Updated 2026-03-20 · Calculated at 7% average annual return (S&P 500 historical average)
Starting at age 45, saving $500/month at 7% average annual return (S&P 500 historical average). The "Monthly Income" column shows what you could safely withdraw using the 4% rule.
| Year | Total Contributed | Investment Growth | Portfolio Value | Monthly Income (4% Rule) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 5 | $30,000 | $5,796 | $35,796 | $119/mo |
| 10 | $60,000 | $26,542 | $86,542 | $288/mo |
| 15 | $90,000 | $68,481 | $158,481 | $528/mo |
| 20 | $120,000 | $140,463 | $260,463 | $868/mo |
You may have a gap. For $50K/year retirement expenses, you would need approximately $1,250,000. Your projected $260,463 leaves a gap of $989,537. Consider increasing your monthly savings, working a few extra years, or supplementing with Social Security and other income.
At 45, you have 20 years until retirement. While this is less time for compounding, aggressive savings now can still build a meaningful nest egg. Consider maximizing your 401K contributions and using catch-up contributions after age 50.
It depends on your target retirement income. $500/month from age 45 builds $260,463 by age 65, providing $868/month via the 4% rule. If you need $50,000/year, you would need approximately $1,250,000, leaving a gap of $989,537. Consider increasing your monthly savings or delaying retirement.
The 4% rule states that you can safely withdraw 4% of your retirement portfolio each year without running out of money over a 30-year retirement. With a $260,463 portfolio, that means $10,419/year or $868/month. This rule was developed from the Trinity Study analyzing historical market returns.
Out of your $260,463 total, $120,000 comes from your own contributions and $140,463 (54%) comes from investment growth. This shows the power of compound interest over 20 years. The earlier you start, the more growth does the heavy lifting.
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