- /
- /
You're 45. You've been saving for retirement, but have no idea if it's enough. Every calculator gives you a different answer. One says you need $2 million. Another says $4 million. Your coworker with the same salary claims they'll retire at 55.
So are you on track? Or are you decades behind?
Here's the reality: most retirement calculators are garbage. They use generic assumptions that don't reflect your actual life. To know if you're on track, you need a framework that accounts for your specific situation.
The Quick Retirement Readiness Test
Before diving deep, take this 60-second assessment:
Question 1: Do you save at least 15-20% of gross income for retirement?
Question 2: Is your total retirement savings at least 1x your annual salary by age 30, 3x by 40, 6x by 50?
Question 3: Do you have a target retirement age and rough estimate of annual spending needs?
Question 4: Are you on track with Social Security (40+ credits if working)?
4 yes: You're likely on track
2 to 3 yes: You're in the ballpark but need refinement
0 to 1 yes: You're behind and need immediate action
The Traditional Rule: Multiples of Salary by Age
Fidelity's guidelines suggest these retirement savings milestones:
- Age 30: 1x salary saved
- Age 40: 3x salary
- Age 50: 6x salary
- Age 60: 8x salary
- Age 67: 10x salary
Example: If you earn $150,000 at age 50, you should have $900,000 saved.
Limitations: This assumes you'll maintain your current lifestyle in retirement. If you plan to downsize or have paid-off mortgage, you may need less. If you want to travel extensively, you'll need more.
The Better Way: The 4% Rule Reverse-Engineered
The 4% rule says you can withdraw 4% of your portfolio annually in retirement with low risk of running out.
Work backward:
- Estimate annual retirement spending (start with 70-80% of current income)
- Multiply by 25 (inverse of 4%)
- That's your target portfolio
Example:
- Current income: $200,000
- Expected retirement spending: $140,000/year (70%)
- Target portfolio: $140,000 × 25 = $3.5 million
Subtract Social Security and pension income from annual needs before multiplying.
Age-Based Benchmarks (More Realistic)
Here's what "on track" looks like at different ages, assuming retirement at 65-67:
Age 30
Saved: 0.5 to 1x salary
Savings rate: 15%+ of gross income
Why it's okay to be behind: Compound interest does heavy lifting over 35 years
Age 40
Saved: 2 to 3x salary
Savings rate: 15 to 20% of gross income
Critical decade: This is when catch-up becomes harder
Age 50
Saved: 5 to 7x salary
- Savings rate: 20%+ (use catch-up contributions)
Reality check: If behind, need aggressive action now
Age 60
Saved: 8 to 10x salary
- Savings rate: Max out 401(k) + catch-ups
Final push: Last chance for meaningful contributions
What If You're Behind?
Behind by 10 to 20%: Minor Course Correction
Actions:
Increase savings rate by 2 to 3%
Delay retirement by 1 to 2 years
- Optimize investment allocation for growth
Behind by 20 to 50%: Significant Adjustments Needed
Actions:
- Increase savings rate by 5 to 10%
Delay retirement by 3 to 5 years
- Consider side income or career advancement
- Review spending for cuts
Behind by 50%+: Major Intervention Required
Actions:
Max all tax-advantaged accounts (401(k), HSA, IRA)
- Work to age 70 (delays retirement, maximizes Social Security)
- Plan for part-time work in early retirement
- Dramatically reduce expenses
Consider geographic arbitrage (move to lower cost area)
Common Mistakes in Retirement Planning
Mistake 1: Ignoring Healthcare Costs
Medicare doesn't cover everything. Expect $300,000+ in lifetime healthcare costs in retirement.
Solution: Factor in $15,000 to 20,000/year for healthcare.
Mistake 2: Underestimating Longevity
Planning to age 85 when you might live to 95 creates a 10-year funding gap.
Solution: Plan to age 90 to 95. If you're healthy with family longevity, plan to 100.
Mistake 3: Assuming Fixed Expenses
Spending isn't flat in retirement. Early years (60 to 75): higher travel spending. Later years (85+): higher healthcare spending.
Solution: Use a dynamic spending model, not flat 4%.
Mistake 4: Forgetting Taxes
$1 million in traditional IRA isn't the same as $1 million in Roth IRA or taxable brokerage.
Solution: Account for taxes on traditional retirement accounts (multiply by approximately 0.75 for effective value).
Mistake 5: Not Accounting for Social Security
Social Security replaces 40-50% of pre-retirement income for average earners.
Solution: Get your Social Security statement. Include it in retirement income projections.
How to Get Back on Track
Strategy 1: Increase Savings Rate Gradually
If currently saving 10%, increase 1% per year for 5 years. You'll barely notice, but it compounds dramatically.
Strategy 2: Max Catch-Up Contributions at Age 50+
2025 catch-up limits:
- 401(k): Extra $7,500 (total $31,000)
- IRA: Extra $1,000 (total $8,000)
- HSA: Extra $1,000 at 55+ (total $5,300 individual, $9,550 family)
Strategy 3: Delay Social Security
Claiming at 70 vs. 62 increases monthly benefit by approximately 75%. For healthy individuals, this is a massive longevity hedge.
Strategy 4: Work Longer (Even Part-Time)
Every year you delay retirement:
- Allows portfolio to grow another year
- Reduces years you'll withdraw from portfolio
- Increases Social Security benefits
Math: Working 3 extra years can improve retirement security by 20 to 30%.
Strategy 5: Optimize Investment Returns
If you're 100% in bonds at age 40, you're leaving returns on table. Age-appropriate allocation matters.
Rule of thumb: Stock allocation = 110 minus age (e.g., age 50 = 60% stocks, 40% bonds)
The Retirement Planning Checklist
Annually:
Every 5 years:
When to Get Professional Help
DIY is fine if:
- Simple finances (W-2 income, standard accounts)
- On track with benchmarks
- Comfortable with basic investing
Get professional help if:
- Complex income (business owner, equity comp)
- Significantly behind on savings
- Facing major life transition (divorce, inheritance, job change)
- Unsure about investment strategy
- Need tax optimization
The Bottom Line
You're "on track" if your current savings trajectory gets you to 10 to 12x final salary by retirement, allowing you to withdraw 4% annually and maintain your lifestyle.
If you're behind, don't panic, but don't ignore it either. Small adjustments made consistently over years compound into security.
The worst mistake? Assuming you're fine without ever checking. Run the numbers. Get clear on where you stand. Then make a plan.
This content is for educational purposes only and should not be considered as financial or investment advice. Every individual's retirement situation is unique based on income, expenses, goals, and risk tolerance. Consult with a qualified financial advisor before making retirement planning decisions.
Historical investment returns are not guaranteed. All investments carry risk, including potential loss of principal.
Social Security benefits are subject to change based on future legislation. Review your personalized Social Security statement for estimates.
Securities offered through LPL Financial, Member FINRA/SIPC. Investment advice offered through Great Valley Advisor Group, a registered investment advisor and separate entity from LPL Financial.
Chesapeake Financial Planners | (410) 652-7868 | www.chesapeakefp.com