Money Moves in Your 70s

Income Stability, Longevity Defense, and Legacy Moves

Your 70s are not the end of the road — they’re the start of your financial finish line strategy.

This decade isn’t about building wealth. It’s about keeping what you’ve built, stretching it wisely, and passing it on with purpose. At this stage, your focus shifts to reliability: reliable income, reliable health care, and reliable decisions that protect you and your family.

You’ve entered Required Minimum Distribution (RMD) territory. Medicare is active. Social Security is rolling. Now it’s about optimizing — not guessing.


Required Minimum Distributions (RMDs): Like It or Not, They’re Here

At 73, Uncle Sam knocks. You’re required to start pulling from your pre-tax retirement accounts — whether you need the money or not. The penalty for not taking an RMD? A steep 25% hit on the amount you should’ve withdrawn.

Result: RMDs can bump you into a higher tax bracket and trigger Medicare surcharges. Pre-retirement Roth conversions would’ve helped — but now it’s about managing what’s already in motion.


Reliable Income Streams: Shift to Consistency

In your 70s, chasing high returns becomes less important than securing predictable cash flow.

Outcome: This approach reduces portfolio stress and lets you keep equity risk where you can afford it — not where you depend on it.


Healthcare Planning: Avoid the Landmines

Even with Medicare, out-of-pocket costs average $6,000–$8,000 per year — and long-term care isn’t covered.


Estate and Legacy: Don’t Just Leave Money — Leave Clarity

The default plan is probate, taxes, and family drama. Yours shouldn’t be.

Legacy isn’t about death — it’s about dignity. Planning this well shows you cared enough to make the hard things easier for your people.


Portfolio Tune-Up: You’re Not Out of the Market — But You’re Not Playing Offense

In your 70s, asset allocation becomes a tightrope. Too conservative and you lose to inflation. Too aggressive and you panic-sell.

Sample Allocation (Moderate 70s Strategy):

45% Bonds / CDs  |  35% Stocks (blue chip, dividend)  |  10% Cash  |  10% Alternatives (REITs, annuities)

Chart: How RMDs Impact Your Taxable Income Over Time

RMD impact chart

Chart Insight: The line spikes in your early 70s. That’s RMDs inflating your income — and possibly your taxes and Medicare premiums. The time to manage RMDs is before they start — but you can still offset the effects with gifting, QCDs, and smart withdrawals.


Final Word: Your 70s are Your Financial Endgame — Make Every Move Count

This isn’t about obsessing over every dollar. It’s about making intentional, legacy-worthy decisions:

You climbed the mountain. Now you’re descending with wisdom, clarity, and control. Done right, your 70s can be the most liberated financial decade of all.

Your 70s: Less chasing. More choosing.