Pre-Retirees Less Confident Their Retirement Income Will Last to Age 90

Confidence among pre-retirees that they will receive enough income from all their accumulated retirement sources to cover basic living expenses throughout retirement has dropped in four of the last five years.  

In a new research article, LIMRA raised concerns about the ability of future retirees to cover their basic living expenses in retirement if they cannot secure more sources for lifetime-guaranteed income.

Pre-retirees—workers within 10 years of their of anticipated retirement dates—are less likely than retirees to say they will be able to cover basic living expenses in retirement with lifetime-guaranteed income sources, LIMRA Secure Retirement Institute research shows.

“[The pre-retiree cohort] will need to figure out proactively how to create sustainable income, with a higher likelihood of failure than what their parents are facing,” says Matt Drinkwater, corporate vice president of annuity and retirement income research at LIMRA, via email.

LIMRA data showed 70% of retiree respondents said between Social Security, traditional pensions and annuities, they expect to have sufficient lifetime-guaranteed income to cover all their basic living expenses. Workers without a traditional defined benefit pension will have to patch together their sources for guaranteed income in retirement, adds Drinkwater.

«