6 Smart Retirement Strategies When You’ve Oversaved

If you’re like most high achievers I work with, you probably spend way too much time comparing yourself to others. Maybe you’re scrolling through social media, seeing someone’s luxury vacation photos, or reading anonymous posts about retirement savings that make you question whether you’ve done enough. But what if I told you that many successful people face the opposite problem—they’ve actually saved too much for retirement?

The Gap and the Gain

This reminds me of a powerful concept I discovered in Dan Sullivan’s book “The Gap and the Gain.” Most of us live in “the gap.” We’re constantly measuring where we are against where we want to be in the future. We’re always chasing the next milestone, the next savings target, the next achievement. But there’s another way to think about your progress: measuring backwards from where you started.

When I think about my own business journey, I can either

  • Focus on how far we still need to go to reach our future goals
  • Celebrate many of the achievements that seemed impossible when we started in February 2021

The same principle applies to your retirement planning. Instead of worrying about whether you have “enough,” consider how far you’ve come from your starting point.

Many successful professionals find themselves overfunding their retirement accounts without realizing it. You’ve been disciplined savers for decades, making sacrifices and staying focused on your goals. The challenge with overfunding isn’t having too much money. It’s knowing how to optimize it for maximum impact during your lifetime and beyond.

What Does It Mean to Be Overfunded for Retirement?

Being overfunded for retirement means your financial plan shows you have significantly more resources than you need to maintain your desired lifestyle throughout retirement. In technical terms, this typically means having a Monte Carlo simulation success rate of 90% or higher.

What Is A Monte Carlo Simulation?

A Monte Carlo simulation runs 1,000 different hypothetical scenarios with varying market returns to stress-test your retirement plan. If you’re at 90%, that means in 900 out of 1,000 scenarios, you never need to make lifestyle adjustments. The remaining 100 scenarios represent extreme market conditions. For example, the “lost decade” from 2000 to 2010, when U.S. stocks were negative due to the dot-com crash and Great Recession.

Using Monte Carlo simulation results, many retirees and pre-retirees discover they have more capacity than expected. What’s particularly telling is looking at the median trial—scenario number 500—which shows your likely portfolio value at the end of your life. For overfunded retirees, this number is often two to three times their starting portfolio value, even after decades of spending on travel, gifts, and lifestyle expenses.

Here’s what this means in practical terms. If you have $2 million today, and your median ending portfolio value is $4-6 million, you’re leaving substantial wealth on the table during your lifetime. That money could be used to

  • Make memories with loved ones
  • Support family members
  • Make charitable impacts while you’re alive to see them

The reality is that $2 million today doesn’t feel as wealthy as it once did. Inflation has changed the purchasing power dramatically. In many parts of the country, a million dollars barely covers a starter home. But when your financial plan shows you’ll likely end with significantly more than you started with, despite living well, you have options that most retirees don’t.

Strategy 1: Retire Earlier Than You Initially Planned

The most obvious benefit of overfunding is the ability to retire earlier than you originally planned. I recently worked with a client in their 50s who assumed they needed to work until 62 to maximize their pension and start Social Security early. After running their numbers, we discovered they could retire today if they wanted to.

Now, I’m not suggesting you should retire just because you can financially. Retirement creates a lot of free time and mental space that needs to be filled with purpose. When you’re on the treadmill of working life, it’s difficult to step back and really think about what you want to do in your next chapter. Who do you want to spend time with? Where do you want to live? What kind of impact do you want to make?

But knowing you have the financial freedom to retire early opens up possibilities you might not have considered. Maybe you’ve always wanted to start that business venture, write a book, or serve on a nonprofit board. Perhaps you want to pursue a “second act” that’s more about passion than paycheck. When you’re focused on retirement planning over 50, overfunding becomes a real possibility that can fund these dreams.

Early retirement also allows you to gradually dial back your work commitments rather than stopping abruptly. You might

  • Reduce your hours
  • Take on consulting projects
  • Redirect the money you were saving for retirement toward other goals

The key is having a plan for what you’re retiring to, not just what you’re retiring from.

Strategy 2: Spend More Intentionally Without Guilt

You’ve earned the right to spend without guilt. After decades of disciplined saving and careful budgeting, it’s time to upgrade your experiences and lifestyle in meaningful ways.

This might mean flying first class instead of coach, especially on longer trips where comfort makes a real difference. Or staying longer at destinations—turning a week-long vacation into a month-long adventure. Many of my clients discover they can book nicer accommodations, take their entire family on trips, and create experiences they’ll remember forever.

The concept of “giving with a warm hand versus a cold one” also applies to experiences. Instead of just leaving money to your children and grandchildren, create memories together while you’re alive to enjoy them. Things like

  • Taking your family to Europe
  • Renting a house for everyone at the beach
  • Funding educational trips for grandchildren

These experiences often mean more than a future inheritance.

Intentional spending also includes services that free up your time for more important activities. Maybe you hire a housekeeper, landscaping service, or personal assistant. If you love golf but hate yard work, paying someone else to maintain your lawn gives you more time on the course. These services aren’t luxuries when they allow you to focus on what truly matters to you.

The psychological shift from “I can’t afford that” to “Is this worth it to me?” is profound. When your financial plan shows you have more than enough, spending decisions become about value and priorities rather than affordability.

Strategy 3: Take More Investment Risk for Greater Returns

What I’m about to say may seem counterintuitive. Having excess retirement funds actually gives you the capacity to take on more investment risk if you choose. When your Monte Carlo simulation shows you’ll be fine, even in market downturns lasting five or six years, you can potentially earn higher long-term returns.

Higher returns over 10, 15, or 20 years can significantly increase your ability to make an impact during your lifetime and leave a larger legacy. More money means more options for family gifts, charitable giving, and lifestyle enhancement.

This doesn’t mean being reckless with your investments. It means understanding that you have the financial capacity to weather market volatility because your spending needs are well-covered even in worst-case scenarios. You can potentially allocate more to growth investments and less to conservative bonds or cash.

The key is matching your risk capacity (what you can afford to lose) with your risk tolerance (what you’re comfortable losing). Being overfunded gives you more flexibility in this equation.

Strategy 4: Take Less Investment Risk and Sleep Better

On the flip side, being overfunded also gives you the option to reduce investment risk significantly. If you’ve been riding the market roller coaster for 30 years and you’re tired of the volatility, you’ve earned the right to step off.

This is the “if you’ve won the game, stop playing” approach. You can

  • Dial back your stock allocation
  • Increase bonds and cash
  • Focus on preserving what you’ve built rather than growing it aggressively

Sure, your returns might be lower. However, they’ll be more predictable, and you’ll still have more than enough to fund your lifestyle.

Many clients find this approach appealing as they get deeper into retirement. The peace of mind that comes from knowing your portfolio won’t drop 30% in a market crash can be worth more than the potential for higher returns.

Additionally, if you have guaranteed income from pensions or Social Security covering your basic expenses, you have even more flexibility with your investment portfolio.

Strategy 5: Gift More During Your Lifetime

The ability to make a meaningful impact on your family while you’re alive to see it is where overfunded retirement really shines. For 2025, you can gift up to $19,000 per year per recipient without filing any gift tax forms. For married couples, that’s $38,000 per recipient, and if you have multiple children and grandchildren, the numbers add up quickly.

But lifetime gifting isn’t just about the money—it’s about the conversations and lessons that come with it. When you give your adult children or grandchildren money, use it as an opportunity to teach them the financial principles that got you to where you are today. Explain

  1. Why you’re gifting the funds
  2. What you hope they’ll do with the money
  3. How you built the wealth you’re now sharing

These conversations help you understand what kind of stewards your beneficiaries will be with larger inheritances. If you gift money for a down payment but they spend it on luxury items instead, that tells you something important about their financial maturity and decision-making.

Charitable Giving

Charitable giving is another powerful option. If you’re over 70½, you can make qualified charitable distributions directly from your IRA up to $107,000 annually (in 2025) without paying taxes on the withdrawal. This is particularly valuable if you don’t need your required minimum distributions for living expenses but are forced to take them anyway.

Donor-Advised Funds

Donor-advised funds offer another flexible approach. You can bunch several years of charitable gifts into one tax year to

  1. Exceed the standard deduction threshold
  2. Get the immediate tax benefit
  3. Distribute the funds to charities over time

Strategy 6: Leave a Multi-Generational Impact

Some people prefer not to make their children’s lives “too easy” during their lifetime. It’s the belief that a healthy dose of struggle builds character. If this describes your philosophy, being overfunded gives you the opportunity to impact multiple generations with the wealth you’ve created.

Think about the power of compound growth over decades. A $2 million portfolio that grows to $8-10 million by the time you’re 90 could

  • Fund college educations for great-grandchildren not yet born
  • Start family businesses
  • Create charitable foundations that operate in perpetuity

If this is your plan, you need to be extremely thoughtful about the structure.

  1. How will the money be distributed?
  2. At what ages can beneficiaries access funds?
  3. What are the funds intended for?
  4. Should assets be held in trust with professional management?

More importantly, you need to have conversations with your family about how you built this wealth and what it represents. Share the story of your sacrifices, discipline, and decision-making. Help them understand that this money isn’t just a windfall—it’s the result of decades of intentional choices.

I think about my great-grandfather, who built a rice mill business in China and Burma. His multi-generational impact allowed my father to attend prestigious schools in India and eventually immigrate to the United States. That legacy shaped our entire family’s trajectory across multiple generations.

However, be aware of the tax implications of leaving large retirement accounts to the next generation. With the 10-year distribution rule for inherited IRAs, your beneficiaries may face substantial tax bills if they’re successful in their own careers. Strategic Roth conversions during your lifetime can help minimize this tax burden and preserve more wealth for your family.

Making the Most of Your Overfunded Retirement

If you find yourself being someone who has saved diligently and has more than enough for retirement, you have options that most people don’t. The key is shifting from a scarcity mindset to one of abundance and intentionality.

Remember the Gap and the Gain concept. Instead of constantly measuring yourself against others or future goals, take time to appreciate how far you’ve come. You’ve achieved something remarkable through decades of discipline and smart decisions.

You may choose to

  • Retire early
  • Spend more intentionally
  • Adjust your investment risk
  • Increase your gifting
  • Plan for multi-generational impact

The most important thing is making conscious choices about your wealth rather than letting it accumulate by default.

Your financial plan isn’t a one-time event. It’s an ongoing process that should evolve as your circumstances and priorities change. What feels right in your first year of retirement might be different after five or ten years of experiencing financial security.

The goal isn’t just to have enough money for retirement. The goal is to use your resources in ways that align with your values and create the kind of impact you want to make during your lifetime and beyond. When you’re overfunding retirement, you have the luxury of choice. Make sure you’re making those choices intentionally.

Ready to discover if you’re overfunded for retirement? A comprehensive financial plan can help you understand your true capacity and explore strategies to optimize your wealth for maximum impact during your lifetime.

How We Can Help

At Imagine Financial Security, we help individuals over 50 with at least a million dollars saved navigate these complex retirement decisions.

If you are looking to

  1. Maximize your retirement spending
  2. Minimize your lifetime tax bill
  3. Worry less about money

You can start with our Retirement Readiness Questionnaire linked on our website at www.imaginefinancialsecurity.com. Click the “Start Now” button to learn more about our process and how we might be able to help you achieve a more confident retirement.

Not quite ready to take the questionnaire, but want helpful tips and resources? Sign up for our monthly newsletter and/or subscribe to our YouTube channel.

This is for general education purposes only and should not be considered as tax, legal or investment advice.




Kevin Lao

I am the owner and lead financial planner @ IFS. We are an independent firm specializing in retirement planning. I also host The Planning for Retirement Podcast and can be found on YouTube, Spotify, Apple Podcasts and other streaming services. I live in Chattanooga, TN with my wife, three boys and two rescue pups. I love to travel, play golf and smoke (and eat) meats.