How Much Do I Need to Retire?

How Much Do I Need to Retire?

Wondering how much you need to retire? You’ve probably heard you need to replace 70% to 90% of your pre-retirement income, save $1 million, or use the 25x rule. These are just rough starting points. The real answer depends on your essential expenses, healthcare costs, and the lifestyle you want in retirement.

Why Rules of Thumb Fall Short

Most people have heard that you need to replace 70% to 90% of your pre-retirement income, save $1 million, or build up 25 times your annual spending to retire comfortably. These rules of thumb are everywhere, but they’re just that, rules of thumb, not real plans. They don’t know what you want your retirement to look like, how much you’ll spend on travel or hobbies, or what your healthcare needs might be.

What the Research Says About Retirement Spending

Research shows that retirement spending isn’t flat. It usually follows a “retirement spending smile” pattern:

  • Higher spending in the early years (travel, experiences, fun)
  • A dip in the middle years
  • A rise again later due to healthcare costs

Essentials like housing, food, and healthcare typically make up 60% to 75% of most retirees’ budgets, according to EBRI (Employee Benefit Research Institute). Discretionary spending on things like adventures, experiences, and memories varies a lot from person to person.

Healthcare is a big wild card. Fidelity estimates a 65-year-old couple retiring today will need about $330,000 just for healthcare costs over their retirement. Social Security helps, but it only replaces about 35% of income for someone earning $50,000, and just 11% for someone earning $300,000. The rest has to come from your own savings and income plan.

A Better Way to Find Your Retirement Number

Instead of guessing with a percentage or a big round number, start by protecting your essentials and non-negotiable lifestyle goals with steady, reliable income. At KJ Financial, we call this Protected Lifetime Income (PLI). The key is making sure your basics and favorite experiences are always covered, no matter what the market does. Then, your remaining investments are used for upgrades, flexibility, and legacy.

Example: If you retire at age 65 with the right amount of guaranteed retirement income and grow your other money aggressively, you might later use some of that growth to fund additional guaranteed income for late-life care costs. Some solutions even double your income for a period if you need extra care, giving you peace of mind that you can cover those costs if they arrive.

What the Data Shows

  • BlackRock and EBRI research: Retirees with a guaranteed income floor have, on average, 22% more potential spending power than those relying only on withdrawals.
  • Fidelity: Healthcare costs are a major factor, plan for at least $330,000 for a couple retiring at 65.
  • Social Security: Replaces only a portion of your income; the rest must come from your own plan.

Myths and Truths

  • Myth: “Everyone needs to replace 80% of their income in retirement.”
    Truth: Actual needs vary a lot. Some people need as little as 55%, others as much as 100%, depending on lifestyle, health, and goals.
  • Myth: “If I save $1 million, I’ll be set for retirement.”
    Truth: The right amount depends on your spending needs, healthcare costs, and other income sources. For some, $1 million is more than enough; for others, it may not be.
  • Myth: “The 4% rule or 25x rule works for everyone.”
    Truth: These are guidelines, not guarantees. They don’t account for market downturns, inflation, taxes, or unexpected expenses.
  • Myth: “All retirement spending is essential.”
    Truth: Essentials usually make up 60% to 75% of the budget, but discretionary spending on experiences and memories is just as important for satisfaction.
  • Myth: “Guaranteed income is only for the risk-averse.”
    Truth: Research shows that retirees with a protected income floor spend more confidently and enjoy retirement more, regardless of their risk tolerance.

Pros and Cons

Pros of Sizing a Guaranteed Retirement Income Floor:

  • Makes sure your essentials and non-negotiable lifestyle goals are always covered, no matter what happens in the market
  • Increases your confidence and willingness to spend, so you can enjoy retirement instead of worrying about running out of money
  • Reduces the need for forced spending cuts during downturns
  • Supports a more personalized, lifestyle-driven retirement plan

Cons:

  • May require setting aside some assets for guaranteed income, which can reduce liquidity or growth potential
  • Takes careful planning to define what’s truly essential and what’s a “nice-to-have”
  • Some people prefer the flexibility of withdrawal-based approaches, especially if they have substantial assets or want to leave a larger legacy

Summary

There’s no one-size-fits-all answer to “How much do I need to retire?” Rules of thumb are just a starting point. The best approach is to protect your essentials and favorite experiences with steady, guaranteed retirement income, then use your investments for upgrades and legacy, so you can retire with confidence, not just a guess.

Book a 15-30 minute call to explore what matters most to you in retirement. No numbers, just your goals and vision.

Return to the Retirement Income Answers Hub

Frequently Asked Questions

How much income will $500,000 generate in retirement?

See how $500,000 can translate into steady, spendable income … plus why the old 4% rule can fail and how guaranteed retirement income can help you spend with confidence.

Is $500,000 enough to retire?

It depends on your spending needs, healthcare costs, and other income sources. See real examples and how to calculate your number.

What is guaranteed retirement income?

Guaranteed retirement income means steady, predictable paychecks for life, covering essentials and experiences, no matter what the market does.

What is the 4% rule and is it still safe?

The 4% rule is a guideline, not a guarantee. Learn why it may not be safe in today’s markets and what to use instead.

How do healthcare costs affect retirement?

Healthcare is a major expense in retirement. Learn how to plan for rising costs and avoid surprises.

How do I protect against inflation and market drops?

Build a guaranteed income floor for essentials, then use growth assets for long-term purchasing power and staged income activations.

About Kurt H. Jackson

Experience: Kurt H. Jackson has spent more than 16 years working directly with retirees and pre-retirees in Missouri, Nebraska, Kansas, Iowa, and Florida. Before founding KJ Financial in 2010, he spent 20+ years as a Certified Mortgage Planner working with more than 1,000 clients on major financial decisions. He has helped hundreds of clients move past rules of thumb and build real retirement income plans around their actual lifestyle goals.

Expertise: Kurt is a Retirement Lifestyle Architect and the creator of the Lifestyle-First Retirement Income Planning framework. He is Life and Health Insurance Licensed in MO, NE, KS, IA, and FL. His practice focuses exclusively on insurance-based, tax-optimized retirement income strategies including Protected Lifetime Income (PLI) design, Roth conversion planning, and the 6-Link Tax Cascade. He does not manage investments or sell securities.

Authoritativeness: Kurt founded KJ Financial and operates MaxMyRetirementIncome.com as a dedicated educational resource for retirees. His Lifestyle-First framework is built on peer-reviewed research from Wade Pfau, Morningstar, BlackRock, and EBRI. Every income figure published on this site is based on actual carrier quotes and current research, updated regularly.

Trustworthiness: KJ Financial is a compliance-first firm. All income figures are presented as illustrative and hypothetical. Kurt H. Jackson is not a securities broker, registered investment advisor, or CPA. Guarantees rely on the claims-paying ability of the issuing insurance company.

Contact KJ Financial:
1014 E. 5th St., Maryville, MO 64468
Direct: 816.582.5532
Email: kurt@kjfinancialonline.com
Website: www.MaxMyRetirementIncome.com

Educational only, not tax, legal, or individualized investment advice. All figures are illustrative and may differ for your situation based on age, health, product features, fees, allocations, and market conditions.

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