If you are 50 years old with $500,000 in retirement savings and are contributing $250 each month, you are targeting retirement at age 67. Assuming a 4% annual return, your projected nest egg at retirement is approximately $1,045,043. However, your desired annual income of $150,000 would require a sustainable withdrawal of only about $41,802 under the 4% rule. This leaves a significant income gap of $108,198 per year, meaning you are not currently on track to meet your 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
Based on your inputs, the Retirement Calculator estimates that by age 67—17 years from now—you will have accumulated roughly $1,045,043. This calculation assumes a 4% annual return on your current $500,000 savings and ongoing monthly contributions of $250. Using the popular 4% withdrawal guideline, your sustainable annual income from retirement savings would be about $41,802.
Your desired annual income of $150,000 is far higher than this sustainable amount, creating a gap of $108,198 per year. This indicates that without changes to your savings rate, investment return, or retirement expectations, you may fall short of your target. The calculator flags you as 'not on track.' To close the gap, you could increase monthly contributions, seek higher returns, delay retirement, or reduce your desired income.
| current Age | 50 |
| retire Age | 67 |
| years To Retire | 17 |
| current Savings | $500,000.00 |
| monthly Contribution | 250 |
| annual Return | 4 |
| retirement Savings | $1,045,042.78 |
| desired Income | $150,000.00 |
| sustainable Income4 Pct | 41801.71% |
| income Gap | $108,198.29 |
| on Track | false |
Compared to a scenario where you start with $500,000 at age 50 but contribute nothing more, your retirement savings would be about $970,000 (just from growth). Your sustainable income would be $38,800—even lower. With your current $250 monthly contributions, you add about $75,000 in growth, raising your income to $41,802—only a $3,000 improvement. That's not enough.
If you were to increase your monthly contribution to $1,000, your nest egg would grow to about $1.27 million, providing $50,800 sustainable income—still far from $150,000. Even boosting returns to 6% with $250 monthly yields about $1.46 million, offering $58,400. None of these modest changes fully close the gap. You would need to either drastically increase savings (e.g., $5,000/month) or reduce desired income to around $50,000–$60,000 to achieve a realistic plan.
The 4% rule is a conservative guideline designed to ensure your savings last 30 years. It suggests you can withdraw 4% of your starting portfolio value (adjusted for inflation) in the first year. On $1,045,043, 4% is $41,802. This accounts for market volatility and inflation, and is meant to preserve capital over a long retirement.
If you achieve a 6% annual return instead of 4%, your nest egg would grow to about $1.46 million. The 4% rule would then allow $58,400 in annual income—still far below $150,000. A higher return helps, but it cannot single‑handedly close a gap this large without also increasing contributions or reducing income expectations.
To hit a savings target that yields $150,000 under the 4% rule, you need about $3.75 million. With your current $500,000 and 4% return, you would need to contribute approximately $6,800 per month for 17 years. That's a large increase. Alternatively, if you earn 7% returns, you'd need about $4,600 monthly—still a major commitment.
Some retirees use 3% or 5% depending on risk tolerance and retirement length. A 5% withdrawal rate on your $1.045M would give $52,250—better but still far from $150k. Using 3% yields $31,350. For most people, the 4% guideline is a reasonable starting point, but you should tailor it to your personal situation and possibly combine with Social Security or part‑time work.
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