Optimization is choosing which lever is cheapest and safest to pull to improve lifetime tax burden.
Use the calculator as a simulator: test one lever at a time, then combine only the levers you can execute.
A lever-by-lever guide to improving your lifetime tax burden outcome using realistic changes—not wishful thinking.
Optimization is choosing which lever is cheapest and safest to pull to improve lifetime tax burden.
Use the calculator as a simulator: test one lever at a time, then combine only the levers you can execute.
Most outcomes are driven by 2–3 inputs. Start with start age, end age, and income assumptions and test sensitivity.
If a small change produces a big outcome shift, that lever is high impact.
Key inputs: start age, end age, income assumptions, and tax bands.
Be consistent about units (monthly vs annual) and scope (include fees/taxes if they exist in real life).
Compare outputs like estimated tax paid and tax-to-income ratio across scenarios instead of trusting one number.
If the decision changes under downside assumptions, build a buffer or revise the plan.