Free online retirement calculator
This calculator projects how big your nest egg will be at retirement, given what you save each year and your expected return, then shows the safe yearly income it can support.
Portfolio at retirement
$—
In today's dollars: $—
Annual income (4% rule)
$—
Monthly: $—
Real: $—/yr
Total contributions
$—
Total growth
$—
| Age | Balance | Contributions | Growth |
|---|
How to use
- Enter your current age and target retirement age.
- Enter your current savings and monthly contribution.
- Set annual return and inflation rates.
- Read nominal and real portfolio value, annual income, and monthly income.
- Press “Show year-by-year” for the full growth table.
The math
Month-by-month simulation:
balance = (balance × (1 + monthly_rate)) + monthly_contribution
Inflation-adjusted (real) value:
real_value = nominal_value / (1 + inflation_rate)^years
Annual income (4% rule):
income = portfolio × 0.04
Worked example
Age 30, retiring at 65. Current savings: $25,000. Monthly contribution: $500. 7% return, 2.5% inflation.
- Years: 35
- Monthly rate: 7% / 12 ≈ 0.583%
- Portfolio at 65 (nominal): ≈ $1,090,000
- Real (today’s dollars): ≈ $441,000
- Annual income (4% rule, nominal): ≈ $43,600/year
- Monthly income: ≈ $3,633/month
Notes
- Source: Bengen WP. Journal of Financial Planning. 1994:171-180.
- The 4% rule was developed for a 30-year retirement with a 50/50 stock-bond portfolio. It may not apply to longer retirements or very different asset allocations.
- This tool is for planning purposes — consult a financial advisor for personalized retirement advice.
Frequently asked
What is the 4% rule?
The 4% rule, introduced by financial planner William Bengen in 1994, states that retirees can withdraw 4% of their portfolio in the first year, then adjust for inflation each year, with a high probability of the portfolio lasting 30 years. The calculator uses this to estimate annual and monthly retirement income.
What is the difference between nominal and real values?
Nominal is the actual dollar amount at retirement. Real is that amount converted to today's purchasing power — dividing by the cumulative inflation factor. Real values tell you what your money will actually buy.
What return rate should I use?
7% is a common assumption for a diversified equity portfolio before inflation. After 2.5% inflation, the real return is roughly 4.5%. Use a lower number for a more conservative estimate. The S&P 500 has returned roughly 10% annually before inflation over the past century, but past returns don't guarantee future results.
How does the simulation work?
The calculator simulates month by month — each month, the balance earns interest, then the monthly contribution is added. At the end of each year, it records the snapshot. This captures compounding accurately regardless of contribution timing.
Can I model retirement savings with Social Security or pension income?
Not directly. You can add your expected Social Security benefit to the monthly income figure shown, or reduce your monthly contribution by the equivalent amount. A full retirement income plan should include all sources.
Related calculators
- Compound interest calculator
See how compounding grows any starting balance over time.
- Income tax calculator
US federal income tax with FICA and bracket breakdown for 2024.
- Loan calculator
Monthly payment and total interest for any fixed-rate loan.
- Mortgage calculator
Fixed-rate mortgage payment and full amortization schedule.