At age 35, you have 25 years until you plan to retire at 60. With $100,000 already saved and a monthly contribution of $250, your projected retirement savings of $904,165 would generate only $36,162 per year using the 4% withdrawal rule. That falls far short of your desired retirement income of $100,000, creating a significant gap of $63,833 each year. This guide explores the numbers, factors affecting your progress, and actionable steps to bridge the shortfall.
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
Based on an 8% average annual return, your current savings plus contributions will grow to $904,165 by age 60. While that’s a healthy nest egg, the 4% sustainable withdrawal rate ($36,162) covers only about one-third of your desired $100,000 annual income. The $63,833 gap means you would need to either drastically reduce your retirement lifestyle or find other income sources like Social Security, a part-time job, or a pension.
Your plan is currently not on track to meet your goal. The primary levers are increasing your monthly savings, delaying retirement, or lowering your income expectation. Even a small adjustment now can have a large impact over 25 years of compounding.
| current Age | 35 |
| retire Age | 60 |
| years To Retire | 25 |
| current Savings | $100,000.00 |
| monthly Contribution | 250 |
| annual Return | 8 |
| retirement Savings | $904,165.34 |
| desired Income | $100,000.00 |
| sustainable Income4 Pct | 36166.61% |
| income Gap | $63,833.39 |
| on Track | false |
If you increased your monthly contribution from $250 to $500, your retirement savings at age 60 would grow to approximately $1,410,000, providing sustainable income of about $56,400—still a $43,600 gap, but much closer. Combined with a part-time job or Social Security benefits, you might reach $100K. Alternatively, delaying retirement by five years (to age 65) while continuing the same $250 monthly contribution would boost savings to about $1,340,000, yielding $53,600 annually—again reducing the gap by roughly $17,500.
Another alternative is lowering your desired income to $70,000. In that case, your current plan would cover over half of that amount, and with the same $250 monthly you could close the gap by reducing expenses in retirement. The key is to run multiple scenarios using a retirement calculator to find the right balance of savings rate, retirement age, and income goal.
It uses the future value of an annuity formula: starting with $100,000, adding $250 per month (or $3,000 per year), compounded annually at 8% over 25 years. The calculation assumes contributions are made at the end of each period and returns are constant, which is an estimate—actual returns will vary.
The 4% rule suggests you can withdraw 4% of your initial portfolio in the first year of retirement, adjusted for inflation, without running out of money for at least 30 years. For your $904,165, that’s 0.04 * $904,165 = $36,166.60. This is a guideline; lower withdrawal rates (e.g., 3.5%) are safer in today’s low-return environment.
To generate $100,000 per year using the 4% rule, you need a portfolio of $2.5 million at retirement. With 25 years, an 8% return, and starting with $100,000, you would need to save about $1,860 per month—more than 7 times your current $250. Saving $1,860 monthly is challenging, so consider a combo of lower income goal, later retirement, and higher returns.
You are on track to have $904,165 at age 60, which provides $36,162 per year. That is a modest retirement income. Combined with Social Security (possibly $18,000/year), you might have around $54,000—enough for a basic lifestyle but not the $100,000 you desire. You are not on track for your specific goal, but you are building a foundation that can be strengthened.
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