The conversation nobody wants to have until it's too late
You've spent decades building something. A career. Financial stability. A rhythm to your days. And then one morning, the alarm doesn't go off anymore.
What happens next is different for everyone. Some embrace the freedom immediately. Others wake up three months later wondering who they are without the title on their business card.
In Ireland, the retirement landscape has shifted dramatically over the past decade. Pension regulations have changed. Tax treatments have evolved. The cost of living has risen in ways that make thirty-year-old financial projections feel almost quaint.
The three phases nobody tells you about
The transition to retirement isn't a single moment. It's a sequence of adjustments, each with its own emotional and practical weight.
Phase one arrives about eighteen months before your planned exit date. This is when the abstract becomes concrete. Questions surface that have no easy answers. How much income will you actually need? What happens to your healthcare coverage? Can your savings withstand market volatility?
Most people underestimate the complexity of this phase. They believe a pension statement and a conversation with their bank will suffice. It rarely does.
"I thought I had everything planned. Then I discovered my pension projections hadn't accounted for the tax changes introduced in 2023. That conversation changed everything."
— Margaret T., Retired Executive, Dublin
Phase two happens during the first year after you stop working. The financial adjustments are real, but the psychological ones often hit harder. The sense of purpose that came from your career doesn't automatically transfer to afternoon walks and weekend gardening.
This is when many people realize they need more than financial planning. They need lifestyle architecture. A framework for how to spend time, maintain social connection, and find meaning in a life structure that no longer revolves around quarterly targets and Monday morning meetings.
Did you know?
72% of Irish retirees report feeling unprepared for the lifestyle shift in their first year, despite having adequate financial resources.
Phase three is the recalibration. It typically begins around month fourteen. You've figured out what doesn't work. Now you're building what does. This phase can last years, and it's where proper guidance makes the difference between drifting and thriving.
How we help you navigate this
Our approach isn't about handing you a forty-page document and wishing you luck. It's about building a strategy that adapts as your life does.
Pre-Retirement Financial Mapping
We analyse your current financial position, pension entitlements, tax obligations, and projected expenses to create a realistic picture of what your finances will actually look like.
€847.50
Get startedPension Optimisation Review
Irish pension regulations are labyrinthine. We review your existing pension arrangements, identify opportunities for tax-efficient withdrawals, and ensure you're not leaving money on the table.
€625.00
Get startedLifestyle Transition Planning
Beyond the numbers, we help you design a post-career life that maintains purpose, social connection, and personal fulfilment. This includes activity mapping and milestone planning.
€495.75
Get startedHealthcare & Insurance Restructuring
Employer healthcare ends when employment does. We evaluate your options, compare private health insurance providers, and ensure you have appropriate coverage for this life stage.
€380.00
Get startedEstate Planning Coordination
We work with your legal advisors to ensure your will, trusts, and inheritance plans align with your retirement strategy and protect your family's interests.
€715.25
Get startedOngoing Strategy Adjustments
Life changes. Markets shift. We provide quarterly reviews to adjust your strategy as circumstances evolve, ensuring you stay on track throughout retirement.
€295.00 per quarter
Get startedThe Irish context matters
Retirement planning advice from London or New York doesn't translate directly to Ireland. Our tax system is different. Our State Pension structure is different. Our healthcare system operates on different principles.
The marginal relief provisions for pension income. The treatment of Approved Retirement Funds versus annuities. The interaction between private pensions and the State Pension (Contributory). These aren't universal concepts—they're specific to how Ireland structures retirement income.
We specialise in this landscape because generic advice isn't just unhelpful—it can be financially damaging.
"The difference between reading about retirement and actually planning for it with someone who understands the Irish system is enormous. I wish I'd started this conversation two years earlier."
— Brian K., Retired Engineer, CorkWhen to start this conversation
The optimal time to begin retirement transition planning is three to five years before your intended retirement date. This gives you enough time to make meaningful adjustments without the pressure of an imminent deadline.
That said, we've worked with people at every stage. Two years out. Six months out. Already retired and needing to course-correct. The worst time to start is never.
If you're within five years of retirement and haven't had a comprehensive review of your financial position, lifestyle expectations, and transition strategy, that's the signal.
Begin your transition strategy
Select the service that fits your current needs. We'll follow up within two business days to schedule your initial consultation.
Retirement isn't the end of your professional life. It's the beginning of a different kind of structure. One that you design rather than inherit. We help you build that structure with clarity and confidence.