General information, not financial, legal, or medical advice. Rules and dollar amounts change; confirm details with the official source or a professional who knows your situation.

A retirement income map is a dated household view of what may come in, what must go out, and which choices can still change. It is not a promise that markets, inflation, health, or family needs will follow a forecast.

Build the map before choosing withdrawals or accepting a pension option. The purpose is to expose timing gaps, tax questions, survivor changes, and assumptions that deserve confirmation.

Put every income stream on a timeline#

List income by owner and by start date: Social Security, pensions, annuities, wages, rental income, and planned account withdrawals. Use official statements and plan documents, not a remembered estimate, and record whether each amount is gross or net of withholding.

For every stream, note what can change. Ask whether it adjusts for inflation, ends at death, continues for a survivor, depends on work, or can be changed after the first election. Keep household benefits separate so a surviving partner's future income is visible rather than hidden in today's total 23.

  • Amount and date. Record the monthly or annual amount, expected first payment, and source document date.
  • Reliability. Distinguish contractual or program income from rent, work, dividends, and withdrawals that may vary.
  • Survivor effect. Write what happens to each payment after either household member dies.

Sources for this section: [2] [3]

Separate ordinary spending from irregular demands#

Review at least a full year of statements when possible. Monthly averages can hide property tax, insurance, travel, gifts, vehicle work, home repairs, and health expenses that arrive only once or twice a year. Give those costs their own annual line instead of pretending they are surprises.

Group spending by how adjustable it is, not by whether it feels worthy. Housing, food, utilities, insurance, taxes, minimum debt payments, and essential care are different from travel or discretionary giving. Then name reserves for emergencies, near-term repairs, and costs that could rise if health or caregiving needs change.

  • Core monthly costs. Use real statements and include premiums, copays, taxes, and debt obligations.
  • Irregular annual costs. Convert infrequent bills into an annual total and a monthly set-aside.
  • Contingencies. Name the event each reserve is meant to cover rather than using one unexplained cushion.

Test timing, taxes, and difficult years together#

Withdrawals can affect taxable income, Medicare costs, account longevity, and the amount left for a survivor. Pension and Social Security elections can be difficult or impossible to reverse. Test the combined household result before treating any one decision as a stand-alone choice.

Use more than one scenario: an ordinary year, a sustained inflation period, a market decline early in retirement, a major home or care expense, and the death of either partner. A qualified, appropriately licensed professional can help model tax and investment consequences, but the underlying plan statements and agency records still need to be verified directly 241.

  • Tax view. Estimate taxable income and withholding with current federal and state rules before moving money.
  • Sequence view. Compare which accounts would fund each phase without assuming one withdrawal order fits everyone.
  • Stress view. Write what would change first if income falls or a large expense arrives.

Caution: A map is not an instruction to trade. Do not sell investments, start benefits, elect a pension, buy an annuity, or make a large taxable withdrawal solely because a simple worksheet shows a gap. Verify plan terms and model the household consequences first.

Sources for this section: [1] [2] [4]

Show the bridge, later phases, and decision deadlines#

A single annual total can hide the years when the plan is most exposed. Divide the map into phases that match real changes: the period between work and Social Security, the period before and after Medicare eligibility, the start of a pension or annuity, the beginning of required withdrawals, a mortgage payoff, and the household after either partner dies. Use the actual dates that apply rather than assuming every change happens on January 1.

For the bridge out of work, list which benefits end with employment, when final pay and unused leave arrive, how health coverage will continue, and which account is expected to fund each month before recurring income begins. Keep a separate cash-flow line for one-time transition costs such as insurance deductibles, a move, home work, or taxes on a final bonus. The retirement planning guide can help place benefit, insurance, and account decisions on one timeline.

For later phases, note which values are estimates and which are elected. Social Security statements, pension illustrations, and annuity quotes can change until a choice is completed. Required minimum distributions depend on account type, birth date, prior-year balance, and current rules; calculate them with the custodian or a qualified adviser rather than placing one permanent amount in the map. Link each figure to the document and date used so it can be refreshed.

Build the survivor phase as its own household, not a percentage reduction in spending. Some income may end, Social Security household benefits can change, a pension survivor option may continue at a different amount, taxes may be filed under a different status, and housing or care needs may shift. Identify which person understands each account and where current beneficiary and survivor elections are stored.

Add decision deadlines beside the cash flow. Examples include an insurance enrollment window, pension election, tax estimate, required distribution, maturing certificate, or review of a temporary withdrawal. A deadline belongs on the map even when the amount is not yet known, because missing the decision can matter more than refining a forecast.

  • Bridge phase. Map the months between the last paycheck and each recurring income source.
  • Later phase. Refresh required withdrawals, health costs, taxes, and care assumptions under current rules.
  • Survivor phase. Rebuild income, taxes, benefits, and spending for each possible survivor.

Build your first income map#

Date every figure and keep sensitive account numbers out of a shared worksheet.

  • Collect current benefit and pension estimates. Include the statement date and available survivor options.
  • List every account by type and owner. A masked name is enough; do not include passwords or full account numbers.
  • Review twelve months of spending. Mark irregular and annual costs separately.
  • Build ordinary, difficult, and survivor scenarios. State which assumptions change in each one.
  • Create a question list. Assign each question to the agency, plan administrator, tax professional, or adviser responsible for answering it.
  • Choose a review date. Update after a benefit election, move, death, diagnosis, or major market or tax change.

Key takeaways

  • Map every income source and its timing.
  • Separate regular spending from irregular shocks.
  • Tax and withdrawal sequencing deserve qualified advice.

References

Start with the original source whenever a deadline, amount, eligibility rule, or legal requirement matters.

  1. Retiring from a Job Publications - U.S. Department of Labor, Employee Benefits Security Administration
  2. Planning for Retirement - Consumer Financial Protection Bureau
  3. Get a Benefits Estimate - Social Security Administration
  4. Retirement Topics - Internal Revenue Service

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Editorial record

Who prepared this guide

Author
RetiredWiki Editorial Team
Status
Editorially checked; no independent professional review claimed
Review scope
Editorially checked against the listed federal retirement-planning, Social Security, labor, and tax sources. This is an organizing guide, not an individualized income, investment, or tax analysis; no independent professional review is claimed.
Sources reviewed
July 17, 2026
Next source review
October 11, 2026

Revision history

  1. : Expanded the guide into a complete income-mapping workflow and added article-specific federal sources.
  2. : Added an at-a-glance summary and a phased map for the retirement bridge, later required withdrawals, health costs, and survivor changes.
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Cite this guide

RetiredWiki. (2026, July 17). Make a retirement income map before making withdrawals. https://retiredwiki.com/article/retirement-income-map

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