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Home›Investing & Wealth›Building Wealth›Investing Basics

What Is Risk Tolerance?

Erajah Scypion
Erajah ScypionFounder, Scypion Finance
1 source5 min readUpdated June 14, 2026
◆ Key Takeaways
  • Risk tolerance is your ability to emotionally and financially endure portfolio losses without panicking and selling
  • Higher risk tolerance enables higher stock allocation (more volatility, more long-term growth); lower tolerance requires more bonds (less volatility, less growth)
  • Time horizon is key: 40-year investors can tolerate 30% annual losses; 5-year investors cannot
  • Understanding your true risk tolerance requires honest reflection, not questionnaires that often overestimate it
  • Most investors have lower risk tolerance than they think—when markets crash, many panic sell at the worst time
On this page
  • Risk Tolerance Components
  • Risk Tolerance and Time Horizon
  • Risk Tolerance Assessment
  • Volatility and Expected Return
  • The Sequence of Returns Risk
  • Common Risk Tolerance Mistakes
  • Factors Affecting Risk Tolerance
  • Asset Allocation by Risk Tolerance
  • Target-Date Funds
  • The Bottom Line

Risk tolerance is your financial and psychological ability to endure portfolio losses without panicking and making emotional decisions.

Risk Tolerance Components

Financial ability: Do you have income or savings to endure losses? If you lose $50,000 on your $100,000 portfolio, can you still pay rent and eat?

Psychological ability: When your $100,000 portfolio drops to $50,000 (50% loss), can you sleep at night? Or do you panic and sell?

Both matter. High financial ability with low psychological ability is still low risk tolerance.

Risk Tolerance and Time Horizon

Time horizon is the most important determinant of appropriate risk tolerance:

40-year investor (age 25):

  • Can endure 30-40% annual losses (they have 40 years to recover)
  • Appropriate allocation: 90-100% stocks
  • Expected return: 10% (but with volatility)

5-year investor (saving for home down payment):

  • Cannot endure 30% losses (no time to recover before home purchase)
  • Appropriate allocation: 40-50% stocks, 50-60% bonds
  • Expected return: 6-7% (lower but more stable)

Retiree (withdrawing money):

  • Cannot endure losses (no income to recover from them)
  • Appropriate allocation: 30-40% stocks, 60-70% bonds
  • Expected return: 4-5% (conservative)

Risk Tolerance Assessment

Honest reflection:

  • In the 2008 crisis, when the market fell 50%, would you have held or panic-sold?
  • When your portfolio is down 30%, do you feel panic or just impatience?
  • Can you go months without checking your portfolio balance?

Questionnaire limitations: Many financial advisors use risk tolerance questionnaires, but they're often inaccurate.

Question: "Would you rather have $10,000 guaranteed or a 50/50 chance of $20,000 vs. $0?"

Theoretically this measures risk tolerance. But real investors in real crises often panic regardless of their theoretical answers. The psychological stress of seeing your portfolio cut in half affects different people differently than abstract questionnaires suggest.

Volatility and Expected Return

Higher risk tolerance enables higher expected returns, but requires tolerating volatility:

Conservative portfolio (30% stocks, 70% bonds):

  • Expected annual return: 5%
  • Worst year on record: -8% (1987 crash, adjusted for allocation)
  • 3-year rolling loss: 0-5%

Moderate portfolio (60% stocks, 40% bonds):

  • Expected annual return: 7.5%
  • Worst year on record: -15%
  • 3-year rolling loss: 0-20%

Aggressive portfolio (90% stocks, 10% bonds):

  • Expected annual return: 9.5%
  • Worst year on record: -35%
  • 3-year rolling loss: 0-45%

Your tolerance determines which is appropriate. There's no "best" portfolio—only the right one for your risk tolerance.

The Sequence of Returns Risk

Risk tolerance matters more for retirees because sequence matters:

Scenario 1: Retiring in 2006

  • 2006-2007: Markets up 20% annually
  • 2008-2009: Markets down 30-40%

Result: Devastating. You're withdrawing money right as markets crash, crystallizing losses.

Scenario 2: Retiring in 2011

  • 2011-2021: Markets up 15% annually
  • No crash for a decade

Result: Fantastic. You're withdrawing from an appreciating portfolio.

Two retirees with identical portfolios had vastly different outcomes based on when they retired (sequence of returns). Low risk tolerance (bonds, cash) in scenario 1 would have been smarter.

Common Risk Tolerance Mistakes

1. Overestimating tolerance: "I can handle volatility" until the market crashes 40%, then panic-sell.

2. Ignoring time horizon: "I have 5 years, so 80% stocks is OK" (no—5 years is too short).

3. Comparing to others: "My friend is 80% stocks, so I should be too" (your situations are different).

4. Not revisiting: Life changes (job loss, inheritance, health crisis) alter risk tolerance. Review annually.

Factors Affecting Risk Tolerance

Age: Younger people have more time to recover; older people don't

Income stability: Stable income enables more stock allocation; unstable income requires bonds/cash

Financial obligations: Dependents, debt, and upcoming expenses reduce risk tolerance

Wealth level: Wealthy people can tolerate bigger losses (in percentage terms); poor people cannot

Previous experience: If you lived through 2008, you probably have lower tolerance; if you only knew bull markets, you probably have high stated tolerance but low actual tolerance

Asset Allocation by Risk Tolerance

Very conservative (cannot tolerate losses):

  • 20% stocks, 60% bonds, 20% cash
  • Expected return: 4%
  • Expected volatility: 5%

Conservative:

  • 40% stocks, 50% bonds, 10% cash
  • Expected return: 5.5%
  • Expected volatility: 8%

Moderate:

  • 60% stocks, 35% bonds, 5% cash
  • Expected return: 7.5%
  • Expected volatility: 10%

Aggressive:

  • 80% stocks, 15% bonds, 5% cash
  • Expected return: 9%
  • Expected volatility: 14%

Very aggressive:

  • 90%+ stocks, <10% bonds/cash
  • Expected return: 10%
  • Expected volatility: 18%+

Target-Date Funds

Target-date funds automatically adjust allocation based on time to retirement:

  • 2060 fund (for age 25): 90% stocks initially
  • 2040 fund (for age 45): 70% stocks initially
  • 2020 fund (for age 65): 40-50% stocks

Each year, the allocation becomes more conservative. This removes the need to manually reassess risk tolerance as you age.

The Bottom Line

Risk tolerance is personal. It's determined by time horizon, financial ability, and psychological comfort with volatility. The right portfolio is the one you'll stick with during market crashes—not the one that theoretically has the highest return.

A 5% portfolio you won't panic-sell beats a 10% portfolio you'll panic-sell at the worst time. Knowing your true risk tolerance is the foundation of a winning investment strategy.

◆ Sources

  1. Risk Tolerance Explained — Investopedia
On this page
  • Risk Tolerance Components
  • Risk Tolerance and Time Horizon
  • Risk Tolerance Assessment
  • Volatility and Expected Return
  • The Sequence of Returns Risk
  • Common Risk Tolerance Mistakes
  • Factors Affecting Risk Tolerance
  • Asset Allocation by Risk Tolerance
  • Target-Date Funds
  • The Bottom Line
◆ Related reading
  • What Is Asset Allocation?
  • What Is a Dividend?
  • What Is Dollar-Cost Averaging?
  • What Is an ETF?
All Investing Basics →
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Erajah Scypion
Erajah Scypion
Founder, Scypion Finance

I got interested in economics the hard way — by not understanding what was happening around me. I'd read an explanation, nod along, and walk away knowing no more than when I started. After enough of that, I stopped looking for the resource I wanted and started writing it.

View full profile →

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