12 Mistakes That Can Delay Retirement (and What to Do Instead)
Many retirement shortfalls aren’t caused by market crashes, but by everyday mistakes. These small decisions can quietly cost you years. Here are 12 common mistakes that can delay retirement and what to do instead.
Why Small Mistakes Can Delay Your Retirement
Most people don’t delay retirement because of one big mistake.
It’s usually a series of small decisions that add up over time.
From missing free money in your 401(k) to underestimating inflation, these things can quietly slow your progress.
The good news?
Once you know what to watch for, these mistakes are usually fixable.
#1 Waiting Too Long to Start Saving
Delaying even a few years may cost you hundreds of thousands in potential lost growth.
When it comes to retirement savings, time can be your biggest advantage.
Time + consistency helps build wealth.
The earlier you invest, the more compound growth works for you.
Wait too long, and you’re not just missing contributions – you’re missing years of growth on those contributions.
#2 Underestimating Inflation
Rising costs can slowly cut your buying power in half over time.
Over a 20-30 year retirement, inflation may significantly reduce what your money can buy.
That means the money you save today may not go as far as you expect in the future.
If your investments aren’t growing faster than inflation, you’re actually losing ground.
But it is not just about investing. It’s about saving enough to begin with.
If you underestimate how much you’ll need, you may fall short later and have to delay retirement.
Save more than you think you’ll need, increase contributions over time, and build your investment strategy to outpace inflation.
#3 Not Getting the Full Employer Match
If your employer offers a company match and you’re not taking full advantage, you are basically turning down free money.
These matching funds benefit from the same compound growth as your own savings over the decades until retirement.
#4 Prioritizing Kids’ Expenses over Retirement Savings

Helping your children is important.
But overfunding education or big expenses at the cost of your retirement can backfire – causing you to need financial support from your kids in your later years.
There are loans for college. There are no loans for retirement.
#5 Being Too Conservative with Investments
Keeping too much money in cash may feel safe, but inflation slowly erodes its value, meaning your money may buy less over time.
While stability matters, long-term growth typically requires some exposure to the market.
Without it, your savings may not grow fast enough to support a long retirement.
The result is you may need to delay your retirement and work longer than planned or significantly adjust your retirement lifestyle.
We believe a more balanced approach is to align your investments with your time horizon and risk tolerance so your money has the opportunity to grow while still managing risk.
#6 Cashing Out a 401(k) When You Change Jobs
When switching jobs, some workers cash out their old 401(k).
Taking early withdrawals from your 401(k) when changing jobs triggers taxes and penalties, which may destroy the long-term growth of your savings.
Basically, cashing out resets your growth.
A better option might be to roll it over into your new 401(k) or an IRA.
#7 Taking Early Withdrawals
To withdraw funds from your 401(k) without facing penalties, the IRS says you need to be 59½ years old.
If not, you will be hit with a 10% penalty. This is on top of the 20% automatic withholding for taxes.
Not only do penalties hurt you, but withdrawing early means you miss out on potential growth.
#8 Ignoring Future Healthcare Costs

Medical expenses can be one of the biggest retirement costs – and many people don’t plan for them.
As you age, medical expenses typically increase, not decrease.
And while Medicare helps, it doesn’t cover everything.
It’s estimated that the average retired couple may need hundreds of thousands of dollars to cover healthcare expenses in retirement.
If you’re not planning for these costs now, they can drain your savings or force you to delay your retirement.
A strong retirement plan should account for healthcare – not treat it as an afterthought.
#9 Not Regularly Rebalancing
Over time, your portfolio may drift and take on more or less risk than you intended.
And market performance can shift your investment mix – sometimes without you realizing it.
For example, if stocks perform well, they may grow to take up a larger portion of your portfolio, potentially increasing your risk.
On the flip side, if your portfolio becomes too conservative, you may miss out on potential growth.
Without rebalancing, you may end up taking on more risk than you’re comfortable with or not enough to support long-term growth.
Over time, this drift pulls you away from your original retirement strategy.
A better approach: Review and rebalance your 401(k) regularly to help keep your investments aligned with your goals, timeline, and risk tolerance.
#10 Letting Emotions Drive Investment Decisions
Reacting to market swings can lead to costly long-term mistakes.
When markets drop, fear can push investors to sell at the worst possible time.
When markets rise, confidence often leads to chasing performance or taking on too much risk.
These emotional decisions often result in selling low and buying high.
Over time, this may significantly reduce your retirement savings.
A more effective approach we recommend is to stay consistent, stick to a long-term plan, and avoid reacting to short-term market noise.
#11 Letting Lifestyle Creep Eat Your Raises
You get a raise. But instead of saving more, your lifestyle expands.
Over time, this slows your savings rate and delays retirement – sometimes without you even realizing it.
The problem isn’t earning more. It’s not keeping any of it.
A common fix: Increase your contributions every time your income increases.
Even a 1-2% contribution increase with each raise can significantly improve your long-term retirement outcome – without drastically changing your day-to-day lifestyle.
#12 Carrying High-Interest Debt
Debt payments can quietly eat away at your future retirement income.
Debt doesn’t disappear when you retire.
And without a steady paycheck, it becomes much harder to manage.
High-interest debt – like credit cards – can drain money that could otherwise be growing in your 401(k).
Over time, this slows your progress and may delay your ability to retire.
We feel this is a better approach: Focus on paying down high-interest debt while continuing to contribute enough to get your full employer match.
Reducing debt today helps free up more income for your future.





