Finance 8 min read

How Much Should I Save for Retirement? Complete Guide by Age

Learn how much you should have saved for retirement at every age. Covers the 4% rule, 401k strategies, catch-up contributions, and when you can actually retire.

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Retirement Savings Benchmarks by Age

Fidelity's widely-cited guidelines suggest: By 30, save 1x your salary. By 40, save 3x your salary. By 50, save 6x your salary. By 60, save 8x your salary. By 67, save 10x your salary. So if you earn $80,000, aim for $80,000 saved by 30, $240,000 by 40, and $800,000 by 67. These assume you want to maintain your current lifestyle in retirement.

The 4% Rule Explained

The 4% rule suggests you can withdraw 4% of your retirement savings in the first year, then adjust for inflation each subsequent year, and your money will likely last 30+ years. To find your target: multiply desired annual retirement income by 25. Want $60,000/year in retirement? You need $1.5 million. Want $100,000/year? You need $2.5 million.

How Much to Save Each Month

If you start at 25 with $0 saved and want $1 million by 65: invest $400/month at 7% average return. Start at 30? You need $550/month. Start at 35? You need $775/month. Start at 40? You need $1,100/month. Every year you delay roughly increases the required monthly savings by 15%. This is why starting early is the most powerful retirement strategy.

Maximize Your 401(k) and IRA

In 2024: 401(k) contribution limit is $23,000 ($30,500 if 50+). IRA limit is $7,000 ($8,000 if 50+). Always contribute enough to get your full employer 401(k) match — that's an immediate 50-100% return. After the match, consider a Roth IRA for tax-free growth. Then max out your 401(k). This order maximizes tax advantages.

What If You Started Late?

If you're 40+ with little saved, don't panic — take aggressive action now. Increase savings rate to 25-30%+ of income. Take full advantage of catch-up contributions. Consider working 2-3 years longer (adds savings years AND reduces withdrawal years). Reduce planned retirement spending. Delay Social Security to 70 for maximum benefits (8% increase per year after full retirement age).

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Frequently Asked Questions

How much do I need to retire?

Multiply your desired annual retirement spending by 25 (the 4% rule). Most Americans need $1-2.5 million. Social Security may cover $20,000-40,000/year, reducing the amount you need from savings. Use a retirement calculator for a personalized estimate.

Should I choose Roth or Traditional 401(k)?

If you expect higher taxes in retirement (young, lower income now), choose Roth (pay taxes now, tax-free withdrawals later). If you expect lower taxes in retirement (high income now, plan to spend less), choose Traditional (tax deduction now, pay taxes on withdrawals). Many advisors recommend having both for tax flexibility.

Is Social Security enough to retire on?

The average Social Security benefit is about $1,900/month ($22,800/year). The maximum at age 67 is about $3,800/month. For most people, Social Security alone isn't enough for a comfortable retirement. It was designed to replace about 40% of pre-retirement income.