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Safe Withdrawal Rate

jJ_Chub·Updated Feb 2026

Definition

The safe withdrawal rate (SWR) is the percentage of initial portfolio value that can be withdrawn annually (adjusted for inflation) while maintaining a target probability of portfolio survival over a specified time horizon.

SWR = (Annual_Withdrawal / Initial_Portfolio) × 100

Monte Carlo Context: Traditional SWR analysis uses historical backtesting. Chubby runs 100 forward-looking Monte Carlo paths with GARCH(1,1) volatility to generate probability distributions of outcomes.

Historical Analysis: Trinity Study

The "4% rule" originates from the 1998 Trinity Study, which backtested withdrawal rates against 1926-1995 US market data. A crucial but often missed insight: 4% is not the average safe rate — it's the historical worst case. In most historical periods, retirees could have safely withdrawn 5-6%.

The Dying Rich Problem: In the Trinity Study's 95% success scenarios, the median retiree died with more money than they started with. Extreme conservatism often means a worse life, not a safer one. The "safe" rate optimizes for avoiding the worst case, not for expected outcomes.

Historical success rates by withdrawal rate:

Success Rate by Withdrawal Rate (30-Year Horizon, 60/40 Portfolio)
Withdrawal Rate Historical Success Portfolio Multiple Required Savings
3.0% ~100% 33.3× spending × 33.3
3.5% ~98% 28.6× spending × 28.6
4.0% ~95% 25.0× spending × 25.0
4.5% ~85% 22.2× spending × 22.2
5.0% ~75% 20.0× spending × 20.0

Limitations of Static Analysis

Data Constraints: Historical backtesting is limited to observed market conditions. The 4% rule was calibrated on US equity performance during America's economic expansion period (1926-1995).

CAPE Reality Check: When CAPE (Shiller P/E) exceeds 30, historical 10-year real returns average ~2-3% annually — far below the 7% assumed in most planning. Starting retirement at high valuations means either accepting lower SWR or building in more flexibility.

Portfolio Allocation Impact

SWR varies non-linearly with stock/bond allocation. The relationship is counterintuitive: more stocks historically supported higher withdrawal rates, up to a point.

Historical SWR by Allocation (30-Year, 95% Success)
Allocation Max SWR Why
100% Bonds ~2.5% Insufficient growth to outpace inflation + withdrawals
25/75 Stocks/Bonds ~3.5% Slightly better growth, still inflation-vulnerable
50/50 ~4.0% Balanced growth and stability
75/25 ~4.2% Historical sweet spot — growth compensates for volatility
100% Stocks ~3.8% Higher returns but sequence risk drag in bad starts

The Paradox: 100% stocks has the highest expected return but *not* the highest safe withdrawal rate. Why? Sequence of returns risk. A 50% crash in year 1 forces you to sell twice as many shares to meet withdrawals — and those shares never recover. The bond allocation acts as a buffer to sell from during equity drawdowns.

The practical insight: somewhere between 50/50 and 75/25 historically maximized sustainable withdrawals. Going more conservative than 50/50 *reduced* safety because the portfolio couldn't grow fast enough. Going more aggressive than 75/25 *also* reduced safety due to sequence risk.

Time Horizon Adjustments

Longer time horizons require lower withdrawal rates to maintain equivalent success probabilities:

30-Year Horizon
4.0%
40-Year Horizon
3.5%
50-Year Horizon
3.25%
Perpetual
~3.0%

Dynamic Withdrawal Strategies

Variable withdrawal rules can increase success rates or sustainable withdrawal amounts:

Flexibility Premium: Willingness to reduce spending by 10-20% during downturns can increase sustainable withdrawal rate by 0.5-1.0 percentage points.

Try It

I'm 50 with $2M, want to retire now. What withdrawal rate gives 90% success over 40 years?