Verizon (VZ) yields 5.4% at its current price, paying $0.69 per quarter and offering higher current income for retirees. AbbVie (ABBV) yields 2.9% but has raised its dividend every year since 2013, with the current quarterly payment at $1.73, providing dividend growth to offset inflation over time.

A 60-year-old with $500,000 saved can generate $3,117 to $4,235 in monthly income depending on Social Security claiming age, with the decision to delay from 62 to 70 worth $1,100 per month in guaranteed lifetime income.

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At 60 with $500,000 saved, you are closer to a workable retirement income than most people realize. The math is concrete, the variables are manageable, and the biggest decision you will make has nothing to do with which stocks to pick.

Key Fact

Detail

Age

60 years old

Savings

$500,000

Core issue

How much monthly income can this realistically generate?

Key variable

Social Security claiming age (62, 67, or 70)

What is at stake

Up to $1,100/month difference in lifetime income based on one decision

The 4% rule is the starting point for any retirement income conversation. Applied to $500,000, it produces $20,000 per year, or roughly $1,667 per month. That is your baseline withdrawal from the portfolio, designed to last 30 years across most historical market conditions.

That $1,667 alone does not fund most retirements. The real income picture depends on when you claim Social Security, and that decision is worth more than almost any investment choice you will make.

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Claiming at 62 versus waiting until 70 is an $1,100/month difference in guaranteed lifetime income. Here is what each path looks like added to your portfolio withdrawals:

Claiming Age

Est. Monthly SS Benefit

Portfolio Withdrawal (4%)

Total Monthly Income

62 (early)

$1,450

$1,667

$3,117

67 (full)

$2,071

$1,667

$3,738

70 (maximum)

$2,568

$1,667

$4,235

Claiming at 62 locks in a 30% permanent reduction to your monthly benefit. For most people who are healthy at 60, waiting pays off. The breakeven on delaying from 62 to 70 is typically around age 80. Every month past that at the higher rate compounds the advantage of having waited.

The 4% withdrawal rule is not the only way to use $500,000. Depending on your risk tolerance and need for simplicity:

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High-yield savings or CDs: With the Fed funds rate at 3.75%, competitive savings accounts are offering around 4% APY. That produces the same $1,667/month as the 4% rule with zero market risk. The catch: you are not growing the principal, and inflation will slowly erode purchasing power.

Dividend-focused portfolio: A 60/40 blend of a dividend equity fund and a bond fund can generate roughly $1,600/month in dividends and interest before touching principal. Two examples: Verizon (VZ yields about 5.4% at its current price of $50.63, paying $0.69 per quarter) and AbbVie (ABBV yields about 2.9% but has raised its dividend every year since 2013, with the current quarterly payment at $1.73). VZ offers higher current income; AbbVie offers dividend growth that can help offset inflation over time.

Standard 4% withdrawal from a balanced portfolio: You draw $1,667/month, invest the rest in a diversified mix, and let the portfolio grow during the years before Social Security maximizes. If you wait until 70 to claim, you are only drawing from the portfolio for 10 years before Social Security covers a larger share of expenses.

If your $500,000 sits in a traditional IRA or 401(k), the government will eventually force withdrawals whether you need the money or not. Required minimum distributions begin at age 73. If the account grows to roughly $600,000 by then, the first-year RMD would be approximately $22,600, which gets added to your taxable income that year. That can push you into a higher bracket and affect Medicare premiums.

If you are in a lower tax bracket between now and 73, converting portions of a traditional IRA to a Roth IRA is a strategy some retirees use to pay taxes at a known rate now and avoid forced withdrawals later. This is where a fee-only financial planner earns their fee, particularly if your balance is large enough that RMDs would meaningfully increase your tax bill.

For most 60-year-olds with $500,000 saved, the Social Security claiming decision matters more than any investment strategy. Historically, delaying Social Security from 62 to 70 has added $1,118/month in guaranteed, inflation-adjusted income for life in inflation-adjusted income for those who live past the breakeven age of approximately 80. Many financial planners note that no dividend stock or savings account offers the same level of certainty.

The 10-year Treasury at 4.21% near 4% means safe income options are more competitive than they have been in years. You do not need to take on equity risk to generate income from $500,000. But you do need a plan for how long that money has to last and when Social Security enters the picture.

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