๐Ÿ–๏ธ Retirement Income Tool

Withdrawal Rate Calculator Plus

Check whether your planned retirement spending is conservative, moderate, or aggressive relative to portfolio size.

Withdrawal inputs

Retirement spending estimate
$
$
$

Pension, rental income, part-time work, or other income.

%

Withdrawal rate calculator guide

This calculator compares your annual portfolio withdrawal against common retirement withdrawal-rate guidelines. It is useful for FIRE planning, retirement spending checks, and stress testing a retirement budget.

How to use it

  • Enter your investable retirement portfolio.
  • Enter annual spending and any non-portfolio income.
  • Review the calculated withdrawal rate and the 3%, 4%, and 5% spending bands.

Calculation method

Withdrawal rate = (annual spending โˆ’ other income) รท portfolio

The calculator also estimates how long a portfolio may last using a simplified real-return model.

Common mistake

A low withdrawal rate is not a guarantee. Market sequence, inflation, taxes, and changing spending can materially change outcomes.

FAQ

Is 4% always safe?

No. The 4% rule is a historical guideline, not a guarantee. Many early retirees use more conservative assumptions.

Should I include Social Security or pension income?

You can enter any stable non-portfolio income in the other income field.

What is a conservative withdrawal rate?

Many planners consider 3% to 3.5% more conservative, especially for long retirements.

Example Scenario

Use realistic assumptions to understand how changes in allocation, withdrawal rates, inflation, and portfolio management decisions can affect long-term financial outcomes.

Common Mistakes

Frequently Asked Questions

How often should I review my plan? At least annually.

Should I use conservative assumptions? Yes, especially for retirement planning.