Personal Finance Essentials

How Much You Need to Save

Save 15% of Every Paycheck — or Risk Running Out of Money

Before You Run Out of Time

Retirement Save Now

Your expenses in retirement will not necessarily decline. Commuting costs get replaced by healthcare costs. Social expenses replace work-related ones. You will need as much money in retirement as you need today – likely even more, due to inflation. Do not assume you will be able to live on less.

Saving 15% of your pay in a properly diversified portfolio gives you a reasonable chance of accumulating enough by retirement age to quit working and still maintain your lifestyle. That figure accounts for Social Security income – which will provide less than most people expect – and assumes a long retirement.

If you need $150,000 a year in retirement and want to sustain that for four decades, a 7.5% annual withdrawal rate is not sustainable. And because of inflation, in 20 to 25 years you might need $300,000 to equal the purchasing power of $150,000 today. These are not reasons to despair – they are reasons to plan carefully and start early.

It is also worth noting that unrealistic expectations about timing are common. A major survey found that 21% of workers plan to retire at age 70 or later, yet only 5% actually do. Health problems forced 40% to retire early; another 18% stopped working to care for a family member. Most people retire sooner than they expect. The earlier you build your savings, the more flexibility you will have.