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How Much Do I Really Need to Retire?
A practical framework for calculating your retirement number based on spending, income sources, and life expectancy.
"How much do I need to retire?" is the most common question in personal finance — and the most personal. The answer depends on your lifestyle, location, health, and goals. Here's a practical framework to find your number.
The Quick Estimate: 25x Rule
The simplest method comes from the 4% Rule: multiply your annual expenses by 25.
- $40,000/year expenses → $1,000,000 needed
- $60,000/year expenses → $1,500,000 needed
- $80,000/year expenses → $2,000,000 needed
This assumes a 30-year retirement with a balanced portfolio. For earlier retirements, multiply by 28–33 instead (corresponding to a 3–3.5% withdrawal rate).
A More Detailed Approach
Step 1: Estimate Your Annual Expenses
Start with your current spending, then adjust for retirement:
Expenses that may decrease:
- Commuting and work clothes
- Mortgage (if paid off)
- Savings contributions (you've stopped saving)
- Payroll taxes
Expenses that may increase:
- Healthcare and insurance
- Travel and hobbies
- Home maintenance
- Long-term care
A common rule of thumb is that retirees need 70–80% of their pre-retirement income, but this varies widely. Some retirees spend more in their active early years and less later.
Step 2: Account for Income Sources
Not all of your retirement spending needs to come from savings. Subtract reliable income sources:
- Social Security: Average benefit is about $1,900/month ($22,800/year)
- Pension: If you have one, this is guaranteed income
- Part-time work: Even $1,000/month reduces your needed savings significantly
- Rental income: Ongoing property income
Example:
- Annual expenses: $60,000
- Social Security: −$22,800
- Gap to fill from savings: $37,200/year
- Savings needed: $37,200 × 25 = $930,000
That's significantly less than the $1.5 million you'd calculate without Social Security.
Step 3: Factor in Inflation
If retirement is 20 years away, your expenses will be higher in nominal terms. At 3% inflation:
- $60,000 today = $108,000 in 20 years
But your investments also grow, so it's best to calculate everything in today's dollars (real terms) and use real returns.
Step 4: Consider Your Timeline
The longer your retirement, the more you need:
| Retirement Length | Safe Withdrawal Rate | Multiplier |
|---|---|---|
| 20 years | 4.5% | 22x |
| 30 years | 4.0% | 25x |
| 40 years | 3.5% | 29x |
| 50 years | 3.0% | 33x |
Common Retirement Numbers by Lifestyle
These are rough benchmarks for US-based retirement in today's dollars:
Lean Retirement ($30,000–$40,000/year)
- Modest lifestyle, low-cost area
- Savings needed: $750K–$1M
Comfortable Retirement ($50,000–$70,000/year)
- Moderate lifestyle, some travel
- Savings needed: $1.25M–$1.75M
Premium Retirement ($80,000–$120,000/year)
- Active lifestyle, frequent travel
- Savings needed: $2M–$3M
The Biggest Variables
Healthcare
In the US, healthcare costs for a couple in retirement average $300,000+ over their lifetime. This is often the largest underestimated expense.
Longevity
Planning to age 90 is the minimum. If your family has a history of longevity, plan to 95 or beyond. Running out of money at 88 is not a risk worth taking.
Housing
Whether you own your home outright, still have a mortgage, or rent makes an enormous difference in your annual expense calculation.
Conclusion
Your retirement number is unique to you. Start with the 25x rule as a baseline, then refine based on your income sources, timeline, and lifestyle goals. Use our Retirement Calculator to run detailed scenarios with your actual numbers — accounting for inflation, investment returns, and pension income.
Try It Yourself
Simulate your retirement savings and pension right now.