients.

The data underscores that — driven by rising Medicare expenses, age-rating of supplemental insurance and increased use of services as clients age — health care costs will continue to increase faster than the rate of the consumer price index.

As a result, the firm warns, these expenses will account for a far greater portion of retirement budgets at the end of retirement than at the beginning. For an average 65-year-old couple, health care costs will require 45% of Social Security benefits; but, by the time they are 85, it will be more than 88%.

“For advisors and their clients, portfolio cash flows required to address these expenses need to track the retirement health care decumulation curve,” the paper suggests.

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Planning Considerations

As the paper notes, in the run up to retirement, advisors’ primary objective is to ensure that clients will have the financial resources to meet their general and health care-specific needs in retirement.

“Projecting future health care costs and regular reviews to determine where a client stands against their accumulation goals are key to driving investments and savings,” the paper states. “Experience shows that when clients are provided with specific data about future health care costs, they take action — increasing investments or savings to ensure this need is met.”

In retirement, advisors and clients shift their focus to generating the income needed to match individually projected health care expenses.

According to HealthView services, there is a great opportunity for portfolio returns and principal withdrawals to be managed specifically around a health care-spending decumulation glidepath. The goal is to provide an optimal balance between risk, return and income goals to ensure the portfolio is ready to pay out increasingly larger amounts of income late in life to account for growing health care expenses.

“Since actuarial expectations provide a framework for planning, advisors need to discuss a range of longevity scenarios with clients using reliable data,” the paper argues, noting that HealthView Services has launched a Health Planner Plus solution that leverages actuarially backed health care cost projection data to track progress against accumulation and decumulation goals, while using a glidepath-driven approach to portfolio rebalancing.