How Long Will My Savings Last in Retirement?
Calculate how many years your retirement savings will support your lifestyle based on your current age, savings, spending, and investment returns.
Your Retirement Savings Projection
Comprehensive Guide: How Long Will Your Savings Last in Retirement?
Planning for retirement is one of the most important financial tasks you’ll undertake. The central question—”How long will my savings last?”—depends on multiple variables including your current savings, spending habits, investment returns, inflation, and unexpected expenses. This guide will help you understand the key factors that determine your retirement savings longevity and provide actionable strategies to make your money last.
1. The 4% Rule: A Starting Point for Retirement Withdrawals
The 4% rule is a widely cited retirement withdrawal strategy popularized by financial planner William Bengen in 1994. The rule suggests that retirees can withdraw 4% of their retirement portfolio in the first year of retirement, then adjust that amount for inflation each subsequent year, with a high probability that their savings will last at least 30 years.
How it works:
- Year 1: Withdraw 4% of your total retirement savings
- Year 2: Withdraw the same dollar amount as Year 1, adjusted for inflation
- Repeat annually, maintaining the inflation-adjusted withdrawal amount
Example: If you retire with $1,000,000, your first-year withdrawal would be $40,000. If inflation is 2%, your second-year withdrawal would be $40,800.
Criticisms of the 4% Rule:
- Assumes a 30-year retirement period (may not account for longer lifespans)
- Based on historical market returns (past performance ≠ future results)
- Doesn’t account for variable spending needs (healthcare costs often rise with age)
- Ignores tax implications of withdrawals
| Portfolio Success Rate (30 Years) | 4% Withdrawal Rate | 3.5% Withdrawal Rate | 3% Withdrawal Rate |
|---|---|---|---|
| 100% Stocks | 96% | 98% | 100% |
| 75% Stocks / 25% Bonds | 98% | 99% | 100% |
| 50% Stocks / 50% Bonds | 95% | 98% | 100% |
| 25% Stocks / 75% Bonds | 89% | 95% | 99% |
Source: Trinity Study (1998) updated with more recent data. Success rates represent the percentage of historical 30-year periods where the portfolio didn’t run out of money.
2. Key Factors That Affect How Long Your Savings Will Last
2.1 Initial Retirement Age
The age at which you retire has a dramatic impact on how long your savings need to last. Retiring at 62 versus 70 can mean your savings need to cover 8 more years of expenses. Additionally, claiming Social Security benefits early (age 62) reduces your monthly benefit by up to 30% compared to waiting until full retirement age (66-67).
Average Life Expectancy at Retirement Age (U.S.):
- Age 62: 20.3 more years (men), 22.9 more years (women)
- Age 65: 18.2 more years (men), 20.8 more years (women)
- Age 70: 14.8 more years (men), 17.1 more years (women)
Source: Social Security Administration Life Tables
2.2 Annual Spending Rate
Your withdrawal rate is the single most important factor in determining how long your savings will last. The lower your withdrawal rate, the longer your money will last. Financial planners generally recommend:
- 3-3.5%: Very conservative, high probability of success
- 4%: Standard rule of thumb
- 4.5-5%: More aggressive, higher risk of depletion
- 5%+: High risk, typically requires flexible spending
2.3 Investment Returns
Your portfolio’s rate of return directly impacts how long your savings will last. Historical stock market returns average about 7% after inflation, but future returns may be lower. A balanced portfolio (60% stocks/40% bonds) has historically returned about 5% after inflation.
Impact of Return Rates on $1,000,000 Portfolio (4% withdrawal rate):
| Annual Return | Portfolio Value After 20 Years | Portfolio Value After 30 Years | Probability of Success (30 Years) |
|---|---|---|---|
| 3% | $741,000 | $432,000 | 78% |
| 4% | $980,000 | $740,000 | 92% |
| 5% | $1,326,000 | $1,326,000 | 98% |
| 6% | $1,842,000 | $2,360,000 | 100% |
2.4 Inflation
Inflation erodes purchasing power over time. Even at 2% annual inflation, prices double every 36 years. Retirees are particularly vulnerable because:
- Fixed incomes don’t keep pace with rising costs
- Healthcare costs typically inflate faster than general inflation
- Social Security COLAs may not fully offset inflation
Historical U.S. Inflation Rates (1926-2023):
- Average: 2.9%
- 1970s: 7.1% (high inflation decade)
- 1990s: 2.9%
- 2010s: 1.8%
- 2022: 8.0% (highest since 1981)
Source: U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics
2.5 Healthcare Costs
Healthcare is typically the largest unpredictable expense in retirement. Fidelity estimates that a 65-year-old couple retiring in 2023 will need $315,000 to cover healthcare expenses in retirement (not including long-term care). This amount has increased 70% since 2002.
Average Annual Healthcare Costs for Retirees (2023):
- Medicare Part B premiums: $1,800 (single) / $3,600 (couple)
- Medicare Part D (prescription): $1,200 (single) / $2,400 (couple)
- Medigap Policy F: $2,400 (single) / $4,800 (couple)
- Out-of-pocket costs: $3,000 (single) / $6,000 (couple)
- Total: ~$8,400 (single) / ~$16,800 (couple) annually
3. Strategies to Make Your Savings Last Longer
3.1 The Bucket Strategy
This approach divides your portfolio into different “buckets” based on when you’ll need the money:
- Bucket 1 (Years 1-3): Cash and short-term bonds (3 years of living expenses)
- Bucket 2 (Years 4-10): Intermediate-term bonds and conservative investments
- Bucket 3 (Years 10+): Stocks and growth investments
Benefits: Reduces sequence of returns risk by avoiding selling stocks during market downturns in early retirement.
3.2 Dynamic Withdrawal Strategies
Instead of fixed 4% withdrawals, consider flexible approaches:
- Guardrails Approach: Adjust withdrawals based on portfolio performance (e.g., reduce by 10% if portfolio drops more than 20%)
- Percentage Rule: Withdraw a fixed percentage (e.g., 4%) of the current portfolio value each year
- Hybrid Approach: Start with 4%, but adjust for actual inflation and portfolio performance
3.3 Delaying Social Security
For each year you delay claiming Social Security between ages 62 and 70, your benefit increases by about 8%. Waiting from 62 to 70 can increase your monthly benefit by 76%.
Break-even Analysis for Delaying Social Security:
- Claiming at 62 vs. 66: Break-even at age 77
- Claiming at 62 vs. 70: Break-even at age 80
- Claiming at 66 vs. 70: Break-even at age 82
3.4 Roth Conversions
Converting traditional IRA/401(k) funds to Roth accounts in low-income years can:
- Reduce future required minimum distributions (RMDs)
- Provide tax-free income in retirement
- Lower Medicare premiums (which are income-based)
3.5 Annuities for Guaranteed Income
Immediate or deferred annuities can provide guaranteed income for life. Consider:
- Single Premium Immediate Annuity (SPIA): Provides income starting immediately
- Deferred Income Annuity (DIA): Starts payments at a future date (e.g., age 85)
- Variable Annuity with GLWB: Guaranteed lifetime withdrawal benefits
Example: A 65-year-old male could purchase a SPIA for $100,000 that pays $6,000 annually for life (6% payout rate).
4. Common Retirement Planning Mistakes to Avoid
- Underestimating Longevity: 1 in 4 65-year-olds will live past 90 (SSA data)
- Ignoring Taxes: Withdrawals from traditional IRAs/401(k)s are taxed as ordinary income
- Overlooking Healthcare Costs: Medicare doesn’t cover long-term care (average nursing home cost: $9,000/month)
- Being Too Conservative with Investments: All-bonds portfolio may not keep pace with inflation
- Failing to Plan for Sequence Risk: Poor market returns in early retirement can devastate a portfolio
- Not Having a Withdrawal Strategy: Random withdrawals can trigger unnecessary taxes and penalties
5. Tools and Resources for Retirement Planning
Free Calculators:
- Social Security Retirement Estimator (Official SSA tool)
- CFPB Retirement Planning Tool (Consumer Financial Protection Bureau)
Recommended Reading:
- “The Simple Path to Wealth” by JL Collins
- “How to Make Your Money Last” by Jane Bryant Quinn
- “The Retirement Café” by Fred Vettese
Important Disclaimer: This calculator provides estimates based on the information you provide and certain assumptions about investment returns and inflation. Actual results will vary. For personalized advice, consult with a certified financial planner or retirement specialist. This tool does not guarantee investment performance or retirement security.