Retirement Projection

Project your retirement savings: current balance, annual contributions, expected return, inflation, target year. See real (inflation-adjusted) and nominal balances. Stress-test with multiple return scenarios.

Projections, not guarantees. Real returns vary, sequence-of-returns risk is real, inflation can spike. Use this for ballpark planning, not as investment advice.

What is this for?

Retirement is one of the largest financial decisions most people will ever make — and most of it is decided years before by a tiny handful of inputs: how much you save, what it earns, and how long it has to grow. This tool projects those inputs forward to a target retirement age, then runs the math in reverse to show how long the resulting pot lasts at a chosen withdrawal level. Crucially it shows both the nominal balance (what your statement will show) and the real balance (what that money will actually buy in today's terms after inflation eats away).

The math

Accumulation phase, year by year: balance × (1 + return) + annual contribution. Inflation-adjusted value: nominal ÷ (1 + inflation)^years. Depletion phase: each retirement year, balance earns return, then a withdrawal that itself grows with inflation comes out. We walk this until the balance hits zero.

The single most important framing

Returns are not steady. The classic "4% safe withdrawal rule" (Trinity Study) survives most 30-year historical periods at 4% real withdrawal — but the worst historical period left someone broke at year 28. Real-world planners often use 3.5% to be safer, or build in a "guardrail" rule that flexes the withdrawal up or down as the portfolio swings. This tool's depletion number is a constant-return projection — treat it as a planning ballpark, not a prediction.

Common gotchas

Expert notes

Pairs with

Not investment advice. This tool runs arithmetic on your inputs and shows you the picture. It cannot account for sequence-of-returns risk, tax law changes, your specific income needs, longevity risk, or any other personal circumstance. Treat its numbers as a starting point for conversation with a qualified financial planner, not as a recommendation.