At age 35, you have $50,000 in current savings and are contributing $100 monthly toward retirement. If you retire at 70, you'll have 35 years of growth ahead of you.
With an average annual return of 5%, your projected total savings at retirement come to $384,185.14. However, your desired annual income is $100,000 โ a target that may be harder to reach than you think.
Using the standard 4% withdrawal rule, your savings would generate only $15,367.41 per year, leaving an income gap of $84,632.59. Based on this scenario, you are not on track to meet your retirement income goal.
Plan your retirement savings with projections, withdrawal strategies, and goal tracking.
Nest Egg at Retirement
$2,376,362.19
Annual Retirement Income
$95,054.49
Based on 4% withdrawal rate
Income Replacement Rate
126.7%
of current $75,000 income
Conservative (3% lower)
$1,116,019.43
At 4.0% return
Optimistic (3% higher)
$5,428,570.57
At 10.0% return
Your retirement savings projection of $384,185.14 assumes you continue to contribute $100 each month and earn a 5% annual return for 35 years. While that sum might seem substantial, it translates to a sustainable annual withdrawal of just $15,367.41 when using the widely recommended 4% rule.
This means your retirement savings would cover only about 15% of your desired $100,000 annual income. The shortfall of $84,632.59 every year will require significant adjustments โ either by increasing your savings rate, seeking higher returns, reducing your income goal, or delaying retirement.
Without changes, you risk outliving your savings or experiencing a much lower standard of living than planned.
| current Age | 35 |
| retire Age | 70 |
| years To Retire | 35 |
| current Savings | $50,000.00 |
| monthly Contribution | 100 |
| annual Return | 5 |
| retirement Savings | $384,185.14 |
| desired Income | $100,000.00 |
| sustainable Income4 Pct | 15367.41% |
| income Gap | $84,632.59 |
| on Track | false |
If you were to increase your monthly contribution to $500 instead of $100, your retirement savings would grow to approximately $770,000 โ more than doubling your nest egg. That would provide $30,800 per year under the 4% rule, still falling short of $100,000 but narrowing the gap significantly.
Alternatively, delaying retirement by just 5 years (to age 75) would give your savings an extra 5 years to compound. With the same $100 monthly contribution, you'd reach about $477,000, raising sustainable income to $19,000. A more aggressive return assumption of 7% would push your total past $700,000, yielding $28,000 annually. None of these single changes close the entire gap, but combining them โ higher savings, longer time horizon, and better returns โ can get you much closer to your goal.
The 4% rule states that you can withdraw 4% of your retirement savings in the first year of retirement and adjust for inflation each year, with a high probability that your savings will last at least 30 years. In your scenario, 4% of $384,185.14 is $15,367.41 โ meaning you can safely withdraw only about $1,280 per month without depleting your nest egg too quickly.
That depends entirely on your expenses. If your annual spending is under $15,000, $384K might be sufficient. But with a desired income of $100,000, it is not enough. You would need about $2.5 million to support $100,000 in withdrawals under the 4% rule. Your current plan would require drastic lifestyle changes or additional income streams after retirement.
Closing the gap requires a combination of approaches: increasing your monthly savings rate (even to $500/month helps), earning a higher average return (e.g., investing more in stocks), reducing your desired income to a more realistic level, working longer, or using strategies like Roth conversions, part-time work in retirement, or reducing expenses. Our retirement calculator shows that small changes early can compound into huge differences.
A Roth IRA offers tax-free withdrawals in retirement, which can be valuable if you expect to be in a higher tax bracket later. A traditional IRA gives you a tax deduction now but taxes on withdrawals. Given your relatively low monthly contribution of $100, a Roth might be a good choice since you're likely in a lower tax bracket now. But both accounts have the same contribution limits, and you can even split contributions. The key is to start saving consistently, regardless of account type.
Important Disclaimer โ Not Financial Advice
The results from this calculator are for informational and educational purposes only. They are not a guarantee of actual outcomes and should not be considered financial, investment, tax, or legal advice. Always consult a qualified professional for advice tailored to your specific financial situation. See our Terms of Service and Privacy Policy for more information.
Last reviewed by Qasem Mohammed โ May 31, 2026
AI & Software Engineer, Founder & Lead Developer at QFINHUB ยท Editorial Policy