Yes, you can generally retire comfortably at 55 with $4,000,000. This amount is roughly 8 times higher than the average 401(k) for that age, placing you in a very strong financial position. A 3.2% to 4% annual withdrawal rate can comfortably sustain your lifestyle, but you must account for healthcare costs, taxes, and potential early withdrawal penalties.
If that projected spending rate seems adequate for covering retirement living costs, then having $4 million saved by age 55 puts a couple in strong financial shape to retire comfortably on their savings and investment returns.
According to the Federal Reserve, the average retirement savings for a person aged 55 to 64 in 2022 was $537,560. Given that this average is approximately $1 million short of what's needed to sustain a relatively comfortable lifestyle, the average person would struggle to retire at this age.
The number of retirees with $4 million or more in savings is relatively small. Using data from the Federal Reserve's Survey of Consumer Finances (SCF), the Employee Benefits Research Institute estimates that only 4.7% have $1 million or more saved for retirement.
The basics. If you retire at 55, and the average life expectancy is around 87, then 400K will need to last you 30+ years. If it's your only source of retirement income, until the state pension kicks in at around 67/68, then you are going to have to budget hard to make it last.
Early retirement might lead to reduced Social Security benefits and longer-lasting savings requirements. Finding suitable health insurance before Medicare eligibility at 65 can be costly for early retirees.
The top ten financial mistakes most people make after retirement are:
Yes, retiring at 55 with $500k is possible, but it's challenging and depends heavily on your low expenses, additional income (like Social Security later), and investment growth, as $500k alone might only last 10-20 years under the 4% rule (providing $20k/year) before running out, especially with inflation, requiring significant lifestyle adjustments or part-time work to stretch it for 30+ years.
Yes, a $4 million net worth is considered very rich in the U.S., placing you in the top few percentiles of households, far above the median, offering significant financial security, lifestyle options, and legacy potential, though it's not ultra-high-net-worth and its sufficiency depends on location and spending habits.
Data from the Employee Benefit Research Institute, which utilizes the Federal Reserve's Survey of Consumer Finances, indicates that only about 0.1% of retirees have over $5 million saved for retirement. Additionally, about 3.2% have savings exceeding $1 million.
Very few people retire with $4 million; it's a rare milestone, placing someone in the top tier of wealth, likely the top 2-3% of households, but far from the ultra-wealthy, with most Americans having significantly less (median retirement savings around $87k). Reaching $4 million requires extreme discipline, starting early, consistent investing, and living below one's means, making it an exceptional achievement, not the norm.
The short answer: to retire on $80,000 a year in Australia, you'll need a super balance of roughly between $700,000 and $1.4 million. It's a broad range, and that's because everyone's circumstances are different.
By age 50, that goal is three-and-a-half to five-and-a-half times your salary. By age 60, your retirement savings goal may be six to 11-times your salary. Ranges increase with age to account for a wide variety of incomes and situations. If you're not reaching these benchmarks, it's okay.
They separated households that met the accredited investor definition into those with $1 million or more in qualified savings, which they dubbed “401(k) millionaires,” and all other accredited investor households.
Yes, you can live off the interest/returns from $500,000, but it depends heavily on your lifestyle and expenses, with the common 4% rule suggesting about $20,000 annually, which may require a frugal lifestyle, relocation, or significant Social Security income to supplement. With smart investing (e.g., balanced stock/bond mix) and minimal spending, it's feasible for many, but living in a high-cost area or with high expenses would make it difficult.