How Much Should You Save for Retirement?

Updated March 2026 · 10 min read

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The question "How much do I need to retire?" has no single answer—it depends on your lifestyle, location, health, and when you want to stop working. But there are well-tested rules of thumb, age-based milestones, and account strategies that make planning straightforward. This guide walks through all of them with concrete numbers.

The 4% Rule: How Much Is Enough?

The 4% rule, derived from the Trinity Study, says you can withdraw 4% of your portfolio in year one of retirement, then adjust for inflation each year after, and your money has a high probability of lasting 30 years.

Working backwards:

Retirement Nest Egg = Annual Expenses × 25

Examples:

These numbers assume Social Security covers part of your income. If you expect $24,000/year from Social Security and need $60,000 total, you only need to cover the $36,000 gap, meaning you need $900,000 saved. Use the retirement calculator to model your specific scenario.

Savings Milestones by Age

Fidelity Investments recommends these benchmarks based on multiples of your pre-tax salary:

Age Savings Target If Salary = $75K
301× salary$75,000
352× salary$150,000
403× salary$225,000
454× salary$300,000
506× salary$450,000
557× salary$525,000
608× salary$600,000
6710× salary$750,000

If you are behind these benchmarks, do not panic. Increasing your savings rate by even 2–3% of salary per year, combined with employer matching and compound growth, can close the gap significantly. See how compounding works with the compound interest calculator.

How Much Should You Save Each Year?

Most financial planners recommend saving 15% of your gross income for retirement, including any employer match. Here is how that breaks down:

If you start at 25, saving 15% with a 7% average annual return gets you to roughly 12× your final salary by age 65—more than enough for most retirees. Starting at 35 requires saving closer to 20–25% to reach the same goal.

401(k) vs. IRA: Which Account to Use

Both 401(k) plans and IRAs offer tax advantages for retirement savings, but they differ in key ways.

401(k) Plans

Model your 401(k) growth with the 401(k) calculator.

IRAs (Individual Retirement Accounts)

See projected IRA growth with the IRA calculator.

The Optimal Order

  1. Contribute to your 401(k) up to the employer match (free money).
  2. Max out a Roth IRA ($7,000).
  3. Go back and max out the 401(k) ($23,500).
  4. If you still have capacity, use a taxable brokerage account or HSA.

Catch-Up Contributions After 50

The IRS allows higher contribution limits once you turn 50, designed to help people accelerate savings in their peak earning years:

Account Under 50 Age 50+ Catch-Up Amount
401(k) / 403(b)$23,500$31,000+$7,500
Traditional / Roth IRA$7,000$8,000+$1,000
Total Possible$30,500$39,000+$8,500

A person who maxes out both a 401(k) and IRA from age 50 to 65, with a 7% average return, would accumulate approximately $785,000 from catch-up contributions alone.

The Power of Starting Early

Compound interest is the most powerful force in retirement savings. Here is what happens when you invest $500/month starting at different ages, assuming a 7% average annual return:

Start Age Total Contributed Balance at 65 Growth
25$240,000$1,198,0005.0×
30$210,000$830,0004.0×
35$180,000$567,0003.2×
40$150,000$380,0002.5×
45$120,000$247,0002.1×

Starting at 25 instead of 35 nearly doubles your ending balance despite contributing only $60,000 more. Model your own scenario with the investment calculator.

What If You Are Behind?

If you are 40+ and have not saved enough, here are five concrete steps:

  1. Increase your savings rate immediately. Even 1–2% more per year adds up.
  2. Take full advantage of catch-up contributions once you hit 50.
  3. Delay retirement by 2–3 years. Working until 68 instead of 65 gives your portfolio more time to grow and reduces the number of years you need to fund.
  4. Delay Social Security to age 70. Each year you delay past full retirement age (67) increases your benefit by 8%.
  5. Reduce expected expenses. Downsizing your home, relocating to a lower-cost area, or paying off your mortgage before retirement can significantly reduce how much you need.

Common Retirement Planning Mistakes

Key Takeaways

Run Your Retirement Numbers

See how much you need to save monthly to reach your retirement goal, based on your current age and savings.

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Related tools: Retirement Calculator · 401(k) Calculator · IRA Calculator · Compound Interest Calculator · Investment Calculator