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How to Read Your Year-by-Year Financial Plan Table (Complete Guide)
Behind your summary charts and Retirement Score sits the most powerful diagnostic tool in your financial plan: the Year-by-Year Financial Plan Table.
This table converts your Monte Carlo simulation’s median outcome (most likely scenario) into a detailed annual breakdown of your projected finances — from today through your projected life expectancy.
Understanding this table allows you to:
Verify retirement readiness
Adjust savings or withdrawals
Reduce sequence of returns risk
Improve tax efficiency
Increase your Retirement Score
What Is the Year-by-Year Financial Plan Table?
The Year-by-Year Financial Plan Table is a detailed annual ledger showing your projected:
Net worth
Income
Contributions or withdrawals
Taxes
Age and calendar year
It translates complex probability simulations into a clear, actionable financial roadmap.
Purpose of the Year-by-Year Table
The table provides transparency into your financial future by showing:
How your portfolio grows during working years
How it declines (strategically) during retirement
Whether income sources properly replace employment income
If your plan lasts through life expectancy
Think of it as the engine room behind your Retirement Score.
Key Columns Explained
1. Age / Year
Definition: Your age and corresponding calendar year.
What to look for:
Identify your retirement year
Confirm projected life expectancy
Track major milestones (Social Security start, pension start)
2. Projected Net Worth
Definition: Estimated total portfolio balance at the end of each year (median outcome).
What to look for:
Steady growth during working years
Controlled, gradual decline in retirement
Positive balance at life expectancy
⚠️ A sharp early drop after retirement may signal excessive withdrawal rates.
3. Total Annual Income
Definition:
Pre-retirement: wages + investment income
Post-retirement: withdrawals + Social Security + pension
What to look for:
Income meets your desired spending goal
Income jump when Social Security begins
Reduced portfolio withdrawals once guaranteed income starts
4. Annual Contribution / Withdrawal
Definition:
Pre-retirement: annual savings
Post-retirement: annual portfolio withdrawals
What to look for:
Contributions align with your real savings habits
Withdrawal rate remains sustainable (typically 3–5%)
High withdrawals early in retirement increase Sequence of Returns Risk.
5. Cumulative Tax
Definition: Estimated taxes paid annually.
What to look for:
Tax spikes after retirement
Required Minimum Distribution years
Opportunity for Roth conversions
Tax-loss harvesting opportunities
Strategic tax planning can significantly improve retirement longevity.
How to Use the Table for Financial Diagnostics
1. Check Your Retirement Drawdown Rate
Immediately after retirement:
Is net worth dropping sharply?
Are withdrawals too high relative to portfolio size?
If yes, consider:
Delaying retirement
Reducing spending
Increasing savings
Adjusting asset allocation
2. Verify Social Security Integration
When Social Security begins:
Total Annual Income should increase
Annual Withdrawal should decrease
This confirms your portfolio is properly supplementing guaranteed income.
3. Confirm Plan Longevity
Scroll to your projected life expectancy.
Your Projected Net Worth should:
Remain positive
Not hit zero prematurely
A small positive ending balance indicates a successful plan.
Why This Table Matters for Retirement Success
The Year-by-Year Financial Plan Table:
Validates your Retirement Score
Identifies risk before it becomes a problem
Helps optimize tax strategies
Improves withdrawal efficiency
Provides clarity for financial decision-making
It is your most powerful retirement planning tool.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is a Year-by-Year Financial Plan Table?
It is a detailed annual projection of your net worth, income, contributions, withdrawals, and taxes based on the median result of a Monte Carlo simulation.
Why does net worth drop after retirement?
Because you begin withdrawing from your portfolio to fund living expenses. A gradual decline is normal; a sharp drop may signal unsustainable withdrawals.
What is a safe withdrawal rate?
Most financial planners suggest 3%–5% annually, depending on market conditions and risk tolerance.
What does a positive ending balance mean?
It means your retirement plan is projected to last through your life expectancy.
The Year-by-Year Financial Plan Table is a detailed retirement projection showing your annual net worth, income, contributions, withdrawals, and taxes. It translates Monte Carlo simulation results into a clear yearly breakdown, helping you diagnose withdrawal risks, optimize taxes, verify Social Security integration, and ensure your portfolio lasts through life expectancy.

