Retirement Lifestyle Calculator

Project your retirement fund growth and determine if your savings will support your desired lifestyle.

Retirement Projection

$659,154

Projected Fund at Retirement

Fund Covers (years): 13.7 years

Status: Critical Gap

Fund Composition

Growth Over Time

Retirement Projection

AgePortfolio BalanceNote
Age 40$148,16710 years of saving
Age 50$294,51620 years of saving
Age 60$512,70030 years of saving
Age 65 (Retirement)$659,15413.7 years of expenses

Planning Your Retirement Lifestyle

The 4% rule suggests you can safely withdraw 4% of your retirement portfolio annually, meaning you need approximately 25 times your annual expenses saved to sustain a 30-year retirement. For example, if you expect to spend $48,000/year in retirement, you would need about $1.2 million. However, this rule assumes a 60/40 stock-bond portfolio and does not account for variable spending, healthcare costs, or sequence-of-returns risk. Real return (nominal return minus inflation) is the key metric — historically 5-7% for diversified equity portfolios. Starting early is critical: saving $500/month from age 25 vs age 35 can mean $400,000+ more at retirement. Employer 401(k) matches are essentially free money — always contribute at least enough to capture the full match. Roth vs Traditional accounts involve tradeoffs between current tax savings and tax-free withdrawals.

Practical Example

Scenario: Age 30, retire at 65, $50K saved, $500/mo, 7% return, 3% inflation, $4K/mo expenses.

Real return: 3.88% | Saving period: 35 years

Projected fund: ~$792,000 | Annual expenses: $48,000

Covers: ~16.5 years — needs more savings to reach 25+ years

Frequently Asked Questions

How much do I need to retire?

Most experts recommend 25 times your annual expenses (the 4% rule). For $50,000/year in expenses, aim for $1.25 million. This provides a high probability of not running out of money over 30 years.

What return rate should I assume?

A 6-7% nominal return is reasonable for a diversified portfolio. After 3% inflation, expect 3.5-4% real returns. Be conservative in your projections — overestimating returns can leave you short.

Should I use a Roth or Traditional 401(k)?

If your current tax rate is lower than your expected retirement rate, choose Roth. If you expect lower taxes in retirement, choose Traditional. Many advisors recommend diversifying across both.

When should I start saving for retirement?

As early as possible. Thanks to compound interest, saving $500/month from age 25 yields roughly 60% more than saving $1,000/month from age 40. Time in the market beats timing the market.

What about Social Security?

Social Security provides a baseline — currently averaging $1,800/month. It is designed to replace about 40% of pre-retirement income. Delaying claims from 62 to 70 increases benefits by about 77%.

Disclaimer: This calculator provides projections based on assumed rates. Actual returns vary. Past performance does not guarantee future results. Consult a financial advisor.

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