Why the First Five Years of Retirement Matter More Than the Last Twenty

For many Oil & Gas professionals, retirement isn’t a sudden stop, it’s a long-planned transition after decades of demanding work, high income, and significant responsibility. Most people focus on how much they’ve saved. Far fewer focus on how those savings will be used once the paycheck stops.

In reality, the first five years of retirement often have a greater impact on long-term financial success than the decades that follow.

Here’s why.

The Early Years Set the Trajectory

Retirement isn’t static. What happens early on — market conditions, spending habits, tax decisions, can permanently shape outcomes.

During the first few years, retirees are:

  • Transitioning from earned income to portfolio income

  • Establishing new spending patterns

  • Making irreversible decisions around withdrawals, taxes, and investment allocation

Mistakes made early are harder to correct later.

Sequence of Returns Risk Is Highest at the Beginning

One of the most underappreciated risks in retirement is sequence of returns risk, the impact of when market returns occur.

Negative or volatile markets early in retirement, combined with withdrawals, can permanently reduce portfolio longevity — even if long-term average returns eventually recover.

This matters especially for:

  • Early retirees

  • Professionals with concentrated assets

  • Those relying heavily on portfolios for income

Strong returns later can’t always undo early damage.

Spending Patterns Get Locked in Early

The first few years often establish a retiree’s “normal” lifestyle:

  • Travel

  • Helping family

  • Second homes

  • New hobbies and freedom-driven spending

Without a clear framework, spending can drift higher than intended — not out of excess, but optimism.

Once lifestyle expectations are set, pulling back becomes psychologically difficult.

Tax Decisions Compound Quickly

Early retirement often presents a unique tax window:

This can create opportunities, but only if planned intentionally.

Without coordination:

  • Withdrawals may come from the wrong accounts

  • Future tax brackets can unintentionally increase

  • Flexibility later in retirement may shrink

Taxes don’t usually hurt all at once, they compound quietly.

Early Retirement Often Means a Longer Retirement

Many Oil & Gas professionals retire earlier than the general population. That’s a great achievement, but it introduces additional planning complexity.

A retirement that lasts 30–35 years requires:

  • Sustainable withdrawal strategies

  • Thoughtful risk management

  • A long-term mindset, not short-term reactions

Early decisions influence whether retirement feels confident or uncertain years down the road.

Planning Is About Structure, Not Prediction

The goal isn’t to predict markets or eliminate uncertainty. It’s to build structure:

  • Clear income sources
  • Purposeful withdrawal sequencing
  • Portfolio alignment with real-world cash needs
  • Flexibility to adjust as life changes

When early retirement years are planned thoughtfully, the later years often take care of themselves.

If you’re approaching retirement and want a second perspective on how your income, investments, and taxes work together in those early years, we’re happy to offer a brief introductory conversation to see if we could be a helpful resource.

Saxon Financial Group (“Saxon Financial”) is a registered investment advisor. Advisory services are only offered to clients or prospective clients where Saxon Financial and its representatives are properly licensed or exempt from licensure. The information provided is for educational and informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice and it should not be relied on as such. It should not be considered a solicitation to buy or an offer to sell a security. It does not take into account any investor’s particular investment objectives, strategies, tax status or investment horizon. You should consult your attorney or tax advisor. This information is general in nature and should not be considered tax advice. Investors should consult with a qualified tax consultant as to their particular situation. All information has been obtained from sources believed to be reliable, but its accuracy is not guaranteed.  There is no representation or warranty as to the current accuracy, reliability or completeness of, nor liability for, decisions based on such information and it should not be relied on as such.

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