Calculate your must-haves

You often hear retirement planning boiled down a single figure — “you need $1 million to retire well.” A smarter approach is to think of your retirement plans as consisting of two separate figures: one for things you must have, the other for things it would be nice to have.

The first and most important part of retirement planning is taking care of things you must have. You want to ensure you have enough to live on without feeling deprived of anything vital.

You can estimate your target figure by toting up how much you spend in all areas, then deducting the expenses that will disappear in retirement — no more mortgage payments (because the house will be paid off), no more child care or tuition payments (because the kids will be adults), no more retirement savings (because you will be retired). You should also deduct any luxuries you could live without in retirement, such as a second car. You can also subtract the cost of commuting to the office, work clothes, and so on.

The amount that’s left represents what it would cost you to maintain the essentials of your current lifestyle in retirement — and that figure is probably a lot lower than you think. Most middle-class couples arrive at a must-have figure of $30,000 to $40,000 in aftertax income.

Calculate your nice-to-haves

We all have dreams and you should budget for those, too. Maybe you want to take that African safari, golf every day, or winter down south. You should size up what it would take to pay for whatever bliss you desire and regard that figure as the second part of your retirement planning.

Just one tip: when assessing your nice-to-have list, remember that age takes its toll. Right now you may dream of traveling the globe. Once you’re past your early seventies, however, you’re likely to discover that your wanderlust is diminished. Similarly, you may find that golfing every day is no longer a pleasure once you’ve hit 75. So by all means budget for luxuries, but keep things within reason. You’re not likely to be globe-trotting for 30 years nor whacking iron shots to the green on your 95th birthday.

Count on government

Despite what the fearmongers would have you believe, Canada Pension Plan (which is funded by contributions from you and me) is in fine shape. Old Age Security (which is funded out of general government revenues) looks to be on solid ground, as well.