So you’re an executive nearing retirement. Now what?

So you’re an executive nearing retirement. Now what?

So you’re an executive nearing retirement. Now what?

Listen and subscribe to Decoding Retirement on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, or wherever you find your favorite podcasts.

After decades of being defined by high-powered roles, influence, and constant decision making, the transition to life after work for corporate executives can feel disorienting.

“That can be a tremendous shift for individuals, especially with the audiences they can command and the importance they’ve had from their roles,” said Amy Permenter, head of corporate executive planning at the Planning Center of Excellence within Bank of America Private Bank.

Executives can prepare themselves by getting a handle on their assets and benefits, as well as how they want to spend their retirement, Permenter said. Those who once enjoyed company-paid travel, fine dining, and generous perks may need to recalibrate spending expectations, taking into account not only personal spending but also ongoing family support.

In a new episode of Decoding Retirement, Permenter explained the essential steps for retirement planning, whether you’re a CEO, department head, or anyone else transitioning from your working years.

If you’re a corporate executive five to 10 years from retirement, the single most important step for you to take is a deep, document-level audit of your employer benefits.

Don’t settle for a skim, Permenter urged. Plan with the actual terms.

That means thoroughly reviewing plan documents and equity award agreements, mapping vesting and forfeiture rules, confirming retirement-eligibility triggers, and looking for special provisions, such as subsidized retiree healthcare, that could materially affect your plan.

“Like most retirees, the company benefits are going to play a significant role in an individual’s retirement,” Permenter said. “But with executives, it tends to be a little bit more poignant because the dollar amount can be larger and there can be more at risk and more that could be subject to risk of forfeiture.”

Read more: How much do you really need to save for retirement?

Deferred compensation, an arrangement that allows employees to postpone receiving a portion of their salary until a future date, is one benefit that requires strategic planning, not a “set it and forget it” approach, Permenter said.

Executives, she said, should review their distribution elections, consider state tax implications, and integrate deferred compensation into their broader retirement strategy — especially as circumstances, tax laws, or residency plans change.

“It’s a great tool for deferring taxes, but sometimes people approach that without a real strategy in place for how that’s going to complement their overall retirement plan,” Permenter said.

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