Retirement Savings Goal Calculator

Free retirement savings goal calculator. See how much you need to save each month to reach your retirement nest egg target using the 4% rule and inflation-adjusted projections.

About the Retirement Savings Goal Calculator

The Retirement Savings Goal Calculator helps you determine the nest egg you need and the monthly savings required to get there. Start with your desired annual retirement spending, and the calculator works backward using a safe withdrawal rate to find your target, then computes how much to save each month given your current savings, expected returns, and time horizon.

Whether you're 25 and just starting out or 55 and trying to catch up, this calculator provides a clear monthly savings number and shows the power of compound growth over your remaining working years.

Enter your retirement spending goal, current savings, expected return, and years until retirement to get your personalized plan. For many workers, the result is both sobering and motivating — a 35-year-old targeting $60,000 in annual retirement spending might need to save $800 to $1,200 per month depending on returns and employer matching. Starting just five years later at 40 can increase the required monthly contribution by 30 to 50 percent, illustrating why time in the market is the most powerful advantage a saver has.

Why Use This Retirement Savings Goal Calculator?

Knowing your retirement number is the foundation of all retirement planning. Without it, you're saving blindly. This calculator translates an abstract goal — "enough to retire" — into a concrete monthly savings target you can track and act on. Once you have that number, every paycheck becomes a measurable step toward financial independence rather than a vague aspiration.

How to Use This Calculator

  1. Enter your desired annual spending in retirement (in today's dollars).
  2. Set the safe withdrawal rate — 4% is the classic rule, 3.5% is more conservative.
  3. Enter your current retirement savings balance.
  4. Set expected annual investment return before retirement.
  5. Enter years until you plan to retire.
  6. Set expected inflation rate (default 3%).
  7. Review your target nest egg and required monthly savings.

Formula

Target Nest Egg (today's dollars) = Annual Spending ÷ Withdrawal Rate Inflation-Adjusted Target = Target × (1 + Inflation)^Years Required Monthly Savings = FV Gap ÷ Future Value Annuity Factor FV Annuity Factor = [((1 + r)^n − 1) / r], where r = monthly rate, n = months

Example Calculation

Result: Target: $1,500,000 → Inflation-Adjusted: $3,139,921 → Save $2,164/mo

You need $1.5M in today's dollars ($60K ÷ 4%). Adjusted for 3% inflation over 25 years, that's ~$3.14M. Your $100K grows to ~$542K at 7%, leaving a $2.6M gap. To fill it, you need $2,164 per month invested at 7%.

Tips & Best Practices

The Power of Starting Early

A 25-year-old saving $500/month at 7% will have approximately $1.2 million by age 65. A 40-year-old would need to save about $1,750/month to reach the same goal. Starting 15 years earlier cuts the required monthly savings by 71% because compound growth does the heavy lifting.

Adjusting for Reality

Retirement savings rarely follow a smooth path. You'll get raises, have years when you save more or less, and experience market ups and downs. Use this calculator as a baseline target and revisit it annually. If you're consistently ahead of your target, you may be able to retire earlier.

The Three-Legged Stool

Retirement income traditionally comes from three sources: Social Security, employer pensions (now mostly 401k/IRA), and personal savings. Maximize all three: claim Social Security strategically, contribute enough to get the full employer match, and save in taxable accounts beyond that.

Frequently Asked Questions

How much do I need to save for retirement?

A common rule of thumb is 25x your annual spending (based on the 4% rule). If you need $60,000/year, that's $1.5 million. Adjusted for inflation, the actual number will be higher. This calculator personalizes that target based on your specific withdrawal rate and timeline.

Is the 4% rule still valid?

The 4% rule originated from the 1994 Trinity Study. While it has held up historically, many financial planners now recommend 3.25%-3.5% for younger retirees (30+ year retirements) or those concerned about sequence-of-returns risk. The calculator lets you adjust this rate.

Should I adjust for inflation?

Yes. If you need $60,000/year today and plan to retire in 25 years, you'll need the equivalent purchasing power, which at 3% inflation is about $125,000/year in nominal dollars. The calculator handles this automatically.

What investment return should I assume?

A diversified stock/bond portfolio has historically returned 7-10% (nominal) long-term. After inflation, real returns average 5-7% for stocks and 1-3% for bonds. A 6-7% assumption is reasonable for a balanced portfolio.

What if I can't save the required amount?

You have several levers: delay retirement by a few years, reduce planned spending, increase your withdrawal rate (more risk), find ways to earn more, or plan on part-time work in early retirement. Even small adjustments to timeline make a big difference due to compounding.

Does this include Social Security?

This calculator focuses on the portfolio portion. To account for Social Security, subtract your expected annual SS benefit from your spending need before entering it. For example, if you need $60K and expect $24K from SS, enter $36K as your annual spending.

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