🎉 Retirement plan ready!
🎉 Financial Freedom

Retirement Planner

Find your exact retirement number, see if you're on track, and get a complete year-by-year simulation of your accumulation and withdrawal phases — including FIRE scenarios.

100%Free Forever
9+Currencies
FIREReady
Advertisement

Plan Your Retirement

Fill in your details below. We'll calculate your retirement number, monthly savings needed, and show your full financial journey year by year.

About You
AGE
Your age today
AGE
When you want to stop working
AGE
How long your savings must last
$
Your gross yearly income today
Current Savings
$
401k, IRA, pension, investments
$
Amount you save for retirement monthly
%
Employer match % on your contribution
%
Max salary % employer will match
Growth & Inflation
%
Expected annual portfolio return while working
%
Return during retirement (more conservative)
%
Expected average annual inflation
%
Raise contributions yearly as income grows
Retirement Income Needs
$
In today's dollars, before tax
%
% of current income to replace (typically 70–90%)
$
Social Security, pension, rental income
🎉 Your Retirement Number
--
Total nest egg needed to retire comfortably
--Years to Retire
--Projected at Retirement
--Monthly Retire Income
--Retire Age
📈 Retirement Readiness --
Current savings trajectory --% funded
Retirement Number
--
Total needed at retirement
Projected Portfolio
--
At retirement age
Monthly Need to Save
--
To hit your retirement number
Total Contributions
--
Your money + employer match
Total Investment Growth
--
Compound interest earned
Employer Match Value
--
Free money over career
💰 Retirement Income by Withdrawal Rate
🏁 Key Milestones
📈 Portfolio Growth Over Your Lifetime
Portfolio Balance Total Invested Investment Growth Retirement Number
📋 Year-by-Year Projection
Age / Year Annual Contrib Portfolio Value Growth Earned Real Value % of Goal
Advertisement

What Is a Retirement Planner Calculator?

A Retirement Planner Calculator is a comprehensive financial tool that helps you answer the most important question in personal finance: how much money do I need to retire comfortably? It takes your current age, savings, income, and retirement goals, and produces a detailed roadmap showing exactly how much you need to save each month to reach financial independence on your timeline.

ToolVila's Retirement Planner goes far beyond a basic calculator. It simulates both the accumulation phase (years of working and saving) and the withdrawal phase (years of living off your portfolio), accounts for employer matching, inflation, investment returns, Social Security or pension income, and shows your full year-by-year projection from today until the end of your life expectancy.

How Much Do You Need to Retire? The Retirement Number

Your "retirement number" is the total portfolio value you need at retirement to sustain your desired lifestyle indefinitely. The most widely used method to calculate it is the 4% Rule, developed from the Trinity Study:

Retirement Number = Annual Spending Need ÷ Withdrawal Rate

Example: You need $50,000/year in retirement income
Less Social Security / pension: $50,000 - $15,000 = $35,000 needed from portfolio
At 4% withdrawal rate: $35,000 ÷ 0.04 = $875,000 retirement number

This means a $875,000 portfolio at 4% withdrawal = $35,000/year

The 4% rule is based on historical data showing that a diversified portfolio can sustain 4% annual withdrawals for at least 30 years with high probability. For longer retirements (35–40+ years), many planners recommend 3.5% or even 3% to be safer.

Are You on Track for Retirement? Age-Based Benchmarks

Fidelity Investments and other major financial institutions publish widely-used retirement savings benchmarks by age:

AgeSavings TargetExample (if income = $70K)Status
301x annual salary$70,000✓ Foundation
352x annual salary$140,000✓ Building
403x annual salary$210,000✓ Midpoint
454x annual salary$280,000✓ Accelerating
506x annual salary$420,000✓ Critical decade
557x annual salary$490,000✓ Final stretch
608x annual salary$560,000✓ Almost there
6710x annual salary$700,000★ Retire!

These are general benchmarks, not hard rules. Your personal retirement number depends on your lifestyle, health, location, Social Security benefits, and desired retirement age. Use our calculator above for a personalized projection.

The Power of Employer Matching

Employer 401(k) matching is the single best guaranteed investment available to most workers. If your employer matches 50% of your contributions up to 6% of your salary, that's an immediate 50% return on every dollar you contribute — tax-advantaged. On a $70,000 salary contributing 6% ($4,200/year), your employer adds $2,100/year. Over 30 years at 7% growth, that employer match alone grows to over $200,000.

Always contribute at least enough to capture your full employer match before directing money anywhere else — before extra debt payments, before a taxable brokerage account, before anything. No other financial decision has a higher guaranteed return.

What Is FIRE? (Financial Independence, Retire Early)

The FIRE movement — Financial Independence, Retire Early — is a lifestyle and investment philosophy focused on aggressive saving and frugal living to achieve financial independence decades before traditional retirement age. FIRE followers typically save 50–75% of their income and aim to retire in their 30s or 40s.

  • Lean FIRE: Retire on a very lean budget, typically $25,000–$40,000/year. Requires a smaller nest egg (~$625,000–$1M at 4%) but demands a frugal lifestyle.
  • Fat FIRE: Retire with a comfortable or luxurious lifestyle, typically $80,000–$150,000+/year. Requires a larger nest egg ($2M–$4M+) but provides more spending flexibility.
  • Barista FIRE: Semi-retire with part-time or flexible work to cover some expenses, reducing the required nest egg while providing structure and social connection.
  • Coast FIRE: Save aggressively early, then stop contributing and let compound interest do the rest. Once your nest egg reaches the "coast number," you only need to cover current expenses.

Roth IRA vs Traditional IRA vs 401(k)

Choosing the right retirement account type is a critical decision that affects your tax bill for decades:

  • Traditional 401(k) / IRA: Contributions are pre-tax (reduce your taxable income today). Growth is tax-deferred. Withdrawals in retirement are taxed as ordinary income. Best if you're in a higher tax bracket now than you expect to be in retirement.
  • Roth 401(k) / IRA: Contributions are after-tax (no current tax benefit). Growth is completely tax-free. Withdrawals in retirement are 100% tax-free. Best if you're in a lower tax bracket now or expect higher taxes in retirement. The earlier you start a Roth, the more valuable the tax-free compounding becomes.
  • HSA (Health Savings Account): Often called the "triple tax advantage" — contributions are pre-tax, growth is tax-free, and withdrawals for medical expenses are tax-free. After age 65, withdrawals for any purpose are taxed like a Traditional IRA. Maximize HSA contributions if you have a high-deductible health plan.

Retirement Income Sources to Plan For

A well-planned retirement rarely relies on a single income source. Consider building multiple income streams:

  • Portfolio withdrawals: Your 401(k), IRA, and taxable investment accounts — the primary focus of this calculator.
  • Social Security: US government benefit based on your lifetime earnings. You can claim as early as 62 (reduced benefit) or as late as 70 (maximum benefit — 32% more than at full retirement age).
  • Pension: Defined benefit plans from employers or government jobs that pay a fixed monthly amount for life.
  • Rental income: Real estate investments that generate monthly cash flow in retirement.
  • Part-time work: Even a small amount of income in early retirement dramatically extends portfolio longevity.
  • Annuities: Insurance products that provide guaranteed lifetime income in exchange for a lump sum.

Frequently Asked Questions

How much money do I need to retire at 65?
Using the 4% rule, you need 25 times your annual spending from your portfolio. If you need $50,000/year from your investments (after Social Security and other income), your retirement number is $1,250,000. If Social Security covers $18,000/year and you spend $60,000, you need $42,000/year from your portfolio, requiring about $1,050,000. Use the calculator above with your exact numbers for a personalized answer.
What is the 4% rule and is it still valid in 2025?
The 4% rule, derived from the 1994 Trinity Study, states that you can withdraw 4% of your portfolio in year one of retirement, adjust annually for inflation, and have a very high probability of not running out of money over 30 years. In 2025, some experts suggest using 3.3–3.5% for retirements longer than 30 years due to lower expected bond returns and higher valuations. For a 65-year-old with a 25-year horizon, 4% remains widely supported. For a 45-year-old retiring with a 50-year horizon, 3–3.5% is more conservative and prudent.
How much should I save for retirement each month?
Most financial planners recommend saving 15% of your gross income for retirement, including any employer match. If you start at 25, 15% is usually sufficient for a comfortable retirement at 65. Starting later requires a higher savings rate: starting at 35 may require 20–25%, and starting at 45 may require 35%+. The calculator shows you exactly how much you personally need to save based on your current savings, age, and goals.
What is a good rate of return to assume for retirement planning?
For the accumulation phase (working years), most planners use 6–8% for a diversified stock-heavy portfolio. During the distribution phase (retirement), a more conservative 4–5% is common as the portfolio shifts toward bonds and dividend stocks. Our calculator uses 7% pre-retirement and 5% post-retirement as defaults — reasonable assumptions for a balanced index fund portfolio. Adjust these based on your actual investment allocation and risk tolerance.
What is the difference between Roth and Traditional retirement accounts?
Traditional accounts (401k, IRA) give you a tax deduction today but you pay income tax on every withdrawal in retirement. Roth accounts give no current tax break, but all growth and withdrawals are completely tax-free forever. The general rule: if you're in a low tax bracket now (early career), choose Roth. If you're in a high tax bracket now, Traditional saves more today. Many advisors recommend having both for tax diversification in retirement.
When should I start collecting Social Security?
You can claim Social Security as early as 62 (reduced benefit — up to 30% less than full retirement age benefit), at full retirement age (66–67 depending on birth year), or as late as 70 (maximum benefit — 32% more than full retirement age). Each year you delay between 62 and 70 increases your benefit. The break-even age for waiting is typically around 80 — if you expect to live past 80, waiting pays off. If you have health concerns or need the income, claiming earlier makes sense.
What is sequence of returns risk in retirement?
Sequence of returns risk refers to the danger of experiencing poor investment returns in the early years of retirement. Even if average returns are good over the long term, a severe market downturn in years 1–5 of retirement — combined with withdrawals — can permanently damage your portfolio's ability to recover. Strategies to mitigate this include keeping 1–2 years of expenses in cash, maintaining a bond buffer, using a flexible withdrawal strategy, or doing part-time work in early retirement to reduce withdrawals during downturns.
How does inflation affect retirement planning?
Inflation is one of the biggest threats to retirement savings. At 3% annual inflation, purchasing power halves every 24 years. A $60,000 lifestyle today costs about $121,000 in 25 years at 3% inflation. This is why your portfolio must continue growing during retirement, why Social Security includes cost-of-living adjustments, and why financial planners stress investing in assets that outpace inflation (equities, real estate, TIPS bonds). Our calculator adjusts all values for inflation to show you real purchasing power at every age.
What happens if I'm behind on retirement savings?
If you're behind, don't panic — options include: maximizing contributions (2025 401k limit: $23,500; catch-up contribution over 50: additional $7,500), delaying retirement by even 2–3 years (dramatically improves outcomes), reducing planned retirement spending, working part-time in early retirement, optimizing Social Security timing, downsizing your home to unlock equity, and most importantly — starting to save aggressively now. The worst response to being behind is doing nothing. Even modest increases in savings today compound significantly over 10–20 years.
Is ToolVila's Retirement Planner free to use?
Yes — completely free, no registration, no email required. Enter your details, click calculate, and instantly get your retirement number, readiness score, year-by-year projection, employer match analysis, withdrawal phase simulation, and milestone timeline. ToolVila provides professional-grade financial planning tools to everyone at no cost, forever.