How Much Money Do I Need to Retire? (2024)

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The question “How much money do I need to retire?” is often seen as impossible to answer – or an impossibly large answer.

But you may be surprised to hear that it’s amazingly simple to work out and, better yet, completely possible to reach.

How Much Money Do I Need to Retire? (1)

As long as you’re not planning to spend wildly during your retirement, the magic number for the amount of money you’ll need is likely to be much less than you think.

In addition, there’s a double bonus in getting your spending under control now in order to accelerate your saving for retirement.

Firstly, you’ll be saving more money now, allowing you to retire even earlier.

At the same time, those reformed spending habits will allow your money in retirement to last even longer.

Essentially, with one action, you’re doubling up your chances of retiring early!

And as an added bonus, it’s so easy to calculate how much you will need for retirement, even those of us who are, ahem, mathematically challenged can figure it out.

Yes, I’m serious. Using this super straightforward formula, you’ll be able to find out just how much money you’ll need to keep you going for the rest of your life.

There are actually two different calculations you can use to work this out, both of which produce the same figure.

Based on your average annual expenditure

This is the most well-known and it’s as simple as this:

Step 1: Work out how much you will need to spend per yearto live the lifestyle that you want to have during retirement. This therefore assumes that this is how much you will continue to spend every year for the rest of your life.

(Not sure how much that is? To get an idea of your current spending to base your calculation off that figure, I’d recommend trying Personal Capital. It’s a super easy way to keep track of your finances.)

Step 2: Multiply it by 25. I’ll explain why below.

Based on your average monthly expenditure

This will produce the same figure as above, but may be easier if you prefer to track your expenses on a monthly basis:

Step 1: Work out how much you will spend per month during retirement.

Step 2: Multiply it by 300.Explanation coming, I promise.

Show me how, Maths is hard

Step 1: Say I’m planning to spend $40,000 per year for the rest of my life. That’s equivalent to $3,333.33 per month.

This includeseverything. Taxes (e.g. capital gains tax from selling your investments year to year, land tax or similar expenses depending on where you live etc.), living costs (including expenses relating to your residence as well as e.g. food, clothes etc.), and lifestyle costs (travel, the new hobby you plan to take up when you retire etc.).

Step 2:$40,000 x 25 = $1,000,000

Similarly, $3,333.33 x 300 = $1,000,000

So at this rate of expenditure, I would need $1,000,000 to retire.

Simple!

Any questions?

Where did you get those numbers from?

The numbers used in these calculations are taken from what’s known as thefour percent rule.

This is based on an assumption that the average annual rate of return on your investments will be 5% after inflation.

Consequently, this allows you to safely withdraw 4% of your investments forever without your money running out. This is, however, subject to some basic money management on your part.

*whisper* Um, what’s inflation?

While some of you may know this already, I have been asked to break this down by a few others, so this section is for the latter group.

Inflation is the rate at which the general level of prices of goods and services is rising. This means, at the same time, the amount of things that your money can buy is decreasing at the same rate.

For example, at an inflation rate of 3%, $1,000 last year (if it does not earn any interest) will be able to buy $970 worth of things this year.

This is partly why you shouldmake your money work for you to ensure that it keeps rising ahead of the rate of inflation and thus gains, rather than loses, value.

(Not sure how to do that? Why not check outThe Beginners’ Guide To Investing Like An Expert (Including How To Beat The Professionals).)

It’s also why keeping all of your money in a standard bank account with low interest rates (or, say, under the mattress) is not sound investment advice: because it willlosevalue from year to year.

Got it? Cool. Let’s keep going then, shall we?

Because smarter people than me did the calculations.

Enter the Trinity Study.

The Trinity Study was first published in the late 1990s and essentially asked: “If you had retired at anytime since 1926, how much could you spend each year for 30 years without running out of money?”

It’s pretty detailed and super interesting. Well, at least I think so. (Ready to invite me to your next party yet?)

As a summary, some key conclusions to take from it (as can be seen inthis table) are as follows:

  • If you withdraw 4% or less of your portfolio value each year, you are pretty much guaranteed to be able to live off your investments for 30 years. This is especially the case if you hold 75% stocks and 25% bonds.
    • Not sure what a bond is? Check out our summary here!
  • If you would prefer to withdraw 5% or 6% of your portfolio value each year, it is best for you to hold 50% stocks and 50% bonds.
  • If you are considering withdrawing 7% or more of your portfolio each year, it becomes less likely that you’d be able to make it to the end of the 30-year period. BUT it’s not impossible, as long as you keep a good eye on things and are prepared to adjust your spending if the market falls.

This means thatif you commit to only withdrawing 4% of your portfolio value per year, it is as close to certain as you can get that you would be able to fund your lifestyle for thirty yearswithout earning an additional cent.

Almost certainly.

What about future market crashes?

The 30-year periods looked at by the Trinity Study included some of the biggest stock market crashes in history, including the Wall Street Crash of 1929 and Black Monday in 1987.And it still found that you could live for 30 years off a withdrawal rate of 4%.

That said, there are things to keep in mind.

For example, if you happened to be unlucky enough to retire in 2008 as the market crashed and your portfolio value similarly plummeted, you would have had to limit your spending a bit until the market recovered.

(As it always does, mind you. After the biggest drop in any single day in history in 2008, the markets recovered to the same pre-crash point after 4.5 years. A good lesson for why you shouldn’t panic sell during the next dip.)

This is because while 4% of $1,000,000 is $40,000, if your portfolio suffers a drop of 20% to $800,000, then 4% of that would only be $32,000. In cases like that, it would be best to reduce your spending accordingly during the downturn to stay at the 4% safe withdrawal rate for that year.

Taking the example above of retiring in 2008, it should be noted that this aligns with what Wade Pfau has found with respect to the 4% rule:

“Retirement success is more dependent on what happens early in retirement than late in retirement. In fact, the wealth remaining 10 years after retirement combined with the cumulative inflation during those 10 years can explain 80 percent of the variation in a retiree’s maximum sustainable withdrawal rate after 30 years.”

If your eyes glazed over at that, don’t worry, I got you.

To break it down: If you get through the first ten years of your retirement with your investment portfolio still at a reasonable amount (i.e. you spend an amount equivalent to your safe withdrawal rate each year and inflation doesn’t suddenly sky rocket), then you’re essentially guaranteed to make it the rest of the way.

As such, any blips during those first ten years may have to be carefully managed, depending on the severity of the blip. But assuming you make it through – and chances are very high that you will – you’re pretty much good to go.

Glad you asked!

The Trinity Study made some fairly broad assumptions, such as the following:

You won’t earn any money from working during retirement. We’ve already clarified though that this isn’t true for almost half of the population.

You won’t gain money from any other sources during retirement, such as through inheritance or social security. While social security in most developed countries is not expected to be provided at the same level in the future as it has historically, you are still likely to receive a small amount of income from this.

You won’t adjust your spending during downturns. This is more than likely incorrect given that most people would normally make small adjustments as needed during more difficult times.

You won’t naturally spend less as you age. Not true, asit’s been establishedthat people spend less as they get older. Check out Table 2 at that link, which indicates that people, on average, have annual expenditures at age 75 and up of less than half of those aged 55-59.

All of this means thatit is highly unlikely that you will not earn another cent during retirement.

And any money you earn during this time reduces the amount that you have to withdraw from your investments in order to have on hand the funds that you need in a particular year to pay for your lifestyle.

(For example: if you have calculated that you need to withdraw $40,000 from your portfolio each year but then you earn $5,000 from other sources in a particular year, you will ultimately only need to withdraw $35,000 that year to fund your lifestyle)

This, in turn,allows your investment portfolio to last even longer.

It’s true that the Trinity Study calculated the 4% rule based on its study of multiple 30-year periods.

However, people live longer now.

More importantly, those of us who intend to retire early will need our investments to last significantly longer than 30 years.

But let’s revisit the assumption that was made at the time of establishing the 4% rule:

“This is based on an assumption that the average annual rate of return on your investments will be 5% after inflation.”

As such, withdrawing 4% of your investments each year (with any adjustments as needed during economic downturns), will mean that you will be withdrawing less than your portfolio’s returns. This, in turn, meansthat your money should last forever.

Subject to you ensuring that your spending does not get wildly out of control relative to your investments,the biggest issue is that you may have too much money leftover when you die.

This article points out the following:

In fact,not only do 90%+ of retirees finish with more than their starting principal after 30 years by following the 4% rule (so even if you outlive the time horizon, there’s still funds left over), the “typical” retiree actually finishes with many multiples of their starting wealth with this spending approach! Over 2/3rds of the time the retiree finishes withmore-than-doubletheir initial principal left over. And the median wealth at the end of 30 years is almost 2.8X principal! One-in-six scenarios finish with more thanquintuplethe retiree’s initial wealth!

How irritating if I check my account in my 90s and see that I still have more than $1,000,000 left – imagine how much earlier I could have stopped working!

This is obviously not the worst problem in the world to have. But still.

(Please don’t take this as meaning that the 4% rule is rubbish and that you can spend whatever you want. My “irritation” at having more than $1,000,000 left is nowhere near to the “irritation” I would have if economic conditions changed and I ran out of money as a retiree.)

In brief, you should keep the following in mind when determining when (and how) you can retire early:

  • To calculate the amount of money you need: multiply your annual expenses by 25 OR multiply your monthly expenses by 300
  • If you withdraw 4% or less of your investment value per year, you are almost guaranteed to be able to fund your lifestyle forever. Even 5% to 6% should be fine, subject to slight adjustments to the percentage of stocks and bonds in your portfolio
  • Make sure you cut back your spending as needed during economic downturns
  • If you earn any money at all during your retirement, as most people do, this will allow you to withdraw even less from your investments, thus further ensuring the success of the 4% rule as a retirement strategy

How Much Money Do I Need to Retire? (2)

Money Bee

As a teenager, I asked for personal finance books for Christmas. While misguided haircuts came and went, I never managed to shake off this particular obsession. Now in my early 30s, my interests have broadened to include travelling, pretending that I don't have a caffeine addiction, and retiring well before my 40th birthday.

How Much Money Do I Need to Retire? (2024)

FAQs

How Much Money Do I Need to Retire? ›

By age 40, you should have accumulated three times your current income for retirement. By retirement age, it should be 10 to 12 times your income at that time to be reasonably confident that you'll have enough funds. Seamless transition — roughly 80% of your pre-retirement income.

How much money should be enough for retirement? ›

In other words, your retirement corpus should be at least 30 times your annual expenses of today. For example, if you are 50 years old and your monthly expenses are Rs 75,000 (or annually Rs 9 lakh), then as per the 30X rule, you need 30 times Rs 9 lakh to retire comfortably. That is Rs 2.70 crore.

What is the average amount needed to retire comfortably? ›

The majority of retirees surveyed believe that they will need $1.46 million in the bank to retire comfortably, according to Northwestern Mutual's 2024 Planning & Progress Study. That's a 15% increase — which far outpaces the 3% to 5% inflation rate — over last year and is up 53% from 2020.

Can you retire $1.5 million comfortably? ›

That's approximately how long your nest egg is likely to last, according to the 4% rule of thumb. If you live longer, however, you might have to cut back or risk running out of money. If that budget looks comfortable, it's a good sign that you can reasonably expect $1.5 million will cover it if you retire at 45.

Is $1 million enough to retire for a couple? ›

How long will $1 million in retirement savings last? In more than 20 U.S. states, a million-dollar nest egg can cover retirees' living expenses for at least 20 years, a new analysis shows.

What is a good monthly retirement income? ›

Many retirees fall far short of that amount, but their savings may be supplemented with other forms of income. According to data from the BLS, average 2022 incomes after taxes were as follows for older households: 65-74 years: $63,187 per year or $5,266 per month. 75 and older: $47,928 per year or $3,994 per month.

Is $100 a month enough for retirement? ›

Based on the same parameters above, you'd save approximately $327,161 by age 65 if you put away $100 a month with a 3% partial employer match of your salary.

What is the average social security check? ›

Overall total average payments for the state of California: Total number of beneficiaries: 6,166,205. Total benefits: $9,340,498,000. Average total benefits: $1,515.

What is a good salary to retire with? ›

After analyzing many scenarios, we found that 75% is a good starting point to consider for your income replacement rate. This means that if you make $100,000 shortly before retirement, you can start to plan using the ballpark expectation that you'll need about $75,000 a year to live on in retirement.

How much do most people retire with? ›

The average retirement savings for all families is $333,940, according to the 2022 Survey of Consumer Finances.

What is the average 401k balance for a 65 year old? ›

Average and median 401(k) balances by age
Age rangeAverage balanceMedian balance
35-44$76,354$28,318
45-54$142,069$48,301
55-64$207,874$71,168
65+$232,710$70,620
2 more rows
Mar 13, 2024

How many people have $1,000,000 in retirement savings? ›

According to the Federal Reserve's latest Survey of Consumer Finances, only about 10% of American retirees have managed to save $1 million or more. This leaves a significant 90% who fall short of this milestone. Don't Miss: The average American couple has saved this much money for retirement — How do you compare?

Can I live off interest on a million dollars? ›

Once you have $1 million in assets, you can look seriously at living entirely off the returns of a portfolio. After all, the S&P 500 alone averages 10% returns per year. Setting aside taxes and down-year investment portfolio management, a $1 million index fund could provide $100,000 annually.

How much monthly income will $1 million generate? ›

At the current Treasury rate of 4.3%, a $1 million portfolio would generate about $43,000 per year, or roughly $3,500 per month. With your Social Security payments that would generate about $6,000, again enough to live comfortably in most places.

Can I retire on $500,000 plus Social Security? ›

Can I retire on 500k plus Social Security? As we have established, retiring on $500k is entirely feasible. With the addition of Social Security benefits, this becomes even more of a possibility. In retirement, Social Security benefits can provide an additional $1,900 per month, on average.

Is $2 million enough to retire? ›

Summary. $2 million is far above the average retirement savings in the US. $2 million should afford you to enjoy a comfortable and happy retirement. If you choose to retire at 50, a retirement savings fund of $2 million would provide you with $50,000 annually.

What is a realistic amount of money for retirement? ›

Fidelity's guideline: Aim to save at least 1x your salary by 30, 3x by 40, 6x by 50, 8x by 60, and 10x by 67. Factors that will impact your personal savings goal include the age you plan to retire and the lifestyle you hope to have in retirement. If you're behind, don't fret.

Can I retire at 62 with 500k? ›

Can I retire on 500k plus Social Security? As we have established, retiring on $500k is entirely feasible. With the addition of Social Security benefits, this becomes even more of a possibility. In retirement, Social Security benefits can provide an additional $1,900 per month, on average.

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