Retirement Calculator

Find out if you're on track for a comfortable retirement - and what it takes to get there.

🏖️ Retirement Calculator
Current Retirement Savings ($) $100,000
$
$0$5M
Annual Savings Contribution ($) $15,000
$
$0$100K
Current Age 35 yrs
yrs
1870
Retirement Age 65 yrs
yrs
4075
Life Expectancy 90 yrs
yrs
65110
Desired Monthly Income ($) $5,000
$
$500$50K
Monthly Social Security ($) $2,000
$
$0$10K
Pre-Retirement Return Rate 7%
%
1%15%
Projected Nest Egg
Required Nest Egg
Monthly Income Gap
Retirement Readiness

🏖️ What Does Retirement Planning Involve?

Retirement planning is the process of determining how much money you need to retire comfortably and what you must do during your working years to reach that target. The two fundamental questions are: How large a portfolio do I need? And am I on track to build it? This calculator answers both by projecting your retirement nest egg based on current savings and future contributions, then comparing it to the amount required to generate your desired monthly income for your expected retirement duration.

The target nest egg is derived from the 4% rule (or a chosen safe withdrawal rate): divide your annual income need by the SWR. For $60,000/year at a 4% SWR, you need $1.5 million. The income need is the gap between your desired monthly income and guaranteed income sources like Social Security or a pension. A Social Security benefit of $2,000/month reduces the gap from savings by $24,000/year - requiring $600,000 less in the portfolio at a 4% SWR.

Retirement readiness is the percentage ratio of your projected nest egg to your required nest egg. A score above 100% means you're on track to meet (or exceed) your income goal. A score below 100% indicates a shortfall. Key levers to improve readiness: increase annual contributions, extend working years, reduce target retirement income, increase investment return, or factor in higher Social Security benefits by delaying claiming.

📐 Retirement Calculator Formula

Projected Nest Egg = PV × (1+r)ⁿ + PMT × [(1+r)ⁿ − 1] / r × (1+r)
Required Nest Egg = (Monthly Income − SS) × 12 / SWR
Readiness = Projected / Required × 100%
PV = Current retirement savings
PMT = Annual savings contribution
r = Annual return rate during accumulation
n = Years to retirement
SS = Monthly Social Security income
SWR = Safe withdrawal rate (default 4%)

The Required Nest Egg calculation adjusts for Social Security - only the income gap (desired income minus SS) must come from savings. The readiness percentage tells you at a glance how well-positioned you are. A readiness above 100% may allow for earlier retirement, higher income, or leaving a legacy.

📖 How to Use This Calculator

Steps

1
Enter current savings and annual contribution - include all retirement accounts (401k, IRA, taxable investments earmarked for retirement).
2
Enter age details - current age, target retirement age, and estimated life expectancy (use 85–95 for conservative planning).
3
Enter income needs and Social Security - your desired monthly spending in retirement and your estimated Social Security benefit (check SSA.gov).
4
Click Calculate to see your projected vs. required nest egg, readiness percentage, and income gap from savings.

💡 Example Calculations

Example 1 - On-Track Saver, Age 35

Savings = $100K | Annual contribution = $15K | Age 35→65 | SS = $2K/mo | Income need = $5K/mo | Return = 7%

1
FV of $100K over 30 years = $100,000 × (1.07)³⁰ = $761,226
2
FV of $15K/year over 30 years = $15,000 × [(1.07)³⁰ − 1]/0.07 × 1.07 = $1,510,722
3
Projected nest egg = $761,226 + $1,510,722 = $2,271,948
4
Income gap = $5,000 − $2,000 = $3,000/mo = $36,000/yr. Required nest egg = $36,000 / 4% = $900,000
Readiness = $2,271,948 / $900,000 = 252% - Well on track!
Try this example →

Example 2 - Late Starter, Age 45

Savings = $50K | Annual = $10K | Age 45→65 | SS = $1,500/mo | Income need = $4K/mo | Return = 7%

Projected: ~$540K | Required: ($4K − $1.5K) × 12 / 4% = $750K | Readiness: 72% - Gap of $210K
Try this example →

❓ Frequently Asked Questions

How much do I need to retire?+
The most common rule is the 25x rule: multiply your desired annual retirement income by 25. For $60,000/year in retirement, you need $1.5 million. This is based on the 4% safe withdrawal rate - a portfolio of 25x annual expenses can sustain a 4% inflation-adjusted withdrawal for at least 30 years in nearly all historical scenarios.
How much should I save for retirement in India?+
A common target: accumulate 25-30x your annual expenses at retirement. For Rs 60,000/month spending (Rs 7.2 lakh/year), target Rs 1.8-2.16 crore. Starting early dramatically reduces the monthly savings needed - Rs 10,000/month at 25 grows to Rs 3.5 crore by 60 at 12% return; starting at 35 requires Rs 35,000+/month for the same goal.
What is the post-retirement corpus drawdown strategy?+
A bucket strategy works well: Bucket 1 (2-3 years expenses) in liquid/FD; Bucket 2 (3-7 years) in debt mutual funds; Bucket 3 (7+ years) in balanced/equity funds. Refill Bucket 1 annually from Bucket 2 gains. This avoids selling equities in a downturn while maintaining long-term growth for the later years.
How does life expectancy affect retirement planning?+
Plan for at least age 90 (30 years if retiring at 60) to avoid outliving your savings. With medical advances, living past 95 is increasingly common. Running out of money at 85 is a catastrophic risk. This calculator lets you adjust retirement age, corpus growth rate, and withdrawal amounts to stress-test your plan against different longevity scenarios.
How much should I save for retirement each year?+
Most planners recommend saving 10–15% of gross income throughout your career. Fidelity suggests 15% including employer contributions. Benchmarks: 1x salary by 30, 3x by 40, 6x by 50, 8x by 60, 10x by 67. Starting later requires a higher savings rate to reach these targets.
What investment return should I assume?+
For long-term planning, 6–7% nominal annual return is commonly used for a diversified portfolio. After 2–3% inflation, this is 4–5% in real terms. Use 6–7% for balanced portfolios, 7–8% for equity-heavy portfolios, and 4–5% for conservative portfolios.
How does Social Security factor in?+
Social Security replaces about 40% of average pre-retirement income. The benefit depends on your 35 highest-earning years and claiming age. Claiming at 62 reduces benefits by up to 30%; delaying to 70 increases by 8%/year past full retirement age. Social Security reduces the gap your savings must fill, directly lowering your Required Nest Egg.
What is a retirement income gap?+
The retirement income gap is the difference between your desired monthly income and your guaranteed income sources (Social Security, pension). If you need $5,000/month and receive $2,000 from Social Security, your gap is $3,000/month - $36,000/year. Your portfolio must generate $36,000 sustainably, requiring a nest egg of $900,000 at 4% SWR.
How much money do I need to retire comfortably?+
A common rule of thumb is 25x annual expenses (based on the 4% safe withdrawal rate). Spending $60,000/year targets a $1.5 million portfolio. Fidelity suggests 10x your final salary. Actual needs depend on lifestyle, healthcare, Social Security income, and retirement duration.
What is the average retirement savings by age in the US?+
Per Vanguard 2023 data, median 401k balances: $18,900 (ages 25-34), $45,174 (35-44), $77,805 (45-54), $87,571 (55-64). Fidelity benchmarks: 1x salary by 30, 3x by 40, 6x by 50, 8x by 60, and 10x by age 67.
How does Social Security income affect my retirement savings goal?+
Social Security reduces the portfolio you need to build. If you expect $24,000/year from Social Security and need $60,000/year total, your portfolio only needs to cover $36,000, requiring $900,000 instead of $1.5 million. Delaying benefits from 62 to 70 increases monthly benefits by about 76%.