A $50,000-a-year lifestyle today — middle-class comfortable, doesn’t feel rich — actually requires roughly $2.55 million at retirement to fund 25 years of inflation-adjusted withdrawals (assuming 3.5% inflation, 7% post-retire return, 30 years to retire). The number sounds enormous because of one thing: inflation. $50K today becomes $140K 30 years from now. The calculator above shows exactly how the math works.
Use-case → Retirement
Retirement Corpus for $50K Annual Expenses
What you actually need to retire if your lifestyle costs $50,000/year today — inflation-adjusted to your retirement date.
Required corpus at retirement
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Required Corpus
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Why the Number Looks So Big
Two compounding effects shock most people. First, inflation: at 3.5% annually, $50K today becomes $140K in 30 years. Second, you need that ${$140K} every year for 25+ years, with the corpus continuing to grow but also being drawn down. The mathematical formula handles both — and the result is roughly 50× your current annual expenses.
The 25× Rule (4% Safe Withdrawal Rate)
Quick mental math: multiply your retirement-year annual expenses by 25. That gives you the corpus needed using the famous 4% safe withdrawal rule (which, despite its age, still works for 30-year retirements based on rolling-period historical data).
Sequence-of-Returns Risk
The biggest hidden risk in early retirement isn’t total return — it’s the sequence. A 30% market drop in your first retirement year can cripple a corpus that would have lasted 30 years. A 30% drop in year 25 barely matters.
- Mitigation: 2–3 years of expenses in cash and short-term bonds at retirement.
- Reduce withdrawals 10–20% in down years — the “guardrails” approach.
- Delay big purchases in early-retirement bear markets.
Reducing the Required Number
- Delay retirement by 3 years: less corpus needed (fewer years of withdrawals) + 3 more years of compounding. Roughly cuts target by 15–20%.
- Geo-arbitrage: retire to a lower-cost country or city. $50K lifestyle becomes a $30K lifestyle in many areas, cutting the corpus need 40%+.
- Reduce target expenses: each $1,000/year cut reduces required corpus by ~$25,000.
- Plan for Social Security / pension: subtract guaranteed government income from required withdrawals before computing corpus.
Frequently Asked Questions
Is 25 years too long for retirement?▾
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