Retirement Savings Planner

Retirement Calculator

Estimate your retirement portfolio, monthly savings needs, inflation-adjusted value and funding gap.

Free Forever No Login Required Browser-Only Calculations Inflation Adjustment
Plan Retirement

Retirement Calculator

Estimate your retirement readiness

Enter your current age, target retirement age, savings balance, monthly contribution and expected return. Results update automatically as you change inputs.

Projected Retirement Portfolio

$0 Estimated at retirement

Retirement Growth Chart

Projected portfolio value compared with your inflation-adjusted retirement target.

How to Use the Retirement Calculator

This retirement calculator helps you estimate whether your current savings plan may support a future retirement goal. Start by entering your current age and the age when you hope to retire. The difference between those ages creates your investment timeline. A longer timeline gives contributions and investment returns more time to compound, while a shorter timeline usually requires higher monthly saving or a lower spending target.

Next, enter your current retirement savings and monthly contribution. These numbers represent the foundation of the projection. The calculator assumes contributions are made monthly and that the portfolio compounds at the annual return you enter. Because real investment returns are uncertain, it is useful to test conservative, moderate and optimistic assumptions rather than relying on a single number.

The annual retirement spending goal estimates how much income you want your portfolio to support in today's dollars. The calculator adjusts that spending target for inflation and then estimates a retirement nest egg using your planned withdrawal rate. For example, a 4% withdrawal rate means a $50,000 annual spending target requires roughly $1.25 million before inflation adjustments.

Results are planning estimates only. The calculator does not include taxes, account rules, Social Security, pensions, health care costs, advisory fees or sequence-of-return risk. Use the output as a starting point for comparing scenarios, then review important decisions with qualified professionals when needed.

Why Inflation Matters for Retirement Planning

Inflation can make retirement planning feel confusing because a large future number may not buy as much as it appears to buy today. If prices rise over several decades, future spending needs may be much higher than current spending. A retirement plan that ignores inflation can look comfortable on paper while still falling short in real purchasing power.

This calculator separates nominal value from inflation-adjusted value. Nominal value is the future dollar amount projected at retirement. Inflation-adjusted value translates that future balance back into today's purchasing power. Looking at both numbers helps you understand whether the plan is growing in a meaningful way or simply keeping pace with rising prices.

Inflation also affects the target nest egg. If you want to spend $50,000 per year in today's dollars, you may need more than $50,000 per year at retirement to maintain a similar lifestyle. The longer the time horizon, the more important this adjustment becomes. Testing different inflation rates can show how sensitive your plan is to price increases.

Retirement Calculator FAQ

How accurate is this retirement calculator?

It uses standard compounding math and simplified assumptions. Actual retirement outcomes can differ because of market volatility, taxes, fees, inflation, spending changes and investment timing.

Can I include Social Security or pension income?

This version focuses on portfolio savings. You can approximate outside income by lowering your annual spending goal by the amount you expect from other reliable sources.

What if my projected balance is below my target?

Consider testing higher monthly contributions, a later retirement age, lower spending, lower fees or a different expected return. Avoid relying only on aggressive return assumptions.

Is the 4% rule guaranteed?

No. A 4% withdrawal rate is a planning guideline, not a guarantee. Sustainable withdrawals depend on market returns, inflation, taxes, fees, portfolio mix and spending flexibility.