Your golden years are your best years! Make them shine!

  • Home
  • Personal Finance
  • Retirement Life
  • Saving & Spending

The Ultimate Pre-Retirement Checklist: Everything to Do in the 5 Years Before You Retire

August 25, 2025 · Personal Finance

Photo-realistic, senior-friendly scene that visually introduces the section titled '4 Years Out: Master Your Debt and Savings'.

4 Years Out: Master Your Debt and Savings

With a clear vision in mind, your fourth year before retirement is about strengthening your financial foundation. This means attacking high-interest debt with intensity and taking full advantage of your final high-earning years to boost your savings.

Eliminate High-Interest Debt

Entering retirement with high-interest debt, like credit card balances, is like trying to run a race with weights tied to your ankles. The interest payments drain your cash flow and eat into the income you need for living expenses. Make a plan to pay off these debts completely before you stop working.

Focus on the debt with the highest Annual Percentage Rate (APR) first. The APR is the total cost of borrowing money, expressed as a yearly percentage. A credit card with a 22% APR is a financial emergency. Pay the minimum on all your debts, but throw every extra dollar you can find at the one with the highest interest rate. Once it’s paid off, roll that entire payment amount over to the next-highest-rate debt. This is called the “avalanche method,” and it’s the fastest way to become debt-free.

The Mortgage Dilemma

What about your mortgage? This is a more complex question. Many people feel a deep sense of security from owning their home free and clear. Paying off your mortgage eliminates a large fixed expense, which can dramatically lower the amount of income you need each month. This is a huge psychological and financial win.

However, there’s another side. If you have a low, fixed-rate mortgage (perhaps from refinancing years ago), the interest rate might be lower than the potential long-term returns you could earn by keeping that money invested. It’s a trade-off between the guaranteed return of paying off a loan versus the potential, but not guaranteed, return from the market. There’s no single right answer; it depends on your comfort level with risk and your overall financial picture.

Supercharge Your Savings

Your last few years of work are likely your peak earning years. This is your final opportunity to make a big impact on your retirement accounts. If you’re 50 or older, you can make “catch-up contributions” to your 401(k) and Individual Retirement Accounts (IRAs). These are additional amounts you can contribute above the standard annual limits.

Check the current year limits on the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) website. For example, in a given year, the regular 401(k) contribution limit might be $23,000, but the catch-up contribution could be an extra $7,500, for a total of $30,500. Do everything you can to max out these contributions. This not only boosts your savings but can also lower your taxable income today if you’re contributing to a traditional (pre-tax) account.

Review Your Investment Risk

As you get closer to needing your money, it’s wise to review how it’s invested. You may want to gradually shift to a more conservative allocation, with a bit less in stocks and more in bonds or cash equivalents. This helps protect you from sequence of returns risk. This is the danger that a major market downturn in the first year or two of your retirement could seriously damage your portfolio’s ability to last a lifetime, since you’d be selling assets at low prices to fund your living expenses. You don’t need to eliminate all risk, but reducing it can provide valuable peace of mind.

Pages: 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10

Share this article

Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Email

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Search

Latest Posts

  • A collage showing a bright tropical postcard on the left overlapping with complex financial documents and a 2026 calendar on the right. These Southern Retirement Towns Look Great on Paper - But…
  • A retiree looks over financial documents at his kitchen table, weighing the costs of moving to a new state. 12 Places Where Everyday Retirement Life Can Be Tougher
  • An illustration of a suitcase packed with heavy weights labeled with retirement downsides, while a retiree looks at a distant palm tree. The Downsides of These 10 Popular Retirement Locations
  • A man in a kitchen looking at real estate listings while a for sale sign is visible through the window in the background. 8 Signs It May Be Time to Relocate
  • A retired couple on a porch, one looking at a map and the other at a garden, in warm golden hour light. 8 Ways Retirement Changes Family Relationships
  • A mixed-media collage split diagonally between a peaceful beach watercolor and a realistic pile of tax forms, medical tools, and bills. 9 Retirement Expectations That Don't Match Reality
  • 9 Things Retirees Are Collecting That Are Suddenly Worth Money
  • A nostalgic living room scene with vintage magazines and reading glasses on a wooden table in warm golden light. Remembering 16 Beloved American Icons We Lost in 2025 and 2026
  • A luxury cruise ship docked in a South American port at dawn, with two retirees looking on from a wooden pier. Hantavirus: What Retirees Need to Know Before Boarding a Cruise Ship
  • A retired couple selects fresh produce at a sunny outdoor market, highlighting the active and affordable retirement lifestyle. 7 Retirement Towns Where Residents Spend Less On Groceries

Newsletter

Get retirement tips and senior living advice delivered to your inbox.

Related Articles

9 Things Retirees Are Collecting That Are Suddenly Worth Money

2. Vintage Video Games and Consoles Do you have a box of old video games…

Read More →
Social Security number spousal

15 Tips to Protect Your Social Security Number From Scams

Offer an alternative form of ID If there’s a business or any other kind of…

Read More →
social security homebuying

8 Myths About Homebuying That Will Cost You a Fortune

Getting prequalified for a mortgage is way better than getting pre-approved Even if it sounds…

Read More →
Tax Refund

7 Ways to Maximize Your Tax Refund in 2023

#2 Verify the Minimum Distributions That Must Be Taken From Your Retirement Accounts According to…

Read More →
Tax Refund

New Court Ruling Could Mean IRS Refunds for Pandemic Tax Penalties (2020–2023)

What the Court Case Means The court ruled that pandemic-related deadline extensions may have lasted…

Read More →
Kamala Harris Tax Reform

6 Kamala Harris Tax Reforms We Avoided by Choosing Trump

Middle-class tax credit Kamala spoke a lot about the LIFT Act on the Biden campaign…

Read More →
A happy retired couple looking at a tablet in a bright, modern kitchen.

How to Get the Biggest Possible Social Security Check – and Why Most Don’t

Learn how to get the biggest possible Social Security check by avoiding common mistakes. Discover…

Read More →

Need Extra CASH? 7 Easy Ideas for Seniors

A happy senior man enjoys a sunny garden walk, discovering how easy it is to…

Read More →
A mature couple sits together in a bright, modern living room looking at a tablet, planning their retirement strategy.

Social Security Claiming Strategies: When to Take It at 62, 67, or 70

Discover the exact financial impact of claiming Social Security at ages 62, 67, and 70,…

Read More →
Retired in USA

Your golden years are your best years! Make them shine!

Inedit Agency S.R.L.
Bucharest, Romania

contact@ineditagency.com

Trust & Legal

  • Terms and Conditions
  • Privacy Policy
  • Do not sell my personal information
  • Subscribe
  • Unsubscribe
  • Contact
  • CA Privacy Policy
  • Request to Know
  • Request to Delete

Categories

  • Enjoying Retirement
  • Personal Finance
  • Saving & Spending

© 2026 Retired in USA. All rights reserved.