Safe Withdrawal Rate Singapore: Does the 4% Rule Work for Singapore Retirees?
The safe withdrawal rate (SWR) is the maximum percentage of a retirement portfolio you can withdraw annually with a high probability of the portfolio lasting through retirement. The widely cited benchmark is 4%, derived from US research. Singapore investors must adapt this for local market conditions, CPF LIFE integration, and Singapore’s high life expectancy. This is educational content only.
Origin of the 4% Rule
The 4% rule originated from the 1994 Trinity Study (Bengen), examining US stock and bond portfolios from 1926–1976. It found that withdrawing 4% of the initial portfolio value, adjusted for inflation annually, historically lasted 30 years in 95% of scenarios. Key assumptions: 50–75% US equities, 25–50% US bonds, 30-year horizon, no additional income sources (no CPF equivalent). Singapore investors have CPF LIFE as a structural advantage the original study didn’t model.
How Singapore Investors Should Adapt the 4% Rule
Longer horizons: at 65 with life expectancy of 84–88, Singapore retirees face 20–25 year horizons minimum — closer to 3.3–3.5% is appropriate. CPF LIFE as a floor: the Retirement Sum scheme provides guaranteed income not modelled in US studies. SRS tax: withdrawals are taxed as income — stagger over 10 years for efficiency. S-REIT income: many investors hold high-yield REITs (5–7% yield) providing organic income without forced selling.
A Tiered Withdrawal Framework
Tier 1 — Guaranteed income: CPF LIFE (Enhanced Retirement Sum payout ~$2,200/month at 65 as at 2026). Zero sequence risk. Tier 2 — Fixed income buffer: SSBs, T-bills, fixed deposits for 2–3 years of supplementary expenses. Withdraw from here during equity downturns. Tier 3 — Investment portfolio: S-REITs, equities, ETFs. Apply 3.5% withdrawal rate to this tier only — not total assets including CPF. Tools: CPF FIRE Number Calculator | Retirement Planning Calculator.