The story we tell ourselves
Most people carry a neat version of downsizing in their heads.
At some point, the house will be sold, something smaller will be bought, and the difference will fall out as a pool of money to fund retirement. It feels logical, almost automatic.
It rarely works that way.
Preparing a home for sale often costs more than expected, especially when it has been lived in for years.
Agent fees, moving costs, and sometimes temporary accommodation quickly erode what people expect to walk away with.
When it comes time to buy again, they enter a more competitive part of the market, where smaller, low-maintenance homes attract more buyers and often command a premium.
What looks like a meaningful gap between selling and buying often narrows quickly.
And that is before you factor in the physical effort and emotional toll of sorting through a lifetime of possessions, letting go of what cannot come with you, and closing a chapter you may not feel ready to end.
Downsizing still matters, but it rarely delivers the windfall people expect unless it is approached with more intention.
Where it tends to go wrong is the timing. We leave it too late.
Hannah McQueen. Photo / Michael Craig
A case study in expectation and reality
I worked with a couple in their late 60s who assumed their home would solve any shortfall in retirement.
They had built equity, cleared the mortgage, and trusted that downsizing would release what they needed. That assumption wasn’t tested, but it felt logical enough to rely on.
So, we started with a simple question. How much did their home downsize need to deliver?
For them, like many of my former clients, the answer was around $500,000. That was what they needed to add to New Zealand Super, to maintain their lifestyle for the next 20-odd years.
New Zealand Super would cover the basics, but not their lifestyle.
Their spending sat around $70,000 a year, leaving a $20,000 annual gap once KiwiSaver ran out.
That changed everything.
They did not need to downsize “one day”. They needed to downsize before the money ran out, and they needed to downsize well.
Over a 20-plus-year retirement, that gap quickly grew into a six-figure problem.
When we tested it, the gap between what they could sell for and what they needed to buy next was smaller than expected. After costs, downsizing alone was unlikely to fund their remaining retirement.
So the choices became clear. Work longer, lower your standard of living now, downsize earlier, or compromise on the next home.
None were ideal, but all were real.
The difference was they still had time. They could act deliberately and adjust early, rather than under pressure.
And that is where most people get caught out. They assume downsizing will work, without ever testing whether it will.
Why timing determines the outcome
The most consistent pattern is that people leave this decision too late.
The family home keeps working well enough, so downsizing is pushed into the future, something to deal with “eventually”, which in practice means when circumstances force it.
Sometimes that shift is gradual. At other times it is sudden, triggered by a health event, a fall or even a death, that changes everything overnight.
At that point, the decision is no longer made from a position of choice, but under pressure, which narrows options quickly.
You lose the ability to wait, compromise becomes easier, and decisions that should be made carefully are made quickly, just to resolve the situation.
The uncomfortable reality is that the best time to downsize is when there is no immediate reason to do so, when you still have the energy, time, and control to act deliberately.
Because downsizing is not a single event, it is a multi-year process.
I encouraged clients to start up to five years earlier than they thought they needed to, giving them time to declutter, prepare the home properly, and ride out weaker market conditions.
What happens next, and what people miss
Even when downsizing is done well, the decision does not end there.
The capital released needs to do the heavy lifting. It must last, remain accessible, and support a retirement that is not always predictable.
For some, that means investing; for others, holding liquidity. Usually, it’s both.
In certain situations, tools such as reverse mortgages can be used deliberately to manage timing issues but they carry risk and must be handled carefully.
It’s not about moving house, it’s about whether the life you want can be funded by the decisions you make.
If you don’t know the number you need to solve your shortfall, you can’t know if you’ve achieved it. Like any trump card, it only works if you recognise it and play it at the right time.
And that is a decision worth getting right – before you must.
Hannah’s 9 rules for downsizing well
Know your number or don’t bother
If you don’t know how much you need to unlock, you’re guessing.
Downsize before life forces you to
Wait too long and you lose control of the outcome.
Start earlier than feels comfortable
If it doesn’t feel early, it’s probably too late. In a perfect world, you downsize once the kids leave home. In a less perfect world, you do it as your first act in retirement.
Your house is worth less. Your next one costs more
That gap you’re banking on is smaller than you think.
A rushed sale will cost you
Pressure destroys negotiating power — and price.
Sentiment is expensive
Memories don’t fund retirement. Decisions do.
It’s harder than you think — get help
Letting go of most of what you own is physically exhausting and emotionally draining. Hire help if you need it.
The money can disappear just as fast
Without a plan, the benefit of downsizing won’t last.
If you’re the adult child, don’t stay silent
Encourage your parents to start early and offer to help. This process is confronting, and like most hard things, it is easier to ignore until it becomes urgent. A family working bee can make all the difference.
Hannah McQueen is the founder and director of Age Brightly. She is also the host of The Next Bit podcast on iHeart Radio.