Give Thanks, Then Revisit Your Retirement Plan

Thanksgiving is a season of gratitude — a moment to slow down, reflect, and appreciate the people, routines, and comforts that make life meaningful. For many retirees, it’s also a natural time to pause and think about the big picture: Is my retirement plan still supporting the life I want?

After the holiday table clears and the leftovers are packed away, a quiet post-Thanksgiving review can help you enter the new year with confidence and clarity. You don’t need spreadsheets, complicated formulas, or major financial overhauls. You simply need a calm, thoughtful look at where things stand and what small adjustments might strengthen your retirement in the months ahead.

This article will guide you through how to revisit your retirement plan in a simple, reassuring way — grounded in gratitude, reflection, and the practical steps every retiree can take, regardless of where they live or how much they have saved.

Why Thanksgiving Is the Perfect Time for a Retirement Review

Most retirees find Thanksgiving to be the most meaningful and grounding time of the year. You’re surrounded by family traditions, familiar routines, and deeper appreciation for what matters most.

Those feelings — gratitude, peace, clarity — provide the perfect mindset for reflection.

A Thanksgiving retirement review helps you:

  • Appreciate what’s working
  • Identify what might need updating
  • Prepare for next year’s expenses or goals
  • Reduce stress heading into the holidays
  • Strengthen your financial confidence

Unlike tax deadlines or market events, this review is gentle, personal, and on your terms.

Step 1: Start With Gratitude — What’s Working Well?

Gratitude is more than a feeling. It’s a tool.
Before looking at numbers, ask yourself:

  • What parts of my retirement feel stable and comforting?
  • What financial decisions from the past few years do I feel proud of?
  • What routines, habits, or expenses bring me genuine joy?
  • What relationships or support systems make my life richer?

This mindset reduces anxiety and helps you approach financial decisions with a clear, grounded perspective — not fear or urgency.

Gratitude is the foundation of a confident retirement review.

Step 2: Review Your Income — Is It Still Supporting Your Lifestyle?

Your income sources may include:

  • Social Security
  • Pension income
  • Withdrawals from retirement savings
  • Part-time income
  • Rental income
  • Predictable lifetime income sources (general concept only)

Ask yourself:

  • Are these income sources stable?
  • Did anything change this year?
  • Are withdrawals still comfortable?
  • Has your cost of living increased depending on where you live?

Costs vary significantly by state — groceries, utilities, insurance, property taxes, and healthcare can look completely different depending on location. Checking in once a year ensures your plan stays aligned.

Q: Should retirees adjust income annually?

A: Many choose to review income once per year to ensure it still matches lifestyle goals, spending levels, and local cost changes.

Step 3: Check Your Spending — What Changed This Year?

Thanksgiving is the perfect point in the calendar to pause and look back.

Consider:

  • Did your travel habits change?
  • Did medical or insurance costs rise?
  • Did you spend more on hobbies or grandchildren?
  • Did you downsize or pay something off?

Spending isn’t “good” or “bad” — it simply needs to be understood and intentional.

Group spending into three categories:

  1. Essentials — housing, food, utilities, medical
  2. Lifestyle — travel, entertainment, restaurants
  3. Future planning — gifts, home repairs, big purchases

This helps you see where adjustments may help, without restricting your lifestyle.

Step 4: Review Savings Withdrawals — Are They Still Sustainable?

One of the biggest retirement challenges is making sure your savings last.

A once-a-year Thanksgiving review helps you see:

  • Did you withdraw more than expected this year?
  • Did markets affect your account values?
  • Do you need to adjust optional spending?
  • Are you withdrawing comfortably and confidently?

Q: Should retirees lower withdrawals when the market dips?

A: Some choose to reduce optional spending temporarily. What’s important is maintaining stability without panic.

Step 5: Reflect on Major Life Changes

Life events impact retirement more than market headlines.

Evaluate whether anything changed this year in:

  • Health
  • Family needs
  • Housing
  • Mobility
  • Goals
  • Travel plans
  • Social support

Even small shifts can influence spending, priorities, and overall resilience.

Q: What if my expenses increased this year?

A: That’s normal. Many retirees experience fluctuations. The purpose of this review is simply awareness and small adjustments if needed.

Step 6: Plan Ahead for the Coming Year

After Thanksgiving, you still have a few weeks left to prepare for the next year.

Consider:

  • Will healthcare costs change?
  • Do you expect any major home repairs?
  • Are you planning big trips?
  • Do you need to update beneficiaries or legal documents?
  • Are you considering part-time work or reducing expenses?

You don’t need to predict every detail — just anticipate the areas that matter most to your lifestyle.

Step 7: Revisit Your Emergency Fund

Unexpected expenses are part of retirement.

A strong emergency fund helps you:

  • Avoid withdrawing during market downturns
  • Handle medical or home expenses
  • Reduce anxiety about “what-ifs”

Many retirees feel secure with 6–12 months of essential expenses, but the right number for you depends on local living costs and personal comfort.

Q&A: Fast Answers to Common Questions

Q: How often should retirees review their plan?

A: Once a year is a healthy rhythm — and Thanksgiving is a natural time to do it.

Q: What if my retirement plan feels off track?

A: Small adjustments often make a big difference. Awareness is the first step.

Q: Do costs vary widely depending on where I live?

A: Yes. Housing, medical care, insurance, and taxes vary by state and city. This is why annual reflection is important.

🐾 Tootsie’s Takeaway

Just like Thanksgiving leftovers, your retirement plan needs a good check-in once a year. Keep what works, adjust what doesn’t, and enjoy the peace of knowing you’re prepared.

Written by Brent Meyer, founder of SafeMoney.com. With more than 20 years of experience helping families navigate retirement and legacy planning, Brent is committed to making financial education simple, clear, and trustworthy.

Disclaimer: SafeMoney.com provides financial education only. For guidance on your specific situation, consult a licensed professional.

The post Give Thanks, Then Revisit Your Retirement Plan first appeared on SafeMoney.com.

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