If you're 45 years old with $100,000 in savings and contributing $1,000 each month, our retirement calculator shows you could accumulate roughly $466,836 by age 60, assuming a 5% annual return. That sounds promising—until you consider your desired retirement income of $150,000 per year. Following the popular 4% withdrawal rule, your savings would generate only about $18,673 annually, leaving a staggering income gap of $131,327 each year. This scenario highlights a critical shortfall and the need to adjust your plan now.
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 estimated savings at age 60: $466,835.58 from a starting balance of $100,000, monthly contributions of $1,000, and a 5% annual return over 15 years. This figure is based on compound growth but does not account for inflation or taxes.
Sustainable annual income (4% rule): $18,673.42. The 4% withdrawal rule is a standard guideline suggesting you can safely withdraw this amount from your retirement portfolio each year without depleting it too quickly. Compared to your $150,000 desired income, the gap is $131,326.58 per year.
Status: Unfortunately, you are not on track to meet your retirement income goal. Without significant changes—increasing savings, delaying retirement, or reducing expectations—you will face a severe income shortfall in retirement.
| current Age | 45 |
| retire Age | 60 |
| years To Retire | 15 |
| current Savings | $100,000.00 |
| monthly Contribution | $1,000.00 |
| annual Return | 5 |
| retirement Savings | $466,835.58 |
| desired Income | $150,000.00 |
| sustainable Income4 Pct | 18673.42% |
| income Gap | $131,326.58 |
| on Track | false |
Alternative 1: Retire later at 65. If you continue the same $1,000 contributions and 5% return for 20 years instead of 15, your savings would grow to approximately $648,000. The 4% withdrawal would provide about $25,900 annually—still far short of $150,000. However, delaying retirement also means fewer years in retirement, which may reduce the total income needed.
Alternative 2: Increase monthly contributions. Boosting your monthly contribution to $2,500 per month would yield around $860,000 at age 60 (with same assumptions). That translates to $34,400 annual income—still under 25% of your target. To hit $150,000 using the 4% rule, you would need a portfolio of $3.75 million. That would require saving roughly $8,000 per month from age 45. Realistically, you may need to adjust your desired income downward or combine multiple strategies.
Technically yes, but with the scenario you described you would have about $466,836 saved by age 60. That amount would only generate about $18,673 per year using the 4% withdrawal rule, which is far below your $150,000 desired income. Unless you drastically reduce your spending, you will not be able to retire comfortably at 60 with this plan.
Assuming a 5% return and 15‑year horizon, you would need a portfolio of about $3.75 million at retirement to generate $150,000 via the 4% rule. That would require starting with $100,000 and contributing approximately $8,000 per month. For most people, that is unrealistic. A better approach is to adjust your income goal or extend your time horizon.
Increasing your annual return to 7% (before inflation) would grow your savings to about $528,000 by age 60 with the same $1,000 monthly contributions. The 4% withdrawal would then be $21,120—still far from $150,000. Even a 10% return would produce only around $615,000 and $24,600 annual income. The gap is too large to be solved by higher returns alone without also increasing contributions or reducing expectations.
The 4% rule is a guideline for retirees: in your first year of retirement, you withdraw 4% of your portfolio, then adjust that dollar amount for inflation each year. It was based on historical data and aims to make your savings last 30 years. It is a conservative starting point, but every individual's situation differs. For your scenario, using the 4% rule highlights that $18,673 is all you could safely spend from $466,836. You may need to consider a lower withdrawal rate (e.g., 3%) or a dynamic withdrawal strategy.
Important Disclaimer — 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 — May 31, 2026
AI & Software Engineer, Founder & Lead Developer at QFINHUB · Editorial Policy