Wealth of Advice, Swale House, Mandale Business Park, Durham, DH1 1TH
One of the biggest fears we hear from people approaching retirement is this:
“I don’t think I’ve saved enough.”
In reality, most people retire using a blend of income sources, assets, and flexible choices — and once you put those pieces together, the picture is often far less intimidating than it first appears.
In this episode of Retire Well, we explored why you may need less than you think, and why understanding the full picture is far more important than fixating on a single number.
Many retirement illustrations assume:
That’s a useful starting point — but it’s not how most people actually retire.
In real life, retirement tends to be funded by a collection of Lego bricks, including:
When you factor these in together, the amount you need from any one source usually drops significantly.
For couples, planning as a household — rather than as two individuals in isolation — can make a meaningful difference.
Consider just a few advantages:
Even where pensions are held individually (as they must be), the income plan often works best when it’s joined up.
One of the most common reasons people overestimate how much they need is forgetting about defined benefit (DB) pensions.
If you have one, it provides:
We regularly meet people who feel “behind” because their flexible pension looks modest — only to discover that, once DB pensions and State Pension are included, most of their core income is already covered.
In some cases, guaranteed income alone can meet the majority of a household’s target spending — meaning the flexible pot only needs to cover part of retirement, not all of it.
Retirement used to be a hard stop at a fixed age.
Today, it’s often more gradual.
Many people choose a “work‑optional” retirement, where:
That flexibility can dramatically reduce the pressure on pensions — particularly in the years before State Pension age.
Property often plays a role in retirement planning — but it needs treating carefully.
There are a few common routes:
Property can help reduce how much you need in pensions, but it comes with trade‑offs:
For some people, equity release later in life becomes a deliberate part of the plan — particularly where pensions are used first and property wealth is left until later years.
Another reason people over‑save is simple:
Most people don’t spend as much as they think they will in retirement.
Yes, the early years can be active and expensive — travel, experiences, big plans.
But over time:
In fact, many people find the hardest part of retirement isn’t budgeting — it’s giving themselves permission to spend.
We often see people with more than enough money choosing the cheaper option, simply because that mindset served them so well while saving.
A key message is that retirement isn’t the end of investing.
If money stays invested:
We regularly see plans where, later in life, pensions actually grow faster than they’re being spent — especially once State Pensions and DB income are in payment.
That’s a good problem to have — but it’s another reminder that working extra years “just to be safe” often isn’t necessary.
Retirement planning doesn’t sit in isolation.
When people look beyond their own lives, new questions appear:
Sometimes, a conversation across generations reveals that the pressure you feel simply isn’t needed — or that your surplus could be put to better use sooner.
Knowing what’s enough is the foundation of good intergenerational planning.
The point isn’t that everyone needs less.
The point is this:
Retirement planning works best when it’s personal, joined‑up, and flexible — not driven by headline numbers.
When you understand:
That “magic number” often shrinks — and confidence replaces uncertainty.
If retirement feels overwhelming, the chances are you’re missing pieces of your own puzzle.
And once those pieces are laid out properly, retirement usually looks far more achievable than you first thought.
If you want a better view of what your future could be, we'll have a chat and work out if we make a good fit for you and your financial picture.

