Retirement

How Much Do I Need to Retire? Free Retirement Calculator With Inflation

Use our retirement calculator to determine your retirement number with inflation adjustments. Learn the formulas and strategies behind retirement planning.

Published: March 1, 2026

How Much Do I Need to Retire? Free Retirement Calculator With Inflation

How Do You Calculate Your Retirement Number?

Multiply your desired annual retirement spending by 25 (based on the 4% rule). For $60,000/year in expenses, you need approximately $1.5 million in today's dollars.

The most widely used method is the "multiply by 25" rule, derived from the 4% safe withdrawal rate:

Retirement Number = Annual Expenses × 25

This means if you want $50,000/year, you need $1.25 million. For $80,000/year, you need $2 million.

However, this is a starting point. You should adjust for:

  • Healthcare costs (often $10,000–$15,000/year before Medicare)
  • Inflation between now and retirement
  • Social Security or pension income that reduces the amount you need from savings
  • Whether you plan a 30-year or 40+ year retirement

How Does Inflation Change Your Retirement Target?

At 3% inflation, $60,000 in today's expenses becomes $108,000 in 20 years. Your retirement number must account for future costs, not current ones.

Inflation is the silent retirement killer. If you need $60,000/year today and plan to retire in 20 years at 3% inflation:

Future annual need = $60,000 × (1.03)^20 = $108,367

Inflation-adjusted retirement number = $108,367 × 25 = $2,709,175

That's nearly double the $1.5 million you'd calculate using today's expenses. This is why retirement calculators that ignore inflation give dangerously low targets.

The good news: if your investments earn returns above inflation (real returns), your savings are growing in purchasing-power terms even as inflation rises. Use real returns in your projections for accurate planning.

What Withdrawal Rate Should You Use?

The traditional 4% rule works for 30-year retirements. For early retirees or conservative planners, 3–3.5% provides a larger safety margin against market downturns.

The 4% rule comes from the Trinity Study, which found that withdrawing 4% of your initial portfolio (adjusted for inflation annually) survived 95% of historical 30-year periods.

But context matters:

  • 30-year retirement (retiring at 65): 4% is generally safe
  • 40-year retirement (retiring at 55): Consider 3.5%
  • 50+ year retirement (FIRE at 40): Use 3–3.25%

Lower withdrawal rates mean larger targets but greater security. A 3.5% rate means multiplying expenses by ~28.6 instead of 25. For $60,000/year, that's $1.71 million vs $1.5 million—a meaningful but manageable difference for the added safety.

How Do You Factor Social Security and Pensions Into Your Number?

Subtract expected Social Security and pension income from your annual need before calculating. If you need $60K/year and expect $20K from Social Security, only $40K must come from savings.

Social Security and pensions reduce the amount your portfolio must generate:

Adjusted retirement number = (Annual expenses − guaranteed income) × 25

Example: $60,000 expenses, $24,000 Social Security benefit:

($60,000 − $24,000) × 25 = $900,000

That's $600,000 less than the $1.5 million without Social Security. However, consider:

  • Social Security may not start until 62–67
  • Benefits may be reduced by future legislation
  • Pensions may not have inflation adjustments

A conservative approach: plan to fund 100% of early retirement from savings, then treat Social Security as a bonus that reduces withdrawals once it begins.

What Are Common Mistakes in Retirement Planning?

The biggest mistakes are underestimating healthcare costs, ignoring inflation, assuming constant returns, and not accounting for sequence-of-returns risk in early retirement years.

Five common retirement planning errors:

  1. Ignoring inflation: Using nominal returns instead of real returns overstates your future purchasing power.
  1. Underestimating healthcare: The average 65-year-old couple needs $315,000+ for healthcare in retirement (Fidelity estimate). Before Medicare eligibility, costs are even higher.
  1. Assuming constant returns: Markets don't deliver steady 8% every year. A bear market in your first retirement years (sequence-of-returns risk) can permanently deplete your portfolio.
  1. Not stress-testing: Run scenarios with lower returns, higher inflation, and unexpected expenses.
  1. Forgetting taxes: Withdrawals from traditional 401(k) and IRA accounts are taxed as ordinary income. A $1 million traditional IRA is really worth $700,000–$800,000 after taxes.
Daniel Lance
Personal Finance Writer

Daniel covers compound interest, retirement planning, and debt payoff strategies at InterestCal. His goal is to break down complex financial concepts into clear, actionable insights.

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