Retirement Gap Calculator

Free retirement gap calculator. Compare projected expenses vs income from Social Security, pensions, and portfolio withdrawals. Find shortfalls and solutions.

About the Retirement Gap Calculator

The Retirement Gap Calculator provides a clear picture of whether your retirement income will cover your expenses. It compares total income from Social Security, pensions, annuities, and portfolio withdrawals against your projected spending to identify any surplus or shortfall.

A retirement gap — when expenses exceed income — is the most common retirement planning problem. This calculator not only quantifies the gap but shows how to close it through additional savings, reduced spending, delayed retirement, or increased withdrawal rates.

Seeing the numbers in a single dashboard helps you make informed decisions about trade-offs and prioritize actions with the greatest impact. For example, a $10,000 annual gap may be closed most effectively by delaying retirement by one year — which simultaneously adds savings, delays withdrawals, and increases Social Security benefits. Alternatively, the same gap could require $200,000 or more in additional savings if addressed through accumulation alone. This calculator quantifies each closure strategy so you can choose the approach that best fits your timeline, risk tolerance, and personal priorities.

Why Use This Retirement Gap Calculator?

Many people approach retirement planning piecemeal, looking at savings and income separately. This calculator brings everything together to show the full picture. A small annual gap of $5,000 over 25 years requires an additional $75,000-$125,000 in savings. Identifying and closing gaps early saves enormous stress later. Even a modest surplus provides a valuable cushion against healthcare costs and inflation uncertainty.

How to Use This Calculator

  1. Enter your expected annual spending in retirement.
  2. Enter income from Social Security and any pension.
  3. Enter your portfolio balance and planned withdrawal rate.
  4. Add any other income sources.
  5. See the annual gap or surplus immediately.
  6. Use the solutions table to explore ways to close any gap.

Formula

Annual Income = Social Security + Pension + (Portfolio × Withdrawal Rate) + Other Income Annual Gap = Annual Expenses − Annual Income Additional Savings Needed = Gap / Withdrawal Rate Months to Work Longer = Gap / Monthly Savings Rate

Example Calculation

Result: Income: $56,000 | Gap: $14,000/year

With $70,000 annual expenses and $56,000 income (SS $24,000 + pension $12,000 + 4% of $500,000 = $20,000), there's a $14,000/year gap. Closing this requires $350,000 more in savings, or reducing spending by $14,000/year, or working 2-3 more years.

Tips & Best Practices

Anatomy of the Retirement Gap

The typical retirement gap has three components: (1) insufficient guaranteed income (Social Security + pension don't cover basic needs), (2) inadequate portfolio to fill the remaining need, and (3) underestimated expenses (especially healthcare and inflation). Addressing all three is key to a secure plan.

Gap Closure Strategies

Delaying retirement by 2 years: increases Social Security by 16%, adds 2 years of savings, and reduces withdrawal years by 2. This single action often closes a $10,000-$15,000 annual gap. Downsizing housing: if housing is $2,000/month and you move to $1,200/month, that's $9,600/year — often sufficient to close a moderate gap.

The Psychological Dimension

Knowing your gap (or surplus) provides peace of mind and direction. Vague anxiety about retirement is far more stressful than a specific number you can work toward. Even a large gap becomes manageable when broken into monthly savings targets and yearly milestones.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is a retirement gap?

A retirement gap is the difference between your projected retirement expenses and your projected retirement income. If expenses exceed income, you have a shortfall that must be addressed through additional savings, reduced spending, longer work, or income changes.

How big of a gap is too big?

A gap under 10% of expenses is usually manageable with minor adjustments. A gap of 10-25% requires meaningful changes to your plan. A gap over 25% suggests fundamental changes are needed — significantly more savings, much later retirement, or major lifestyle adjustments.

What's the best way to close a retirement gap?

The single most effective action is usually delaying retirement: it increases Social Security benefits, allows more saving years, and reduces withdrawal years. Other strategies include: reducing expenses, part-time work in early retirement, downsizing housing, and Roth conversions for tax efficiency.

Should I include taxes in the gap analysis?

Yes. Traditional 401(k)/IRA withdrawals are taxed as ordinary income, and up to 85% of Social Security may be taxable. A simple approach is to gross up your expenses by 10-25% to account for taxes, or use our Retirement Tax Estimator for a precise figure.

How often should I check my retirement gap?

Review annually or whenever there's a major life change (job change, inheritance, market shock, health issue). The gap typically narrows as you get closer to retirement because projections become more certain and you have less time for variables to change.

What if my gap is negative (surplus)?

A surplus means your income exceeds expenses — a great position. Consider whether the surplus accounts for healthcare inflation, one-time expenses, and longevity risk. A small surplus may be consumed by unexpected costs, so maintaining some buffer is wise.

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