Counting on Real Estate to Fund Your Retirement? Avoid These 3 Costly Mistakes
The keys to successful real estate planning for retirees: Stop thinking of property income as a reliable paycheck, start planning for tax consequences and structure your assets early to maintain flexibility.
Profit and prosper with the best of Kiplinger's advice on investing, taxes, retirement, personal finance and much more. Delivered daily. Enter your email in the box and click Sign Me Up.
You are now subscribed
Your newsletter sign-up was successful
Want to add more newsletters?
Delivered daily
Kiplinger Today
Profit and prosper with the best of Kiplinger's advice on investing, taxes, retirement, personal finance and much more delivered daily. Smart money moves start here.
Sent five days a week
Kiplinger A Step Ahead
Get practical help to make better financial decisions in your everyday life, from spending to savings on top deals.
Delivered daily
Kiplinger Closing Bell
Get today's biggest financial and investing headlines delivered to your inbox every day the U.S. stock market is open.
Sent twice a week
Kiplinger Adviser Intel
Financial pros across the country share best practices and fresh tactics to preserve and grow your wealth.
Delivered weekly
Kiplinger Tax Tips
Trim your federal and state tax bills with practical tax-planning and tax-cutting strategies.
Sent twice a week
Kiplinger Retirement Tips
Your twice-a-week guide to planning and enjoying a financially secure and richly rewarding retirement
Sent bimonthly.
Kiplinger Adviser Angle
Insights for advisers, wealth managers and other financial professionals.
Sent twice a week
Kiplinger Investing Weekly
Your twice-a-week roundup of promising stocks, funds, companies and industries you should consider, ones you should avoid, and why.
Sent weekly for six weeks
Kiplinger Invest for Retirement
Your step-by-step six-part series on how to invest for retirement, from devising a successful strategy to exactly which investments to choose.
For many retirees, the real estate component of their investment portfolios feels safe.
- It's tangible
- It produced income during working years
- In some cases, it helped build the wealth on which they rely
That safety, however, can be deceptive.
As a Florida-based adviser, I regularly see the retirees I work with carry real estate habits from their accumulation years straight into retirement, without adjusting for how dramatically the rules have changed.
From just $107.88 $24.99 for Kiplinger Personal Finance
Become a smarter, better informed investor. Subscribe from just $107.88 $24.99, plus get up to 4 Special Issues
Sign up for Kiplinger’s Free Newsletters
Profit and prosper with the best of expert advice on investing, taxes, retirement, personal finance and more - straight to your e-mail.
Profit and prosper with the best of expert advice - straight to your e-mail.
They don't know to consider that what once worked well can quietly create tax friction, cash-flow stress and long-term inflexibility.
The most costly mistakes in retirement real estate planning aren't sudden or obvious. They're built into the structure of decisions made years earlier and allowed to persist without adjustment.
About Adviser Intel
The author of this article is a participant in Kiplinger's Adviser Intel program, a curated network of trusted financial professionals who share expert insights on wealth building and preservation. Contributors, including fiduciary financial planners, wealth managers, CEOs and attorneys, provide actionable advice about retirement planning, estate planning, tax strategies and more. Experts are invited to contribute and do not pay to be included, so you can trust their advice is honest and valuable.
Mistake No. 1: Turning real estate into a retirement paycheck
One of the most common assumptions I hear is that rental income will naturally replace a paycheck in retirement. On the surface, it sounds reasonable. Properties generate cash flow, rent arrives monthly, income feels steady.
In reality, rental income rarely behaves like a paycheck once earned income is gone. Why? People don't take every factor into account:
- Vacancies happen
- Repair needs arrive in clusters
- Insurance costs rise
- Property taxes rarely stay flat
A single unexpected capital expense can wipe out months of "income." Unlike a salary, rental income is uneven, and only a portion of what looks like income actually makes it into a retiree's pocket after vacancies, repairs, taxes, insurance and ongoing property costs.
This risk is magnified when retirees rely on only one or two properties to support a meaningful portion of their lifestyles.
A retiree with $8 million to $12 million in net worth might plan to fund $300,000 a year of spending with rental income. If two properties generate $180,000 of that cash flow, a prolonged vacancy, combined with a $150,000 capital repair such as a full roof replacement paired with multiple HVAC system failures, can quickly turn what felt like stable income into a liquidity problem. This could force asset sales or unplanned portfolio withdrawals.
Real estate can play a role in retirement; the mistake is treating it as a paycheck replacement rather than as one component of a broader, more resilient income strategy.
Mistake No. 2: Ignoring how real estate locks in tax outcomes
Real estate is often praised for its tax advantages, and during accumulation years, those benefits can be meaningful:
- Depreciation offsets income
- Leverage amplifies returns
- Capital gains can be deferred
In retirement, however, the picture changes.
Rental income is typically taxed as ordinary income, which can push retirees into higher brackets than expected. That income can also increase the taxation of Social Security benefits and trigger higher Medicare Part B and Part D premiums through IRMAA surcharges.
Then there is the exit problem.
Many retirees hold properties for decades without revisiting how or when they might sell. When the time comes, they're surprised by the size of the capital gains tax bill, depreciation recapture and state taxes layered on top.
What looked tax efficient for years can suddenly create a rigid outcome with limited flexibility. I've seen retirees hesitate to sell properties they no longer want to manage because the tax cost feels painful.
The result is often worse. They keep assets that no longer fit their lives simply to avoid a tax decision that should have been planned for years earlier.
Real estate doesn't just produce returns. It locks in future tax consequences. Ignoring that reality reduces options when flexibility matters most.
Mistake No. 3: Waiting too long to structure real estate correctly
The third mistake is timing — or, more accurately, waiting.
Many retirees assume they can address real estate structure later. They plan to think about ownership, trusts, gifting strategies or exit planning once retirement feels more settled. By then, the best opportunities are often gone.
Certain strategies work far better before retirement, before income drops and before health or family dynamics complicate decision-making. Others require time to implement cleanly. Waiting compresses choices and increases the risk of mistakes.
I've seen families hold properties purchased decades ago for modest sums that are now worth several million dollars. Without early planning, selling later in retirement can create seven-figure tax exposure once capital gains and depreciation recapture are combined, limiting flexibility at precisely the stage of life when options matter most.
The retirees who struggle are rarely those who made poor decisions early. They're the ones who postponed good decisions for too long.
Looking for expert tips to grow and preserve your wealth? Sign up for Adviser Intel, our free, twice-weekly newsletter.
A better way to think about real estate in retirement
Real estate doesn't need to be eliminated in retirement, but it does need to be re-examined. The role it played during accumulation is rarely the role it should play once work income stops and priorities shift.
The key change is moving away from asking how much income a property produces and toward asking how it supports flexibility, tax efficiency and peace of mind. Retirement changes the lens:
- Liquidity becomes more important
- Simplicity carries more weight
- Control over timing and outcomes starts to matter as much as return
Real estate that once felt empowering can quietly become a constraint if it no longer aligns with how you want to spend your time, manage risk or support the next generation. What worked for decades may still be valuable, but only if it fits the life you are trying to build now.
The most successful retirees treat real estate as a strategic decision rather than an emotional one. They think about exits as carefully as entries. They structure assets early, while options are still wide, rather than waiting until circumstances narrow the path forward.
Mistakes in retirement planning are rarely about intelligence. They're about inertia. Real estate often rewards action during accumulation. In retirement, it rewards foresight.
Wells Fargo Advisors Financial Network does not provide legal or tax advice.
Investment products and services are offered through Wells Fargo Advisors Financial Network, LLC (WFAFN), Member SIPC. Edwards Asset Management is a separate entity from WFAFN.
Related Content
- How Smart Retirees Turn a Second Home Into a Financial Asset
- How to Create Passive Income Through Real Estate Syndication
- A Compelling Case for Why Property Investing Reigns Supreme, From a Real Estate Investing Pro
- Should You Still Invest in Real Estate?
- Diversification: An Investment Adviser's Guide to Why You Need It and How to Achieve It
Profit and prosper with the best of Kiplinger's advice on investing, taxes, retirement, personal finance and much more. Delivered daily. Enter your email in the box and click Sign Me Up.

Rob Edwards is the Managing Director and Senior PIM® Portfolio Manager at Edwards Asset Management, where he advises high-net-worth individuals and families on retirement planning, generational wealth, estate strategy and real estate-focused investment planning. With nearly two decades of experience in the financial industry, Rob is known for helping clients navigate complex life transitions, including retirement, business exits and legacy planning.
-
These Small Money Habits Really Can Plant RootsFebruary gets a bad rap for being the month when resolutions fade — in fact, it's the perfect time to reset and focus on small changes that actually pay off.
-
Nasdaq Leads a Rocky Risk-On Rally: Stock Market TodayAnother worrying bout of late-session weakness couldn't take down the main equity indexes on Wednesday.
-
Quiz: Do You Know How to Avoid the "Medigap Trap?"Quiz Test your basic knowledge of the "Medigap Trap" in our quick quiz.
-
I'm a Financial Planner: These Small Money Habits Stick (and Now Is the Perfect Time to Adopt Them)February gets a bad rap for being the month when resolutions fade — in fact, it's the perfect time to reset and focus on small changes that actually pay off.
-
Nasdaq Leads a Rocky Risk-On Rally: Stock Market TodayAnother worrying bout of late-session weakness couldn't take down the main equity indexes on Wednesday.
-
Quiz: Do You Know How to Avoid the 'Medigap Trap?'Quiz Test your basic knowledge of the "Medigap Trap" in our quick quiz.
-
5 Top Tax-Efficient Mutual Funds for Smarter InvestingMutual funds are many things, but "tax-friendly" usually isn't one of them. These are the exceptions.
-
Why Invest In Mutual Funds When ETFs Exist?Exchange-traded funds are cheaper, more tax-efficient and more flexible. But don't put mutual funds out to pasture quite yet.
-
We Retired at 62 With $6.1 Million. My Wife Wants to Make Large Donations, but I Want to Travel and Buy a Lake House.We are 62 and finally retired after decades of hard work. I see the lakehouse as an investment in our happiness.
-
Social Security Break-Even Math Is Helpful, But Don't Let It Dictate When You'll FileYour Social Security break-even age tells you how long you'd need to live for delaying to pay off, but shouldn't be the sole basis for deciding when to claim.
-
I'm an Opportunity Zone Pro: This Is How to Deliver Roth-Like Tax-Free Growth (Without Contribution Limits)Investors who combine Roth IRAs, the gold standard of tax-free savings, with qualified opportunity funds could enjoy decades of tax-free growth.