Here's Exactly How Social Security Fits Into My Retirement Plans


I’ve spent years planning for retirement. Even when my husband and I were broke college students, I spent an inordinate amount of time considering how to make eventual retirement work. Although planning for retirement began as a college project, the habit stuck with me. And even though I’ve known for years that I don’t want to retire, I want my husband to be able to when the time comes.

The primary thing I’ve focused on is “money in, money out.” In other words, how much I expect we’ll have coming in each month and how much we’ll be able to spend without cutting ourselves short.

Two people walk in the woods.
Image source: Getty Images.

If my husband were to retire tomorrow, we’d have four sources of income: Social Security, a modest pension, withdrawals from two retirement accounts, and my income. Here’s how the non-Social Security income sources are earmarked:

  • Pension: This is money that’s currently being put away for minor home and auto repairs. It’s not much, but could come in very handy in a pinch.

  • My income: As much as I love my job and want to continue working, the decision may not be up to me. Whether artificial intelligence takes over or a health issue rears its ugly head, I know I can’t control the variables. For those reasons, I don’t count on my income when planning for retirement.

  • Retirement accounts: In a move that would shock my college-age self, we’re going into retirement with a mortgage. I remember being sure we would have our mortgage paid off years before hitting retirement age, but a brain tumor, career opportunities, and 24 moves led to a change in plans. Due to the way I plan to spend Social Security, a mortgage is not going to fit into the budget. For that reason, I plan to use a portion of our required minimum distributions (RMDs) to make our monthly mortgage payments. I may also use money from our retirement accounts to recast our mortgage periodically, lowering the monthly payment without changing our current interest rate.

I can’t remember a time when some corner of Congress wasn’t talking about cutting Social Security benefits. Today, because I plan to pay the entirety of our monthly bills (minus a mortgage) using Social Security benefits, I’m doing two things:



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