Experience is important because retirement planning is not a single decision, but a series of connected decisions that affect each other over time. An experienced advisor understands how income, tax, investments, risk, and estate planning work together, not in isolation. That experience develops judgment, pattern recognition, and the ability to identify risks before they become problems. Without that level of understanding, important gaps can be missed, even when a plan appears complete on the surface.
When deciding which financial planner or financial advisor to work with, you want to make sure that they have decades of experience because this gives them more than just knowledge. It gives them perspective and judgment. You need a financial advisor who recognizes patterns and has the ability to see risks before they become problems.
An experienced financial advisor has seen what happens when income is structured poorly, when tax is underestimated, when markets decline at the wrong time, or when one overlooked issue creates a much larger problem later.
That experience shapes how decisions are made and can directly impact how well you retire.
An experienced advisor understands how all parts of a retirement plan work together.
Income planning, tax planning, investment strategy, risk management, and estate considerations are not handled in isolation. Each decision affects the others.
Financial planning done well follows a deliberate process.
It involves examining each part carefully, identifying gaps, and understanding how every decision affects the whole.
That is where experience shows up most significantly.
Information is not the same as judgment.
A planner can sound knowledgeable, present information clearly, and still miss what matters.
If the thinking is shallow, the plan will be shallow.
This can show up in subtle ways:
In retirement planning, it’s often not what you see that causes the problem. It is what gets missed.
Many people approach retirement believing they are prepared. They have savings, investments, and possibly a pension. On the surface, everything appears fine.
But without a structured review, gaps often exist:
Once those gaps are identified and addressed, clarity improves, and decisions become easier because the plan is better understood.
There are practical ways to assess if your financial planner’s experience is sufficient to help you have a comfortable, low-stress retirement.
Does your advisor or potential advisor:
These are indicators of experience in action.
Retirement planning in Canada should consider common situations such as:
It’s worth noting that these are not extreme scenarios; they’re part of real retirement.
Experienced financial planners help retirees prepare for them before they happen.
Experience is not just about years. It is about what those years represent. Judgment. Structure. The ability to see what is not immediately obvious. That comes with experience.
Preparation matters. Understanding matters. And guidance grounded in real experience can make a meaningful difference in how retirement unfolds.
If you want to see the difference experience can make in your retirement plan, there are two ways to work with me. If you’re approaching or living in retirement in British Columbia or Alberta, please join me at my next retirement seminar.
Or book a confidential introductory conversation with me.
Wes Forster is an experienced financial planner in Kelowna, BC, serving clients across British Columbia and Alberta. He helps individuals approaching or living in retirement build integrated, stress-tested financial plans. Through his work at Seravue Financial, Wes helps clients make thoughtful retirement income decisions with clarity and confidence.
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