Retirement Calculator

Estimate the nest egg you need at retirement and the monthly savings required to reach it.

All math runs in your browser — nothing is uploadedReviewed & updated: Methodology
Progress toward target
0%100%+
Result breakdownInvested: 235,000 (19.8%); Growth: 953,181.1 (80.2%)
Nest egg
$1,188,181.10
Total invested$235,000.00
Investment growth$953,181.10
Target needed$1,500,000.00
Shortfall$311,818.90
Two phases: decades of accumulation, then a controlled drawdown funded by growth.

How the retirement projection works

The calculator applies compound growth to your current balance and to each future contribution, then estimates a sustainable withdrawal from the resulting nest egg. Two formulas do the work. The future value of a starting balance P after n years at annual return r is FV = P × (1 + r)^n. The future value of an annuity — a stream of yearly contributions C — is FV = C × ((1 + r)^n − 1) / r. Adding them gives your projected retirement balance.

Worked example

A 30-year-old with $10,000 saved, contributing $500 per month ($6,000 per year), earning a 7% real return, will retire at 65 with roughly $938,000. Wait until 40 to start with the same contribution and you land near $438,000 — less than half, for missing only ten years. That gap is the compounding tax on delay, and the retirement calculator makes it visible instantly.

Start ageYears investedProjected balance
2540$1.32M
3035$938K
3530$654K
4025$438K
4520$286K
Nest egg at age 65 by start age ($500/mo, 7% real return, $10k seed)

The 4% rule and safe withdrawal rates

Once you retire, how much can you spend from the portfolio each year without running out? The Trinity study and follow-up research popularized the 4% rule: withdraw 4% of the balance in year one, then adjust that dollar amount for inflation each subsequent year, and a diversified stock-and-bond portfolio has historically supported a 30-year retirement. A $1M nest egg thus supports about $40,000 of first-year spending, or roughly $3,300 per month.

The three inputs that dominate the result

  1. Time horizon. Every extra year of compounding grows the outcome roughly by the return rate — 7% more balance per year, ignoring contributions.
  2. Savings rate. Retirement is funded by the gap between income and spending; personal savings rate, not raw income, is the biggest lever.
  3. Real return. Use a real (after-inflation) return of 5%–7% for a diversified portfolio; using nominal 10% will overstate the nest egg's purchasing power by decades' worth of inflation.

Tax-advantaged accounts amplify the result

Contributions to a 401(k) or traditional IRA reduce current taxable income and grow tax-deferred; Roth 401(k) and Roth IRA contributions are after-tax but withdrawn tax-free in retirement. The 2026 employee 401(k) contribution limit is $23,000 with an additional $7,500 catch-up at age 50+. Employer matches are essentially free money — a full match on a 6% contribution is a 100% return on those dollars before any market return.

Sensitivity: what small changes are worth

  • Raising the savings rate from 10% to 15% of income shortens the years-to-retirement by roughly 8–10 years.
  • Cutting portfolio fees from 1% to 0.1% adds 20%–30% to the final balance over a 40-year horizon.
  • Delaying retirement by two years is often equivalent to another decade of contributions in terms of sustainable income.

How to use this retirement calculator

  1. Enter your current age and target retirement age.
  2. Enter your current retirement savings and expected monthly contribution.
  3. Set a realistic real return — 5%–7% for a diversified stock-and-bond portfolio.
  4. Read the projected balance and the 4%-rule sustainable annual income.
  5. Adjust inputs to test earlier retirement, higher contributions, or lower returns.

Companion tools

Pair the retirement calculator with the compound interest calculator to isolate the effect of a single-return assumption, the inflation calculator to see how prices erode purchasing power over 30 years, and the investment calculator to model lump-sum vs. periodic contributions side by side.

Glossary

Nest egg
The total portfolio balance available at retirement to fund spending.
Safe withdrawal rate
The percentage of the initial portfolio that can be withdrawn each year (inflation-adjusted) with high historical success.
Real return
Investment return after subtracting inflation; the correct rate to project purchasing power.
Sequence-of-returns risk
The risk that poor early-retirement returns permanently damage a portfolio despite good average returns.
401(k) match
Employer contribution matched to a portion of the employee's retirement contributions.

How it works

Target = annual spending / safe-withdrawal-rate. Solve compounding for required PMT.

Example

Want $60k/yr at 4% SWR → $1.5M target. 30 years at 7% requires ~$1,275/mo.

Frequently asked questions

What's the 4% rule?
A rule of thumb suggesting you can withdraw 4% of your portfolio annually with high odds of not running out over 30 years.
Should I account for Social Security?
Yes — subtract expected SS income from your annual retirement spending target.
What return should I use?
6–7% real is a common long-term diversified assumption.
What about healthcare?
Add it to your annual spending target — it's often the biggest retirement expense.

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