How Long Will $1 Million Last in Retirement?
Whether $1 million is enough for retirement depends on how much you spend each year, how your investments perform, and how long you need the money to last. For some people, $1 million can last decades. For others, it may run out much sooner.
The short answer
There is no single answer because retirement is different for everyone. A $1 million portfolio could last a long time with modest spending, but high withdrawals can drain it much faster.
What affects how long $1 million lasts?
- How much you withdraw each year
- Your average investment return
- Inflation over time
- Whether your spending increases later in retirement
- How many years you need your portfolio to last
- Taxes and healthcare costs
This is why two retirees with the same $1 million balance can have completely different outcomes.
Simple examples
If you spend $30,000 per year
A $1 million portfolio may last a very long time, especially if your investments continue growing and your withdrawals stay relatively low.
If you spend $40,000 per year
This lines up with the 4 percent rule. Many retirees use this as a rough starting point for a 30-year retirement plan.
If you spend $60,000 per year
Your withdrawals are much higher, so the portfolio may not last as long unless returns are strong or you have other income sources.
If you spend $80,000 or more per year
A $1 million portfolio may run down much faster, especially during periods of inflation or poor market performance.
The 4 percent rule connection
Many people use the 4 percent rule as a starting benchmark. With $1 million saved, a 4 percent first-year withdrawal equals $40,000.
That does not mean $40,000 is guaranteed forever. It simply gives you a planning starting point based on a common retirement rule of thumb.
When $1 million may be enough
- Your yearly spending is moderate
- You have Social Security, pension income, or both
- You retire later rather than very early
- Your home is paid off or housing costs are low
- You keep some flexibility in spending
In those cases, $1 million may go much further than people expect.
When $1 million may not be enough
- You plan to retire very early
- Your yearly expenses are high
- You expect major healthcare costs
- You withdraw too much too soon
- You face a long stretch of poor market returns
Even a seven-figure retirement portfolio can feel smaller than expected if spending is high or inflation stays elevated.
Why calculators help more than rules
A rule of thumb can only take you so far. To get a more realistic picture, it helps to test your own numbers.
- Try different withdrawal amounts
- Test different investment returns
- Think about inflation over time
- Estimate how long you want the portfolio to last
Helpful retirement tools
These pages can help you go deeper:
Related retirement pages
- How long will $750,000 last?
- Can you retire with $1 million?
- Can you retire with $2 million?
- Can you retire with $750,000?
- How much do you need to retire at 60?
The retire-at-60 page can stay here now and will work once we build it.
Bottom line
$1 million may be enough for retirement, but it depends on your lifestyle, withdrawal rate, and how long you need the money to last. The best next step is to run your own numbers using a retirement calculator instead of relying on a general guess.