Free Retirement Planning Software Now Online

April 22, 2009 RSS Feed Print
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ESPlannerBASIC, a free online version of a powerful financial-planning service, has just been developed. Now that the investment dust and damage of the past 18 months is settling, this is an excellent time to take an honest look at your financial future. ESPlannerBASIC is financial planning software that's worth your time and effort.

Even the free version of this tool is no lightweight. You will need to devote a good half an hour providing the information requested by the interactive tool. But it can be very helpful in telling you where you stand in ways that lots of other financial-planning tools do not. Developed by economist Laurence Kotlikoff at Boston University, ESPlannerBASIC is based on a philosophy of "consumer smoothing." It doesn't just tell you how much money you need for "retirement" (whatever that is, these days). It tells you how much you should spend and save every year, and shows you how lifestyle decisions will raise or lower your standard of living.

For example, should you rent or own a home? What will your retirement income taxes be like? Is there a better location for you to live, in terms of how state taxes influence your standard of living? At what age should you begin taking Social Security? By looking at different responses to such questions, ESPlannerBASIC can illuminate some big impacts that you might not have considered. In the process, it can help return control of your future to you, and that's a good feeling in any economy.

(I have written about Larry and explained how consumption smoothing works: It's Time to Review Retirement Path.)

Tags:
wealth,
taxes,
retirement

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Monte carlo simulation is a pipe dream and a misleading load of bull. My advisor gave me one of these ESPlanner reports and then the market tanked and I am now down to 30% of my final nest egg. You can run all these dumb simulations but the REALITY is that you can't predict the future, and doing this monte carlo garbage is a misleading waste of time.

Thurston Howell III of CO 10:52PM April 24, 2013

I would like some info on your free retirement planning software.

spoerlein of IL 4:44PM January 20, 2013

ESPlannerBasic does indeed, do detailed tax calculations, but the calculations are based on simplified inputs so there is a limit to what it possible to do. If more detailed tax planning is desired, ESPlanner should be the product of choice (since the inputs are more complex) although ESPlannerBasic gives you a detailed breakdown of taxes, both federal and state. The whole point of ESPlanner is NOT to have the user specify anything other than assets, income, pensions, etc. and have the software tell them what they can expect to spend. Additional non-discretionary spending can be specified to any given level of detail. The way to treat ESPlanner's recommendations as an upper bound on discretionary spending. If you spend less, you're being conservative and less subject to having made overly optimistic assumptions, if you spend more you're heading for a crash. While ESPlanner does not have a free trial program, ESP, Inc. has a policy of refunding purchases within 10 days although they have yet to refuse any request for a refund.

In the interest of full disclosure, I'm one of the developers of ESP, Inc.'s products.

Richard Munroe of MA 12:34PM April 10, 2010

The Best Life

Philip Moeller, contributing editor for U.S. News Money, writes about achieving success and happiness in older age.

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