16 Feb Why Your AI Might Be “Lying” to You About Your Retirement
— a financial planner’s perspective
Artificial intelligence has become an incredibly useful tool. Ask it about retirement, taxes, Social Security, or investing, and you’ll get a fast, confident answer. That clarity can feel empowering.
But when it comes to retirement planning, AI can be misleading, not because it’s intentionally wrong, but because retirement decisions are too personal and interconnected for generic answers.
AI Explains Rules. Retirement Requires Context.
AI excels at explaining how things work: Roth conversions, required minimum distributions, or Social Security rules. What it struggles with is determining whether a strategy makes sense for you.
Your retirement plan depends on variables that can’t be fully captured in a prompt:
- Current and future income sources
- Multi-year tax brackets
- Pension elections and survivor benefits
- Medicare premiums and healthcare costs
- Real estate decisions and timing
- Risk tolerance and emotional behavior
- Family and legacy goals
Change just one of these inputs, and the “right” answer can flip entirely.
Retirement Planning Is a Long-Term Process, Not a One-Time Choice
Many strategies look smart in isolation but create problems over time.
For example:
- A Roth conversion may lower future taxes but increase Medicare premiums.
- Delaying Social Security may boost lifetime benefits but strain early retirement cash flow.
- Selling a property may simplify life while triggering permanent tax consequences.
AI often optimizes for one variable at a time. Retirement planning requires balancing trade-offs across decades.
AI Doesn’t Share the Consequences
One major difference between AI and a financial planner is accountability.
If an AI suggests converting aggressively, taking more risk, or selling assets, it doesn’t sit with you when markets fall, tax bills arrive, or assumptions change. Retirement planning isn’t just about numbers, it’s about confidence, behavior, and staying committed during uncertainty.
Those human elements matter more than most spreadsheets.
Rules Change, and So Do You
Tax laws, retirement rules, and planning strategies evolve. AI responses are based on generalized information, not how recent changes interact with your entire financial picture.
More importantly, your life changes:
- Retirement happens earlier or later than planned
- Health shifts priorities
- Family needs emerge
- Risk tolerance changes after market stress
A good plan adapts. One time answers don’t.
Where AI Does Add Value
This isn’t an argument against AI, it’s a reminder to use it appropriately.
AI can be helpful for:
- Learning concepts
- Understanding terminology
- Generating better questions
- Exploring high-level “what if” ideas
Think of AI as a research assistant, not a decision-maker.
The Role of a Financial Planner
A financial planner’s role is to integrate decisions, stress-test outcomes, and help clients avoid costly blind spots. The goal isn’t to find the “best” answer in theory, it’s to find the strategy that works best for your life.
Bottom Line
If your AI sounds very confident about your retirement, that’s often when caution is warranted.
Technology can inform you. Thoughtful planning protects you.
If you are relying on technology alone for retirement answers, it may be time for a second look. Schedule a consultation with KPC Financial Solutions to ensure your plan reflects your full financial picture.