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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.

Years Until Portfolio Depleted

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:

  1. Required Minimum Distributions (RMDs) from traditional 401(k)/IRA — required starting age 73+
  2. Taxable accounts (brokerage): use long-term capital gains rates
  3. Tax-deferred (traditional IRA, 401(k)): use proportionally to manage tax brackets
  4. Roth IRA/401(k): save for last (tax-free growth)
  5. 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.


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