Retirement Planning: How Much Will I Need?
Does retirement planning seem complicated? Forget all the confusing chatter about annuities and asset allocation. Here’s everything you need to know about retirement planning in six easy steps.
Figure Out How Much You Need
Calculate how much money you’ll need to support your cost-of-living when you retire.
One general rule-of-thumb says that you should aim for 8% of your current income. If you make $100,000 per year, for example, you should aim for a retirement income of $80,000. But we disagree with this concept. A person who makes $100,000 a year and spends every dime is different than a person who makes $100,000 a year and lives on 30% of his income.
So we recommend a different approach: base your assumption on how much you currently spend, not how much you currently earn.
Assume that the amount you spend right now will be roughly equal to the amount you spend when you retire. Sure, you may be free from some current expenses like your mortgage during your retirement years, but you’ll probably also pick up new expenses like travel and additional health care costs.
Multiply by 25
Multiply the amount that you need each year in retirement by 25. This is how large your portfolio should be, assuming you have no other sources of retirement income.
If you want to live on $40,000 per year, for example, you’ll need a $1 million portfolio ($40,000 x 25). If you want to live on $60,000 per year, you’ll need a $1.5 million portfolio.
Use a Retirement Calculator
Use a retirement calculator to find out how much money you’ll need to save each year to accumulate your target portfolio.
Let’s imagine that you’re 30. You have $20,000 currently saved. You want to retire at age 65. You want a retirement income of $70,000, of which $25,000 will come from Social Security and the other $45,000 will come from your portfolio. You assume a 4% inflation rate, 25% tax rate, and 7% rate of return on your portfolio investments.
Under those conditions, you’ll need to put aside $24,000 per year to have a good shot at your retirement portfolio lasting until you turn 99, according to US News’ retirement calculator.
Crunch the numbers for your situation to see how much you’ll have to save to meet your goals.
Save!
Put your plan into action! Start socking away money. Reduce your grocery bills, don’t dine at restaurants as often, go on a backpacking vacation and use lots of other money-saving tactics to help you shovel more cash into your retirement accounts.
Diversify
Invest the money that’s in your retirement portfolio based on your age, your risk tolerance, and your income goals. As a general rule of thumb, 110 minus your age is the amount of money you should keep in equities (stocks), with the rest in bonds and cash equivalents. If you’re 30, for example, keep 110 – 30 = 80% of your portfolio in stocks, with the rest in bonds and cash, and rebalance yearly.