How to Fund an Expense from a Portfolio
Learn the steps to model funding an expense from the portfolio.
Last published on: September 03, 2025
Learn how to specify where ongoing and one-time expenses are funded in your plan. This feature lets you customize beyond default settings for more precise pre-retirement planning.
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Video: Fund an Expense from a Portfolio
Video Transcript
Hello everyone. This is an introduction
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to some new features that allow you to
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pinpoint where things are funded in
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pre-retirement from the portfolio. Um so
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by default
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um right now if you put any expenses
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uh in
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pre-retirement that are ongoing, they're
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not funded from the portfolio. They're
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just assumed to be funded from whatever
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other income you have pre-retirement.
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And if it's a one-time expense, then
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it's funded from the portfolio, like
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buying a a house or something. But now
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you'll be able to um actually specify
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whether those things are true. We'll
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still default to that. So if it's an
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ongoing expense, we will default to not
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funding from the portfolio. If it's a
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one-time expense, we'll default to
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funding from the portfolio. But you can
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turn those things on and off. So for
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example, in this plan, I have a bunch of
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things going on. I've got just a $1,000
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a month pre-retirement variable
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expense. Um we have a mortgage
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um payment and a a final payment. Um and
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in each of these what you'll see is for
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example in the other variable expenses.
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Um we now have a right under the amount
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you have this fund expense from
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portfolio in pre-retirement. Um, and the
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way to understand this is if the expense
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happens in pre-retirement, fund it from
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the portfolio, meaning take money out of
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the the portfolio to fund it. We
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probably should add an if here. Fund
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expense from portfolio, fund from
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portfolio if in
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pre-retirement. So, I might add that if.
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Um, so that one is already set there.
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Um, on the
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mortgage, you actually have two places.
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So, you can do the payments
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um fund payments from the portfolio if
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in pre-retirement. Um, by the way, if
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you're doing that, it will go to another
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variable expense. So, there's no way to
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do it baseline if you're funding it from
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the portfolio in pre-retirement. And
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then if there's a payoff early or
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anything like that, you can fund the
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final payment as well. Um, and I believe
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this is going to default to off and this
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one will default to on, but I might need
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to check
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that. And then the last thing we have
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here is this vacation
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home, which I have a planned purchase.
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And since it's a purchase, we can fund
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the purchase fund portfolio if it's in
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pre-retirement. And we've done that
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here. And so you can see that. Um, so
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more improve retirement. We don't retire
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it looks like until
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um
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2031. And we've got, you know,
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$21,39 in other variable expenses. All
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those were the ones I just went over.
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So, you got the mortgage payment and the
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variable expense, and you're taking all
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that from the taxable account. Um, and
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so the next year we're at just just
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under 3.1 million. Um, so essentially
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we've
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um, you know, it's in this case, you're
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not going to notice much of a
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difference, but if we took out those
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expenses, you'd be $21,000 and change
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higher uh than you were otherwise. And
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you'll notice here in 2026, that's when
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we're buying this um, vacation home. And
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so now I have
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221,000 in variable expenses including
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that vacation home purchase and I'm
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taking it all out of the taxable
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account. So now this is a bigger one.
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You we're going to go from about 3.1
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million to 3.03. So again um if we take
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that out you'd see a difference. For
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example, I think in this one all I did
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was said no no I'm going to pay for the
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vacation home out of
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my out of my
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income. And so you can see it's a lot
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higher um balance there. And you can
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also see I'm not
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taking Oh, here it is. So the vacation
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home purchase 170
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197,000 but my portfolio withdrawals are
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smaller uh because I'm not accounting
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for that as a as a portfolio withdrawal.
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Um so that those are all the places
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you'll see them. Again, just to just to
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go over them again. Um if in assets
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other assets if you have a planned
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um purchase then you can fund it in
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pre-retirement. If you have a
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liability then you can fund the payments
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and the final payment from
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pre-retirement. And if you have an other
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variable
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expense, you can fund that.
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