
By Davis Private Wealth | Royal Palm Beach, Florida
There’s a moment that happens to almost every new retiree. The paychecks stop. The portfolio you’ve spent thirty years building is suddenly the thing that has to feed you, pay your taxes, and last another three decades. And then the market drops 15% in a quarter — because eventually, it always does.
That’s the moment when retirement feels different than the spreadsheets suggested it would.
The bucket strategy is one of the most effective frameworks we know of for managing that feeling — not by ignoring market volatility, but by building a structure where short-term volatility doesn’t threaten your short-term spending. It’s simple, it’s flexible, and most importantly, it gives retirees a clear answer to the question that quietly haunts most of them: “what happens to my income if the market drops?”
Match the time horizon of your money to the time horizon of your spending needs.
That’s the entire concept. Money you need to spend in the next year or two should not be sitting in stocks. Money you won’t touch for fifteen years probably shouldn’t be sitting in cash. The bucket strategy formalizes that intuition into a structure you can actually implement and refill over time.
This is your spending account. Its only job is to be there when you need it — stable, liquid, and boring.
If you spend $120,000 per year and receive $60,000 in Social Security and pension income, you need to fund roughly $60,000–$120,000 of withdrawal capacity in this bucket.
This is the bridge. Its job is to refill Bucket 1 when needed, and to ride out moderate market downturns without forcing you to sell stocks at the worst possible time.
Historically, the average bear market in the S&P 500 has lasted around 12–18 months, with full recoveries typically occurring within 3–5 years. A well-funded Bucket 2 means you can leave your stocks alone during that recovery window.
This is your growth engine — the part of the portfolio that will fund the second half of retirement and, for many of our clients, leave a legacy. Because you don’t need to touch it for the better part of a decade, it can absorb volatility in exchange for higher expected returns.
Let’s make this concrete. Imagine a 67-year-old couple in Palm Beach County. They have $2,000,000 invested. They spend $120,000 per year. Social Security covers $50,000 of that, leaving $70,000 in annual portfolio withdrawals.
| Bucket | Time Horizon | Amount | Holdings |
| Bucket 1 | 1–2 years | $140,000 (7%) | Money market, Treasury bills, high-yield savings |
| Bucket 2 | 3–7 years | $350,000 (17.5%) | Intermediate bonds, conservative balanced fund |
| Bucket 3 | 8+ years | $1,510,000 (75.5%) | Diversified global equity portfolio |
Note that the overall allocation in this example works out to roughly 75% equities and 25% fixed income/cash — a stance most advisors would consider reasonable for a healthy 67-year-old couple with a 30-year planning horizon. The bucket framework didn’t change the underlying allocation; it just told a clearer story about why each piece is there.
This is where the strategy earns its keep — and where most retirees benefit from professional guidance, because the refilling rules require judgment.
When markets are flat or rising, you periodically harvest gains from Bucket 3 to refill Bucket 2, and from Bucket 2 to refill Bucket 1. This typically happens annually or semi-annually. The cadence isn’t rigid — it’s opportunistic.
When stocks are down significantly, you stop refilling from Bucket 3. You spend down Bucket 1, and if needed, refill it from Bucket 2. Bucket 3 is left untouched to recover.
This is the entire psychological payoff of the strategy. In 2022, when both stocks and bonds were down, our retired clients with proper bucket structures didn’t need to sell anything at a loss. Their spending was already covered by short-term holdings. They could read the news without panic, because the news wasn’t about money they needed this year.
This is when discipline matters most. After a 25% equity year, the temptation is to let it ride. But this is exactly when you should be harvesting gains — trimming Bucket 3, topping up Buckets 1 and 2 — so you have ammunition for the next downturn. “Sell high” is easier said than done, but the bucket framework operationalizes it.
Behavioral finance research consistently finds that retirees underperform their own portfolios — not because their portfolios are wrong, but because they panic-sell during downturns and lock in losses. The bucket strategy addresses this at its root.
No strategy is perfect, and the bucket approach has tradeoffs worth understanding.
The bucket strategy isn’t a clever trick or a market-beating system. It’s a structure — a way of organizing your portfolio so that the money you need soon is safe, the money you need later is growing, and the worst day in the market doesn’t become the worst day of your retirement.
Done well, it lets you spend in retirement with the same confidence you spent your paycheck during your working years. That’s the real goal. The returns are just how you get there.
About Davis Private Wealth
Davis Private Wealth, LLC is an independent, fee-only registered investment advisor based in Royal Palm Beach, Florida. We help Palm Beach County business owners and retirees design retirement income strategies tailored to their specific goals and tax situation. To discuss how a bucket strategy might fit into your plan, contact our team at davisprivatewealth.com.
This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment, tax, or legal advice. The example shown is hypothetical and does not reflect any specific client. Past performance does not guarantee future results. Please consult with qualified professionals before making decisions based on this information.

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