By Charnel-Ann Heyn, Momentum Marketing Specialist
If you’re a young working professional, retirement probably feels very far away.
You’re focused on building your career, paying off debt, saving for a car or property, maybe even starting a family. Retirement income feels like something you’ll think about “one day.”
But here’s the truth: the decisions you make in your 20s and 30s will determine whether your future self has freedom or financial stress.
And retirement income is not just about stopping work. It’s about replacing your salary with a sustainable income that lasts for the rest of your life.
What Is Retirement Income – Really?
When you retire, your monthly salary stops. But your expenses don’t.
You still need money for housing, food, medical care, transport, and the soft lifestyle you want to maintain. Retirement income is simply the money you draw from your retirement savings to replace your salary.
One common structure used at retirement is a living annuity. It allows your retirement savings to remain invested while you withdraw a percentage each year as income. You can choose how much income to take (within regulatory limits) and you can adjust it annually as your needs change.
That flexibility is powerful – but it also comes with responsibility.
But why does this matter to you now?
As a young professional, you may think income withdrawal decisions are decades away. But the size of your retirement income depends entirely on what you build today.
Three factors will determine your future retirement income:
- How much you save monthly.
- How your investment grows.
- How much you withdraw in retirement.
You can’t control markets. But you can control your savings behaviour.
The earlier you start saving consistently, the more time your money has to grow. Time is your biggest advantage. Starting early reduces the pressure to save aggressively later in life.
The Hidden Risk: Running Out of Money
Many retirees make one critical mistake: they withdraw too much income too quickly.
Retirement income is not guaranteed for life unless structured very carefully. If your withdrawals are too high, or your investment growth is too low, your money can run out while you are still alive.
This is called longevity risk.
As life expectancy increases, this risk becomes very real. You may live 20–30 years after retirement. That means your money must last just as long.
The level of income you choose must balance:
- Your withdrawal rate.
- Your investment return.
- Inflation over time.
This is why responsible planning starts long before retirement.
You don’t need to wait until retirement to think about retirement income.
Simple steps to apply now:
- Preserve Your Savings When You Change Jobs
If you leave your employer, don’t cash out your retirement savings. Preserve them. Every time you withdraw early, you reduce your future retirement income dramatically.
- Contribute Consistently
Even small increases in your monthly retirement contributions can make a meaningful difference over 25–35 years.
- Think Long-Term About Investment Risk
Your investment growth affects how sustainable your future income will be. Young professionals can typically afford to take appropriate long-term growth exposure because you have time to ride out market fluctuations.
- Understand Withdrawal Discipline
When you eventually retire, you will be allowed to withdraw a percentage of your investment annually. Just because you can withdraw more doesn’t mean you should.
Higher withdrawals shorten how long your income lasts. Learning financial discipline now prepares you for better decisions later.
- Nominate Beneficiaries
Retirement investments allow you to nominate beneficiaries. If something happens to you, your remaining investment value goes to them. Estate planning is not only for older people. It is part of responsible financial adulthood.
Retirement Income Is About Freedom
Retirement income is not about “old age.” It is about independence.
It determines whether:
- You can choose when to retire.
- You can maintain your lifestyle.
- You can support your family.
As a young professional, your greatest advantage is time. Every year you delay, you reduce that advantage.


