Many retirement plans fail because they calculate how much a person hopes to spend, not what retirement is likely to cost. In effective retirement planning for men, the most dangerous expenses are often the ones omitted from the first estimate: healthcare premiums, taxes, home repairs, inflation, family support, and professional fees.
Finance educator Clarissa Vaughn’s central lesson is that replacing a paycheck is only part of the problem. A retirement portfolio must also absorb expenses that may change unpredictably over 20, 25, or 30 years.
A man can save consistently, pay off his mortgage, and still underestimate the amount required. Medicare is not completely free. Social Security may not replace enough income. A paid-off home still needs insurance, property taxes, utilities, and maintenance. Investment and advisory fees also continue after employment ends.

Clarissa Vaughn Explains Why Many Men Underestimate Retirement Costs: Retirement Planning for Men
Editorial disclosure: Clarissa Vaughn is an educational advisor persona used to explain retirement concepts. This article provides general information and is not individualized investment, tax, insurance, medical, or legal advice.
Why Retirement Planning for Men Often Misses the Real Cost
Current spending is not a complete retirement budget
A common retirement estimate begins with today’s monthly spending and subtracts costs expected to disappear. Commuting, payroll taxes, work clothing, and retirement contributions may decline. That can make retirement appear less expensive.
However, other categories can rise. Travel may increase during the first years. A household may pay more for medical services, home assistance, or accessibility improvements later. Adult children or aging parents may also need financial support.
The better approach is to build the budget by category. Separate essential costs from flexible spending and one-time expenses. Then test the budget against different inflation rates, retirement dates, and life expectancies.
Healthcare costs begin before major medical treatment
Many workers assume Medicare will cover nearly every healthcare expense after age 65. Medicare provides important protection, but retirees can still pay premiums, deductibles, coinsurance, prescription expenses, dental care, vision services, hearing care, and costs for services that are not fully covered.
In 2026, the standard Medicare Part B premium is $202.90 per month, with higher premiums for some higher-income beneficiaries. The annual Part B deductible is $283. Medicare also explains that Original Medicare has no general annual out-of-pocket maximum unless a retiree has supplemental protection or joins a Medicare Advantage plan with its own limit.
Those figures will change before today’s 30- or 40-year-olds retire. Their purpose is not to predict a future bill. They demonstrate why “Medicare will pay for it” is not a sufficient healthcare budget.
Current Medicare pricing and plan-comparison resources are available through Medicare.gov.
Housing does not become free when the mortgage ends
Paying off a home can reduce retirement risk, but it does not eliminate housing costs. Property taxes, homeowners insurance, utilities, association fees, roofing, heating systems, plumbing, appliances, and accessibility renovations may continue.
A retirement budget should therefore include an annual maintenance reserve. The correct amount depends on the home’s age, size, condition, climate, insurance market, and local property taxes.
Some retirees may eventually downsize, relocate, or rent. Those choices can lower certain expenses, but they can introduce transaction costs, moving expenses, rent increases, association fees, or higher insurance premiums. Home equity is valuable, but it is not automatically spendable income.
Inflation changes more than grocery prices
Inflation gradually reduces purchasing power. Even moderate inflation can make a comfortable budget feel restrictive after two decades.
The impact is uneven. Food, insurance, healthcare, energy, travel, and housing services do not necessarily rise at the same rate. A plan using one inflation assumption for every category may therefore hide important risks.
Retirement projections should test multiple scenarios rather than rely on one smooth estimate. A household can evaluate what happens if inflation is higher during the first ten years, investment returns are weaker than expected, or a major home repair occurs during a market decline.
Taxes do not disappear after the final paycheck
Traditional 401(k) and IRA withdrawals are generally taxable. Pension income, part of Social Security benefits, investment gains, interest, rental income, and business income may also affect the tax bill.
Retirees may face different tax rates than they paid while working, but lower employment income does not guarantee a low-tax retirement. Large tax-deferred balances can create taxable withdrawals, while higher income may also affect Medicare premiums.
Tax diversification can provide flexibility. A household may build assets across traditional retirement accounts, Roth accounts, health savings accounts, and taxable brokerage accounts. The objective is not to predict future tax law perfectly; it is to avoid depending on only one tax treatment.
Social Security estimates are often misunderstood
Social Security should be included in a retirement plan, but the claiming age matters. The Social Security Administration allows retirement benefits to begin between ages 62 and 70. Monthly benefits are generally higher when claiming is delayed, up to age 70.
The largest possible benefit shown in an advertisement or news story is not what every worker will receive. Benefits depend on earnings history and claiming age. Workers can review personalized estimates through the Social Security Administration.
Couples should consider both spouses’ benefits, survivor income, taxes, health, employment, and portfolio withdrawals before selecting a claiming strategy.
Six expenses commonly missing from retirement estimates
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- Medicare premiums, deductibles, prescriptions, dental, vision, and hearing care
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- Property taxes, insurance, repairs, and major home replacements
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- Federal and state taxes on retirement income
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- Support for adult children, parents, or other relatives
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- Investment management, fund, legal, and tax-preparation fees
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- Travel, vehicles, relocation, and one-time lifestyle purchases
Missing one category may not destroy a plan. Missing several can create a persistent shortfall that becomes difficult to correct after employment income stops.
Best Retirement Cost Planning Options in 2026
Option 1: A detailed DIY retirement projection
A self-directed projection is the lowest-cost option for someone comfortable with spreadsheets, retirement calculators, investment assumptions, and tax estimates.
The plan should include account balances, annual contributions, expected Social Security income, debts, healthcare costs, taxes, inflation, and a range of investment returns. It should also model retirement dates rather than assume one fixed year.
Pros: low direct cost, complete control, and the ability to update assumptions frequently.
Cons: results depend on the quality of the assumptions, and the investor may overlook taxes, insurance, sequence-of-returns risk, or behavioral mistakes.
DIY investors should review the fees inside workplace plans. The U.S. Department of Labor explains that retirement plan costs can include administration fees, investment fees, and individual service charges. Its retirement fee guide also notes that the cumulative effect of fees can be substantial.
Option 2: Retirement calculators and planning software
Online planning programs can connect accounts, estimate retirement income, test different savings rates, and illustrate the impact of retiring earlier or later. Some are free, while others are included with brokerage or advisory services.
Paid software may offer tax modeling, withdrawal sequencing, Social Security comparisons, and scenario testing. Pricing varies from one-time purchases to monthly or annual subscriptions.
Before paying, determine whether the program models taxes, healthcare, inflation, required distributions, and account-specific withdrawals. A visually impressive projection may still be weak if it assumes constant returns or ignores major expenses.
Option 3: Workplace plans, IRAs, and automatic savings increases
Better cost estimation is useful only when it changes behavior. Automatic contributions can convert a projection into a funding plan.
For 2026, the employee contribution limit for most 401(k), 403(b), and governmental 457 plans is $24,500. The IRA contribution limit is $7,500. The IRS also lists catch-up limits for eligible older workers.
Current contribution rules are available through the Internal Revenue Service.
Reaching the maximum is not realistic for every household. A practical alternative is to increase the contribution percentage after raises, bonuses, or debt repayment. The employer match should be understood as a benefit, not as proof that the employee’s contribution rate is sufficient.
Option 4: Robo-advisor retirement services
Robo-advisors can build and rebalance diversified portfolios while providing automated goal tracking. Some include tax-loss harvesting, retirement projections, or access to financial coaches.
Fidelity Go: Fidelity currently lists no advisory fee for balances under $25,000 and a 0.35% annual advisory fee once the account reaches $25,000. Underlying investment expenses or other charges may still apply. Review current terms on the Fidelity Go page.
Schwab Intelligent Portfolios: Schwab lists no separate advisory fee or commissions for its standard automated service, but investors pay direct and indirect costs, including ETF expenses and costs associated with the cash allocation. Premium service lists a $300 initial planning fee and a $30 monthly advisory fee. Details appear on the Schwab website.
Vanguard Personal Advisor: Vanguard lists a $50,000 minimum and an annual advisory fee of approximately $30 to $31 per $10,000 invested. Investment expense ratios may be additional. Review current information through Vanguard Investment Advice.
Provider pricing changes. Compare minimums, portfolio construction, cash allocation, tax features, customer reviews, access to human professionals, and the total cost rather than relying on one advertised fee.
Option 5: A human financial advisor
A human advisor may be useful when the household has stock compensation, business income, several properties, complex insurance, estate-planning needs, or uncertainty about retirement withdrawals.
Pricing models include hourly fees, fixed project fees, subscriptions, commissions, and a percentage of assets under management. A project-based retirement plan may suit someone who wants a second opinion without ongoing portfolio management.
An asset-based service may include investment management and continuing advice, but its cost increases as the portfolio grows. A 1% fee equals $5,000 annually on $500,000 and $15,000 on $1.5 million before fund expenses.
Ask the advisor to identify every charge, the services included, potential conflicts of interest, and whether the professional will act as a fiduciary. Registration and disciplinary information can be reviewed through Investor.gov.
Cost and pricing comparison
- DIY planning: usually the lowest direct cost, but requires time and financial knowledge.
- Planning software: free to subscription-based, with features varying significantly.
- Robo-advisor: commonly uses a flat fee or percentage-based advisory charge.
- Project-based advisor: one-time or hourly pricing for a defined retirement analysis.
- Ongoing wealth management: recurring subscription, commission, or asset-based pricing.
The cheapest option is not always the best, and the most expensive service is not automatically comprehensive. The correct comparison is total cost versus the decisions, planning, and accountability actually provided.
Which Retirement Cost Strategy Is Right for You?
Start with three retirement budgets
Instead of creating one estimate, build three. The essential budget covers housing, food, healthcare, taxes, transportation, and insurance. The comfortable budget adds travel, entertainment, gifts, and hobbies. The stress-test budget includes higher healthcare costs, home repairs, and weaker investment returns.
This structure shows which expenses can be reduced during difficult markets and which must be paid regardless of portfolio performance.
Convert future costs into monthly savings decisions
A projected shortfall should lead to a specific response. That response may involve raising contributions, retiring later, paying down expensive debt, reducing housing costs, changing the expected retirement lifestyle, or obtaining professional advice.
For example, a worker contributing 7% may schedule a one-percentage-point annual increase until reaching the rate supported by the retirement projection. Someone with high-interest debt may capture the employer match while directing additional cash toward repayment.
The objective is not to create a perfect forecast. It is to make current decisions consistent with a realistic range of future costs.
Review the plan after major life changes
Retirement estimates should be updated after marriage, divorce, childbirth, job changes, business sales, inheritances, home purchases, major illness, or relocation.
An annual review can update account balances, contribution limits, insurance premiums, tax assumptions, beneficiaries, and Social Security estimates. The plan should also be checked during major market declines—not to panic, but to confirm whether the household has sufficient cash and an appropriate risk level.
FAQ: How much does retirement really cost?
Retirement cost depends on housing, location, healthcare, taxes, debt, lifestyle, and retirement length. A useful estimate begins with expected annual spending and adds irregular expenses, inflation, and a margin for uncertainty.
FAQ: What retirement expense do men underestimate most?
Healthcare is frequently underestimated because Medicare does not remove all premiums, deductibles, coinsurance, prescription, dental, vision, or long-term support costs. Housing maintenance and taxes are also commonly omitted.
FAQ: Is 80% of pre-retirement income enough?
An income-replacement percentage is only a starting point. Someone with high debt or expensive travel plans may need more, while a debt-free household with modest spending may need less. A category-based budget is more reliable.
FAQ: Should a paid-off home be counted as retirement income?
A home contributes to net worth and may reduce monthly expenses, but it does not generate spendable income unless it is sold, rented, or used through an appropriate lending arrangement. Taxes, insurance, utilities, and repairs continue.
FAQ: When is a financial advisor worth the fee?
An advisor may be worth the fee when tax planning, withdrawal strategy, insurance analysis, estate coordination, or behavioral coaching provides value beyond the total cost. Compare several providers and request written pricing.
Conclusion: Estimate the Retirement You Will Fund, Not the One You Imagine
Many men underestimate retirement costs because they focus on a savings balance rather than the expenses that balance must support. The overlooked items—healthcare, taxes, inflation, housing repairs, family obligations, and fees—can quietly change the result.
A stronger plan uses realistic spending categories, several scenarios, current account information, and a clear funding strategy. It compares DIY tools, automated programs, and professional services without assuming that one option is right for everyone.
Retirement planning does not require predicting every future bill. It requires acknowledging uncertainty, maintaining flexibility, and reviewing the numbers before a shortfall becomes difficult to repair.