How Much Money Do You Need to Retire Comfortably? 7 Steps

How much money do you need to retire — retirement savings planning guide
how much money do you need to retire

How much do you actually need to retire comfortably? The answer isn’t as simple as “$1 million” (though we’ll get to why that number keeps popping up). It depends on your lifestyle, where you live, and when you want to stop working.

Let me walk you through this step by step, using real data and practical examples that actually make sense.

According to the Federal Reserve’s 2025 Survey of Consumer Finances, the median retirement savings for Americans aged 55-64 is just $185,000. That’s the median—half of people have even less. Meanwhile, the average 65-year-old couple will spend approximately $315,000 on healthcare alone during retirement (Fidelity, 2026). And that’s just medical expenses.

Not trying to scare you. Just want you to understand why we’re having this conversation.

 

The 4% Rule: Your Starting Point

The concept is simple. If you withdraw 4% of your retirement savings in your first year of retirement, then adjust that amount for inflation each year, your money should last at least 30 years.

So if you have $1 million saved:

  • Year 1: Withdraw $40,000
  • Year 2: Withdraw $40,000 + inflation adjustment (let’s say $41,200 at 3% inflation)

 And so on…

This rule comes from the Trinity Study (1998), which analyzed historical market returns and found that a 4% withdrawal rate had a 95% success rate over 30-year periods.

But the 4% rule was designed for a 50/50 stock-bond portfolio. If you’re more conservative (more bonds), you might need to use 3.5%. If you retire during a market crash, that 4% could be too aggressive.

I think of 4% as a guideline, not a guarantee. Your actual safe withdrawal rate depends on market conditions when you retire, your age, and your flexibility.

 

How Much Do You Really Need? Let’s Do the Math

Annual Retirement Income Needed ÷ 0.04 = Total Retirement Savings Needed

But first, you need to figure out that annual income number. Let’s work through an example.

Example 1: The “Comfortable Middle-Class” Retirement

Meet Sara and Tom, ages 62 and 64:

  • Current household income: $85,000/year
  • Mortgage will be paid off by retirement
  • Want to travel 2-3 times per year
  • Live in Austin, Texas (moderate cost of living)

They estimate they’ll need 80% of their current income in retirement (a common rule of thumb):

  • $85,000 × 0.80 = $68,000/year

Now subtract guaranteed income sources:

  • Social Security (combined): $42,000/year (average for couple in 2026)
  • Tom’s small pension: $8,000/year
  • Total guaranteed income: $50,000/year

Gap to fill: $68,000 – $50,000 = $18,000/year

Using the 4% rule:

$18,000 ÷ 0.04 = $450,000 needed in retirement savings

That’s way more doable than $1 million, right? That’s because they have Social Security and a pension doing heavy lifting.

Example 2: The “Early Retirement” Dream

Now meet Alex, age 45:

  • Current income: $95,000/year
  • Wants to retire at 55 (in 10 years)
  • No pension
  • Won’t qualify for Social Security until 62 (and wants to delay until 67 for higher payments)

Alex needs to bridge a longer gap:

  • Desired retirement income: $70,000/year
  • Social Security at 67: $28,000/year (estimated)
  • Years without Social Security: 12 years (age 55-67)

For ages 55-67:

$70,000 ÷ 0.04 = $1,750,000 needed

But that’s just for the first 12 years. After Social Security kicks in:

Gap: $70,000 – $28,000 = $42,000

$42,000 ÷ 0.04 = $1,050,000 needed

This gets complicated because you’re drawing down more aggressively early on. Most financial planners would recommend Alex aim for $1.8-$2 million to be safe.

See why early retirement is so expensive? You need to fund more years, and you lose out on Social Security for a while.

 

The Geographic Wild Card

Something that doesn’t get enough attention is where you retire dramatically changes how much you need.

Let’s say you need $50,000/year from your portfolio (after Social Security):

In San Francisco or New York City:

  • Housing costs are 2-3x the national average
  • You might actually need $75,000-$80,000 to live comparably
  • Required savings: $1,875,000 – $2,000,000

In Tampa, Florida or Boise, Idaho:

  • Lower housing costs and no state income tax (Florida)
  • $50,000 goes much further
  • Required savings: $1,250,000

In Mérida, Mexico or Lisbon, Portugal:

  • Many retirees live comfortably on $2,000-$3,000/month
  • Required savings: $600,000 – $900,000

I’m not saying you should move to Mexico (though some people love it). I’m saying don’t ignore geography in your planning. Moving one state over could save you $500,000 in required retirement savings.

 

The Healthcare Bomb

Let’s talk about the elephant in the retirement room: Healthcare.

If you retire before 65 (when Medicare kicks in), health insurance will likely be your second-biggest expense after housing.

Real numbers for 2026:

  • Average private health insurance for a couple in their early 60s: $1,800-$2,400/month
  • That’s $21,600-$28,800 per year
  • Just for premiums—not including deductibles and copays

After 65, you get Medicare, but it’s not free:

  • Medicare Part B premium: $174.70/month per person (2026)
  • Medicare Part D (prescription drugs): $40-$50/month
  • Medigap or Medicare Advantage: $100-$300/month
  • Total: $350-$600/month per person

And remember that $315,000 lifetime healthcare cost I mentioned earlier? Plan for it.

My advice: add an extra $300,000-$500,000 to your retirement savings just for healthcare, especially if you want to retire before 65. It sounds crazy, but medical costs are the #1 cause of retirement plan failures.

 

Age-Based Retirement Savings Milestones

Want to know if you’re on track? Here are some realistic benchmarks based on your current age and income:

By Age 30:

  • Target: 1x your annual salary saved
  • Example: If you make $60,000, aim for $60,000 saved
  • Why it’s achievable: You’ve got time and compound interest on your side

By Age 40:

  • Target: 3x your annual salary
  • Example: $60,000 income = $180,000 saved
  • Reality check: Many people are closer to 2x due to student loans, kids, etc.

By Age 50:

  • Target: 6x your annual salary
  • Example: $75,000 income = $450,000 saved
  • This is where catch-up contributions help (you can add extra to 401(k) after 50)

By Age 60:

  • Target: 8x your annual salary
  • Example: $80,000 income = $640,000 saved
  • You’re in the home stretch—max out all contributions now

By Age 67 (Full Retirement Age):

  • Target: 10x your annual salary
  • Example: $85,000 income = $850,000 saved
  • Combined with Social Security, this should fund a comfortable retirement
 

Creating Your Personal Retirement Number: A Step-by-Step Worksheet

Okay, let’s calculate YOUR number right now.

Step 1: Estimate your annual retirement expenses

Housing (mortgage/rent, insurance, taxes, maintenance): $_______

Transportation (car, insurance, gas, maintenance): $_______

Food (groceries + dining out): $_______

Healthcare (insurance, medications, copays): $_______

Utilities (electric, water, internet, phone): $_______

Entertainment and hobbies: $_______

Travel: $_______

Gifts and personal care: $_______

Miscellaneous and emergency buffer: $_______

Total Annual Expenses: $_______  (A)

 

Step 2: Calculate guaranteed income sources

Social Security (estimate from ssa.gov): $_______/year

Pension (if applicable): $_______/year

Rental income: $_______/year

Annuity income: $_______/year

Part-time work in retirement: $_______/year

Total Guaranteed Income: $_______  (B)

 

Step 3: Calculate the gap

Income Gap: (A) – (B) = $_______  ©

 

Step 4: Calculate retirement savings needed

Using 4% rule: (C) ÷ 0.04 = $_______  (D)

 

Step 5: Add healthcare buffer

Healthcare reserve: $300,000 – $500,000

Emergency reserve: $50,000 – $100,000

Total Additional Reserves: $_______  (E)

 

YOUR RETIREMENT NUMBER: (D) + (E) = $_______

 

Common Retirement Planning Mistakes 

Mistake #1: Underestimating healthcare costs

Mistake #2: Claiming Social Security too early

Mistake #3: Paying too much in investment fees

Mistake #4: Not adjusting asset allocation as you age

Mistake #5: Ignoring taxes in retirement

Mistake #6: Retiring into a bear market

Mistake #7: Not having a withdrawal strategy

 

The Bottom Line:

Something is always better than nothing. Even if you can’t hit the “ideal” number, every dollar you save gives you more options. Your retirement doesn’t have to look like everyone else’s. Maybe you’ll work part-time doing something you love. Maybe you’ll move somewhere cheaper. Maybe you’ll need less than you think. Don’t let perfect be the enemy of good. Focus on what you can control: your savings rate, your spending, your investment fees, and when you claim Social Security. Stressing about market returns you can’t predict won’t help.

The retirement you want is probably more achievable than you think—but only if you start planning for it today, not “someday.”

Mehrab Musa From Asset Stories.

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