Written for US workers without employer pensions.
Most retirement advice was written for people with pensions. If you don't have one, the standard rules -- save a million dollars, replace 80% of your income -- were built for someone else's life.
The starting point here is where most people land: a 401k they may or may not be maximizing, a Social Security estimate they've never looked at closely, and a vague sense that the math might not be working in their favor. The real calculation isn't a shortcut. It comes from your spending, your accounts, your timeline, and your zip code.
Every account type available to self-funded retirees gets full treatment: 401k, 403b, and 457 plans; Traditional and Roth IRAs including backdoor strategies; the HSA used as a long-term retirement vehicle rather than just a medical spending account; and taxable brokerage accounts for anyone planning to retire before 59.5. Fee minimization, asset allocation, and the tax drag that quietly reduces returns for people who never think about it all get their own chapters.
The Social Security section goes deeper than most. It covers how benefits are calculated from the ground up, the full range of claiming strategies for singles and married couples, spousal and survivor benefit coordination, divorced spouse rules, and what reduced benefits would mean for plans built around current projections.
Healthcare gets the attention it deserves. For anyone retiring before 65, the ACA marketplace chapter covers subsidy structures, income management to preserve eligibility, and the real cost of coverage by age and location. The Medicare section covers Parts A through D, Medigap versus Medicare Advantage trade-offs, IRMAA surcharges and how to avoid triggering them, and what total healthcare costs realistically look like decade by decade.
Later chapters cover withdrawal sequencing: which accounts to tap first and why the order matters for taxes, subsidies, and how long the money lasts. Geographic arbitrage examines how location choice affects required savings by hundreds of thousands of dollars. Part-time work in retirement, estate planning, long-term care, and the financial impact of marriage, divorce, and remarriage each get dedicated treatment.
The final chapter covers what happens when plans fail -- forced early retirement, portfolio depletion, medical costs that exceed projections -- and what recovery options and safety nets exist for people whose retirement isn't going according to plan.
For anyone building retirement without an employer safety net, here is the treatment the problem deserves.
Approximately 68.000 words