See your projected balance and find out if you're on track.
Retirement planning suffers from a common problem: the goal is so far in the future that it feels abstract, while the sacrifice — saving money today — is immediate and tangible. A retirement calculator bridges that gap by translating your current savings rate into a projected future balance, making the abstract concrete.
The results can be motivating or alarming, and both reactions are useful. If you are ahead of schedule, you have the confidence to redirect some savings toward shorter-term goals. If you are behind, you have time to course-correct — and the calculator can show you exactly how much more you need to save each month to close the gap.
The most widely used benchmark is the 4% rule: in retirement, you can withdraw 4% of your portfolio in the first year, then adjust for inflation annually, with a high historical probability of not running out of money over a 30-year retirement. That means your retirement number is 25 times your expected annual spending.
If you expect to spend $60,000/year in retirement, you need a $1.5 million portfolio. If you expect $80,000/year, you need $2 million. These numbers sound large but are achievable through consistent contributions over a long career, especially with employer matching and tax-advantaged accounts.
Saving $500/month from age 25 to 65 at 7% annual return produces approximately $1.2 million. Starting the same $500/month contribution at 35 instead produces approximately $590,000 — less than half, for starting only 10 years later. This is the power of compounding time, not just compounding interest.
Annual contribution limit: $23,000 in 2024 ($30,500 if age 50+). Many employers match contributions — commonly 50–100% of the first 3–6% of salary. Always contribute at least enough to capture the full match before directing money elsewhere.
Annual limit: $7,000 ($8,000 if 50+), shared with Roth IRA. Contributions may be tax-deductible depending on income and whether you have a workplace plan. Growth is tax-deferred; withdrawals in retirement are taxed as ordinary income.
Same $7,000/$8,000 annual limit. Contributions are made with after-tax dollars, but growth and qualified withdrawals are completely tax-free. Income limits apply: phaseout begins at $146,000 (single) and $230,000 (married) for 2024.
For self-employed individuals and small business owners. SEP-IRA allows contributions up to 25% of net self-employment income, up to $69,000 in 2024. Solo 401(k) has similar limits with the ability to make both employee and employer contributions.