How Much Guaranteed Retirement Income Can I Get with $300,000 in Kansas?
Why the 4% Rule Isn't Enough Anymore
For decades, retirees were told to withdraw 4% of their savings each year and hope it lasted. New research in 2026 shows that advice is no longer reliable. Lower interest rates, longer life expectancies, and the risk of a market drop early in retirement have all changed the math.
Here is what $300,000 actually generates under the old rules:
- Traditional 4% Rule: $12,000/year ($1,000/month)
- Morningstar 2026 Safe Withdrawal Rate: $11,910/year ($993/month)
- Pfau/Dokken 2026 Conservative Rate: $8,800/year ($740/month)
These numbers are sobering. In Kansas, where the cost of living is moderate but rising, those monthly amounts may not cover your essentials, let alone your lifestyle.
How Much Guaranteed Retirement Income Can $300,000 Generate in Kansas?
The figures below are illustrative examples for married couples, based on the age of the youngest spouse. PLI numbers assume a deferral period before income begins. Actual results will vary based on your age, health, product features, fees, and market conditions. These are hypothetical examples for educational purposes only.
- Scenario A: Retire at 62 (Both Age 57 Today)
Act Now: $29,517/year ($2,460/month)
Wait Until 62: $20,295/year ($1,691/month)
Difference: +$9,228/year (+$769/month), or 45.4% more income... just by starting 5 years earlier - Scenario B: Retire at 65 (Both Age 55 Today)
Act Now: $45,117/year ($3,760/month)
Wait Until 65: $23,040/year ($1,920/month)
Difference: +$22,080/year (+$1,840/month), or 95.8% more income... nearly double - Scenario C: Retire at 67 (Both Age 60 Today)
Act Now: $36,372/year ($3,031/month)
Wait Until 67: $23,400/year ($1,950/month)
Difference: +$12,972/year (+$1,081/month), or 55.4% more income - Scenario D: Retire at 70 (Both Age 60 Today)
Act Now: $48,600/year ($4,050/month)
Wait Until 70: $24,120/year ($2,010/month)
Difference: +$24,120/year (+$2,040/month), or 101.5% more income... more than double
Key Finding: The earlier you start your PLI plan... ideally 5 to 10 years before you need the income... the more “wholesale” your retirement income becomes. Waiting until retirement means you’re paying “retail” and getting less for your money. Over a 20-year retirement, that gap could represent hundreds of thousands in total lifetime income... just from making a decision a few years earlier.
See What Your $300,000 Could Generate... Free CallKansas Taxes and Retirement Income
Kansas is one of the more tax-friendly states for retirees—if you plan ahead. If your federal adjusted gross income (AGI) is $75,000 or less, Kansas does NOT tax your Social Security benefits at all. Above $75,000, the federally taxable portion of your Social Security may also be taxed by Kansas. That means smart withdrawal sequencing and Roth conversions can help you keep more of your income. For more details, see Does Kansas tax Social Security?
The 6-Link Tax Cascade in Kansas
Even with Kansas’s favorable Social Security rules, taxes in retirement are rarely simple. The 6-Link Tax Cascade shows how one decision can trigger a chain reaction:
- RMDs increase income: Required Minimum Distributions kick in at age 73 (if born 1951–1959) or age 75 (if born after 1959), and they push your gross income up whether you need the money or not.
- Social Security becomes taxable (up to 85%): As income rises, more of your Social Security check becomes subject to federal and possibly state tax.
- Medicare IRMAA surcharges triggered: Go over certain income thresholds and your Medicare Part B premium jumps. The lowest tier starts at $202.90/month, but surcharges can add hundreds more.
- Loss of itemized deductions and credits: Higher income phases out deductions and credits you counted on.
- Widow’s Penalty: When one spouse passes, the survivor files as single at a lower income level, losing the lesser of the two Social Security incomes, often still pushing them into a higher tax bracket overnight.
- Taxes on inherited accounts: Heirs face the 10-year rule on inherited retirement accounts, which can mean large, forced taxable distributions especially if your heirs are in their peak earning years.
A well-designed Lifestyle-First Retirement plan accounts for all six links before they become problems. For more on how taxes and Medicare interact with your income, see How Taxes, IRMAA, and Market Drops Affect Retirement.
Protected Lifetime Income vs. Market-Based Withdrawal
Market-Based Withdrawal (4% Rule)
- Income Source: Sells shares of your portfolio each year
- Market Dependency: Completely dependent on market performance and interest rates
- Longevity Risk: Real risk of running out of money in your 80s or 90s
- Income Certainty: None—withdrawals can be reduced if markets drop
- Typical Result from $300,000: $8,800 to $12,000/year (illustrative)
Protected Lifetime Income (PLI)
- Income Source: Insurance-based—income is contractually structured
- Market Dependency: None for income payments—income is protected from market loss
- Longevity Risk: Income continues for as long as you live, regardless of account balance
- Income Certainty: Steady, predictable monthly deposits you can count on
- Typical Result from $300,000 (Act Now): $29,517 to $48,600/year (illustrative, based on age and deferral)
Frequently Asked Questions
Is This Income Really Guaranteed for Life?
Protected Lifetime Income (PLI) is specifically designed to pay you income for as long as you live, even if your account balance runs to zero. The word "guaranteed" refers to the contractual commitment from the issuing insurance company, which means the strength of that guarantee depends on the insurer's claims-paying ability. All figures shown on this page are illustrative—your actual income will depend on your age, the product you choose, fees, and other factors. A personalized Blueprint Call with Kurt Jackson can show you exactly what your situation looks like.
Why Is the 4% Rule Considered Outdated in 2026?
The 4% rule was developed in the 1990s when bond yields were high and life expectancies were shorter. Today, Morningstar's 2026 research puts the safe withdrawal rate at just 3.97%, yielding $11,910 a year from $300,000—and conservative researchers like Pfau and Dokken put it even lower at around 2.96%, or $8,800 a year. When you factor in a bad market early in retirement (sequence of returns risk), the odds of running short get worse. PLI removes this uncertainty by providing contractually structured income regardless of what markets do.
How Does Kansas's Cost of Living and Taxes Affect My Retirement Income?
Kansas's moderate cost of living and Social Security tax exemption for AGI under $75,000 mean your retirement dollars go further than in many other states. However, the 6-Link Tax Cascade can still erode your income if not planned for in advance. A Lifestyle-First Retirement plan can help you keep more of what you earn by sequencing your income sources in a tax-smart way. Kurt Jackson helps Kansas retirees understand all six links before they become costly surprises.
What If I'm Single, Not a Couple?
Single individuals typically qualify for higher PLI payout rates than married couples of the same age, because the income benefit only needs to cover one lifetime instead of two. The scenarios on this page are built for married couples, so single retirees in Kansas may see even better income numbers from the same $300,000. Your age, health, and the specific product you choose will all factor into your personal income figure. Book a free Blueprint Call to get numbers built specifically for your situation.
How Does Starting My PLI Plan Earlier Increase My Lifetime Income?
When you fund a PLI strategy before retirement, both your income base and your payout factor grow during those deferral years—a period sometimes called the "runway." A 10-year deferral can produce nearly double the guaranteed lifetime income of starting at retirement, from the exact same $300,000. The scenarios on this page illustrate this powerfully: acting now versus waiting can mean tens of thousands of dollars more every single year for life. Starting earlier is one of the most impactful decisions a pre-retiree can make.
Book Your Free Retirement Income Blueprint CallEducational only... not tax, legal, or individualized investment advice. Guarantees rely on the issuing insurer's claims-paying ability. Any figures shown are illustrative and may differ for your situation based on age, health, product features, fees, allocations, and market conditions. KJ Financial and Kurt H. Jackson do not provide investment advisory services or securities recommendations. All strategies discussed are insurance-based and may not be suitable for all individuals. © 2026 KJ Financial. All rights reserved.