Retirement Withdrawal Rate Calculator
Calculate how long your retirement portfolio will last using the 4% rule or a custom withdrawal rate.
See yearly portfolio balance over time.
Where the 4% Rule came from
William Bengen, a financial advisor, published his seminal 1994 paper in the Journal of Financial Planning titled “Determining Withdrawal Rates Using Historical Data.” He tested every historical 30-year period in US market history (using actual returns and inflation from 1926-1992) and found that retirees could withdraw 4% of their initial portfolio in year one, adjust for inflation each year, and never run out of money in any historical 30-year window.
His finding was originally cautious — the “SAFEMAX” withdrawal rate. Subsequent research by the Trinity Study (Cooley, Hubbard, Walz, 1998) confirmed and refined the 4% number, and it became known as the 4% Rule.
The basic math:
Annual Withdrawal Year 1 = Portfolio × 4% Annual Withdrawal Year N = Year 1 amount × (1 + inflation)^(N-1)
For a $1,000,000 portfolio:
- Year 1: $40,000
- Year 2 (3% inflation): $41,200
- Year 3: $42,436
- Year 30 (3% avg inflation): $94,000
The portfolio assumption: 60/40 stocks/bonds
The 4% Rule assumes a portfolio of roughly 60% stocks and 40% bonds, rebalanced annually. This is the classic “balanced retirement portfolio” allocation. Different allocations produce different safe rates:
| Portfolio | Approximate safe rate (30-year) |
|---|---|
| 100% bonds | ~3.0% (deflation/inflation risk) |
| 30/70 stocks/bonds | 3.5% |
| 50/50 stocks/bonds | 3.8% |
| 60/40 stocks/bonds (classic) | 4.0% |
| 70/30 stocks/bonds | 4.0-4.2% |
| 80/20 stocks/bonds | 4.0-4.2% |
| 100% stocks | 3.8% (volatility kills early years) |
The interesting finding: higher stock allocation doesn’t necessarily increase safe rate. The volatility actually hurts the 4% Rule due to “sequence of returns risk.”
Sequence of returns risk — the silent retirement killer
The order of returns matters enormously. Consider two retirees with identical 30-year average returns of 7%:
Retiree A: high returns first, then losses later
- Year 1-5: +15% per year
- Year 26-30: -5% per year
- Portfolio mostly grows before withdrawals matter
Retiree B: losses first, then high returns
- Year 1-5: -5% per year
- Year 26-30: +15% per year
- Portfolio depleted by combined withdrawals + losses early
Same average return, but B runs out of money far earlier. This is sequence of returns risk. The 4% Rule survived because Bengen tested the worst historical sequences (early 1930s and 1965-1969 retirements were the closest to failure).
How the 4% Rule survives bad markets
Specific historical retirement years and their 30-year outcomes at 4%:
| Starting year | 30-year outcome |
|---|---|
| 1929 (Great Depression start) | Survived with depleted portfolio |
| 1965-1968 (high inflation era) | Closest to failure |
| 1969 | Very close to depletion |
| 1973 (oil crisis) | Survived with thin margin |
| 1982 (start of bull market) | Massive surplus remaining |
| 1999 (tech bubble peak) | Survived but uncomfortable through 2002 |
| 2000-2008 | Stressed by two big crashes |
The 4% Rule has never failed in US historical data with a 60/40 portfolio over 30 years. But many critics worry it may not survive the next few decades because of:
- Lower expected bond returns (current yields lower than 1980s-2010s)
- Stock valuations near historical highs (lower expected forward returns)
- Higher inflation than the 2010s
- Longer retirements (people living to 90s+)
Modern revisions: 3.3-3.7% rule
In response to concerns about future returns, recent research suggests lower safe rates:
- Morningstar 2021 research: 3.3% for newly retiring 30-year retirements
- Big ERN’s safe withdrawal series: 3.25-3.75% for various confidence levels
- Wade Pfau and Michael Kitces: 3.5-4.0% depending on starting valuations
The honest reality: for new retirees starting in 2024-2025, 3.5-3.8% is more defensible than 4%.
Variable spending strategies — beating the 4% Rule
Rigid 4% spending isn’t actually how retirees should behave. Modern research favors variable spending:
Guardrails (Kitces 2015):
- Start at 5.0% withdrawal rate
- If portfolio drops 20% from initial, cut spending by 10%
- If portfolio rises 20%, increase spending by 10%
- Provides more income in good years, less in bad years
- Historical success rate at 5% with guardrails: 95%+
RMD-style (similar to required minimum distributions):
- Each year, withdraw 1 ÷ life expectancy years of current portfolio
- 65-year-old: 1÷20 = 5%
- 75-year-old: 1÷13 = 7.7%
- 85-year-old: 1÷7 = 14.3%
- Always responsive to current portfolio; never depletes
- But spending varies a lot year-to-year
Vanguard’s “dynamic” approach:
- Floor: never less than year-1 amount adjusted for inflation
- Ceiling: never more than initial × 1.5 (real)
- Adjust within range based on portfolio performance
These approaches allow higher average spending (~5%) while maintaining sustainability.
The Sustainable Withdrawal Rate by retirement length
The 4% Rule assumes 30 years. Different time horizons need different rates:
| Retirement length | Safe rate (60/40 portfolio) |
|---|---|
| 10 years | 8-9% |
| 15 years | 6-7% |
| 20 years | 5-5.5% |
| 25 years | 4.5% |
| 30 years | 4.0% |
| 35 years | 3.7% |
| 40 years | 3.5% |
| 50 years (early retirement) | 3.0-3.25% |
Early retirees (FIRE community) typically aim for 3.5% or lower withdrawal rates because of the long horizon. Late retirees (starting at 70+) can use 5%+ with reasonable safety.
Social Security and pensions change everything
The 4% Rule treats your investment portfolio as your only income. In reality, most US retirees have:
- Social Security ($1,500-$4,500/month for typical earners)
- Pensions (if employer offers)
- Rental income (some retirees)
- Part-time work (especially early years)
If Social Security covers $2,500/month ($30,000/year) of your $80,000/year expenses, you only need to withdraw $50,000/year from investments. With a $1M portfolio, that’s 5% — well above 4%. The “income gap” matters more than the absolute spending.
The withdrawal order matters
In tax-efficient retirement, the order of withdrawal accounts matters:
- Required Minimum Distributions (RMDs) from traditional 401(k)/IRA — required starting age 73+
- Taxable accounts (brokerage): use long-term capital gains rates
- Tax-deferred (traditional IRA, 401(k)): use proportionally to manage tax brackets
- Roth IRA/401(k): save for last (tax-free growth)
- HSA: keep for medical expenses (triple tax advantage)
Smart withdrawal sequencing can save tens of thousands in taxes over a retirement.
The healthcare wild card
Healthcare costs in retirement are a major risk:
- Medicare doesn’t cover everything (Part B/D premiums, copays, dental, hearing, vision)
- Long-term care can devastate a retirement (covered by neither Medicare nor most insurance)
- Healthcare cost inflation runs 4-6%/year (higher than general inflation)
Fidelity’s 2024 estimate: a 65-year-old couple needs $315,000 for healthcare costs through retirement (excluding long-term care). This should be considered separately from the basic 4% Rule.
Bottom line
The 4% Rule is a 30-year retirement guideline using 60/40 stocks/bonds, validated against historical US data. For new retirees today, 3.5-3.8% is more defensible given current market conditions. Sequence of returns risk makes the first 5-10 years of retirement critical. Variable spending strategies (guardrails) allow higher average withdrawal with maintained safety. Social Security and pensions reduce the burden on investment portfolios. Healthcare and long-term care should be planned separately.