Retirement Savings Calculator

How Much Do I Need to Retire on $7,500 per Month?

Savings target (4% rule)

$2,250,000

Spending $7,500 per month is $90,000 per year. Using the 4% rule you need about 25 times that — roughly $2,250,000. A more conservative 3.5% withdrawal rate pushes the target to about $2,571,429.

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Target at 4% rule

$2,250,000

25× annual spending

Target at 3.5%

$2,571,429

~28.6× annual spending

Annual spending covered

$90,000

Target at 5%

$1,800,000

20× — aggressive

How to read these numbers

The standard way to size a retirement portfolio is to work backwards from spending: annual spending divided by your withdrawal rate. That is where the popular "25× rule" comes from — 25 times annual expenses is the same thing as a 4% withdrawal rate.

Two things can shrink the target meaningfully. First, this is the portfolio needed to cover the full $7,500 per month; if Social Security or a pension covers part of it, you only need to fund the gap. Second, these are pre-tax figures — your account mix (Roth vs. traditional vs. taxable) determines how much of each withdrawal you keep.

Portfolio needed for $7,500/month at different withdrawal rates

Withdrawal ratePortfolio neededMultiple of annual spendingProfile
3%$3,000,00033× $90,000Very conservative
3.5%$2,571,42928.6× $90,000Conservative
4%$2,250,00025× $90,000The classic "4% rule"
4.5%$2,000,00022.2× $90,000Slightly aggressive
5%$1,800,00020× $90,000Aggressive

A lower withdrawal rate means a bigger savings target but a wider safety margin. The 4% rule corresponds to saving 25 times your annual spending.

How long it takes to save $2,250,000

Monthly contributionTime to reach the target
$500More than 40 years
$1,000More than 40 years
$1,500More than 40 years
$2,000~37 years
$3,000~30 years

Assumes a $10,000 starting balance, contributions held steady in today's dollars, and our standard return and inflation assumptions. Timeframes use the same projection engine as the main calculator.

Assumptions behind this page

  • Average investment return of 7% per year before inflation — roughly in line with the long-term history of a diversified stock-heavy portfolio.
  • Inflation of 2.5% per year. All figures are shown in today's dollars, so the inflation-adjusted ("real") return works out to about 4.4% per year.
  • Withdrawals rise with inflation each year so your purchasing power stays constant.
  • Drawdown scenarios assume a single starting balance with no further contributions or other income.
  • Taxes, investment fees, Social Security, pensions, and healthcare costs are not included — they can meaningfully change the picture for your situation.
  • Scenarios are projected up to 60 years. "60+ years" means the money was not depleted within that horizon.

Frequently asked questions

Can I retire on $7,500 a month with Social Security on top?

If Social Security pays you, say, $2,000 per month, your portfolio only needs to produce $5,500 per month — which cuts the 4% savings target from $2,250,000 to about $1,650,000. Funding the gap, not the whole budget, is what your savings are for.

Why do I need 25 times my annual spending?

Withdrawing 4% per year is the same as holding 25 years' worth of spending (100 ÷ 4 = 25). The portfolio is invested while you draw it down, so growth replaces part of what you withdraw — historically enough to make $2,250,000 last 30 years or more at this spending level in most scenarios.

Is $7,500 a month a realistic retirement budget?

US household spending in retirement averages roughly $5,000 per month (BLS, households 65+), but the spread is wide: housing status, healthcare, and location dominate. Build the budget bottom-up from your own expenses, then use the multiplier to size the portfolio.

Should taxes change my target?

Yes, if your savings are mostly pre-tax. If you need $7,500 per month after tax and expect an effective tax rate of around 15% on withdrawals, you really need about $8,824 per month pre-tax — which raises the 4% target to roughly $2,647,059. Roth balances need no such adjustment.

What if I want to retire early?

A retirement of 40+ years argues for a withdrawal rate below 4%. At 3.5% the target for $7,500 per month is about $2,571,429, and at 3% about $3,000,000. Early retirees also need a plan for healthcare and for bridging the years before Social Security.

See your own path to this target

Open the full calculator with a $7,500/month withdrawal prefilled, then plug in your age, current savings, and contributions to see exactly when you'd get there.

Plan for $7,500/month

Related scenarios

Disclaimer: This page is an educational estimate based on simplified assumptions, not financial advice. Market returns vary, and your taxes, fees, and personal circumstances will change the outcome. Consider consulting a qualified financial advisor before making retirement decisions.