Retirement Age & Savings Rate Calculator – When Can I Retire?

Estimate your retirement age based on savings rate, current savings, expected returns, and safe withdrawal rate. Includes FIRE number, scenarios, and action plan.

Retirement Age & Savings Rate Calculator – When Can I Retire?

Introduction

Your savings rate is the single biggest lever for retiring earlier. This guide shows how contributions, investment returns, and spending targets translate into a retirement timeline—and the tradeoffs to get there faster.


Key Concepts

  • Savings rate: percent of income saved for investments
  • FIRE number: annual spending × 25 (for a 4% starting withdrawal)
  • Safe Withdrawal Rate (SWR): typically 3.5–4.0% starting point
  • Sequence‑of‑returns risk: early bad markets can impact outcomes

Step‑by‑Step: Estimate Your Retirement Age

  1. Define target annual spending in retirement
  2. Compute FIRE number (spending × 25)
  3. Enter current invested assets
  4. Choose expected real return (e.g., 4–6%)
  5. Set monthly contribution and growth rate
  6. The calculator estimates years to reach your target

Examples

Example A: 20% Savings Rate

  • Income: $90,000, Savings: 20% ($18,000/yr)
  • Current investments: $50,000
  • Real return: 5%
  • Time to FIRE number ($1.2M): ~22–25 years

Example B: 35% Savings Rate

  • Income: $120,000, Savings: 35% ($42,000/yr)
  • Current investments: $120,000
  • Real return: 5%
  • Time to FIRE number ($1.6M): ~16–18 years

How to Retire Faster

  • Raise savings rate with lifestyle changes and income growth
  • Reduce target spending (geo‑arbitrage, housing downsizing)
  • Optimize taxes with 401(k), HSA, and IRA contributions
  • Invest in diversified low‑cost index funds
  • Avoid lifestyle inflation; automate increases after raises

Safe Withdrawal Nuances

  • Guardrails strategies adjust withdrawals with markets
  • Early retirement: consider 3.5% start and glide higher
  • Bridge to Social Security/penalties using brokerage funds or Roth ladder

FAQ

Q: Should I use 3%, 3.5%, or 4%?
A: Earlier retirement and higher stock/bond valuations argue for caution (3–3.5%); longer careers can support 4%.

Q: Do I need to be debt‑free first?
A: High‑interest debt first; low‑rate mortgages can be carried if you save aggressively.

Q: How often should I update my plan?
A: At least annually or after major life changes.


Related Calculators and Guides


CTA: Build Your Retirement Timeline

Use the calculator to set a savings rate target and generate a one‑page action plan to hit your desired retirement age.

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