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Retirement Planning

Retirement Planning Basics for Beginners

Not sure where to start with retirement planning? This guide covers everything you need to know — from your first contribution to understanding the accounts, rules, and strategies that will shape your financial future.

Why Retirement Planning Can't Wait

The single most powerful force in retirement planning isn't income, investment skill, or even luck. It's time. Thanks to compound interest, money invested early grows exponentially — a dollar invested at 25 is worth roughly 15× more at 65 than a dollar invested at 45, assuming a 7% annual return.

Consider this: if you save $500/month starting at age 25 and earn 7% annually, you'll have approximately $1.3 million by age 65. Start at 35 instead, and the same $500/month leaves you with just $608,000 — less than half, despite only starting 10 years later. That's the power of compounding, and it's why the best time to start is always right now.

The Three Pillars of Retirement Income

Retirement income in America traditionally rests on three pillars:

  1. Social Security: A government program providing monthly payments based on your lifetime earnings. The average benefit in 2025 is about $1,900/month. It replaces about 40% of pre-retirement income for average earners — not enough on its own for most people.
  2. Personal savings: Your 401(k), IRA, brokerage accounts, and other savings. This is the pillar you control most and where smart decisions matter most.
  3. Employer pensions: Defined benefit plans that pay a fixed monthly amount in retirement. Once common, they now cover fewer than 15% of private-sector workers. If you have one, you're fortunate — factor it into your plan.

Key Retirement Accounts You Need to Know

401(k) and 403(b) Plans

These employer-sponsored accounts are the backbone of most Americans' retirement savings. In 2025, you can contribute up to $23,500/year (plus a $7,500 catch-up contribution if you're 50 or older). Key features:

  • Contributions reduce your taxable income today (traditional 401k)
  • Many employers match contributions — this is free money you should always capture
  • Funds grow tax-deferred until withdrawal
  • Roth 401(k) option available at many employers: after-tax contributions, tax-free withdrawals
  • Required minimum distributions (RMDs) begin at age 73

Traditional IRA

An Individual Retirement Account you open independently. 2025 contribution limit: $7,000 ($8,000 if 50+). Contributions may be tax-deductible depending on your income and whether you have a workplace plan. Earnings grow tax-deferred; withdrawals in retirement are taxed as ordinary income.

Roth IRA

Same contribution limits as a Traditional IRA, but funded with after-tax dollars. The payoff: qualified withdrawals in retirement are completely tax-free — including all the growth. This is particularly powerful for younger workers who expect to be in a higher tax bracket in retirement. Income limits apply (phases out above $161,000 for single filers in 2025).

Health Savings Account (HSA)

Often overlooked but incredibly powerful. If you have a high-deductible health plan, you can contribute to an HSA and use those funds — tax-free — for medical expenses now or in retirement. After 65, you can withdraw for any purpose (taxed like a traditional IRA). It's effectively a triple tax advantage.

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Use our free calculator to see your personalized retirement projection based on your current savings, contributions, and target age.

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How Much Should You Be Saving?

The most common rule of thumb: save at least 15% of your gross income for retirement, including any employer match. Here's how to think about it:

  • Step 1: Contribute enough to your 401(k) to get your full employer match. If your employer matches 4%, contribute at least 4%. Never leave this on the table.
  • Step 2: Max out a Roth IRA if eligible ($7,000/year). The tax-free growth is very valuable.
  • Step 3: Return to your 401(k) and increase contributions toward the annual max ($23,500).
  • Step 4: If you've maxed both, consider taxable brokerage accounts or HSA contributions.

The 4% Rule: Your Retirement Target Number

How much do you actually need to retire? The 4% rule, derived from the Trinity Study, suggests you can safely withdraw 4% of your portfolio annually in year 1, then adjust for inflation each subsequent year, and your money should last 30+ years.

Practically, this means: multiply your expected annual spending by 25. Want to spend $60,000/year? You need $1.5 million. Want $80,000/year? That's $2 million. This is a rule of thumb, not a guarantee — but it's a solid starting point.

The 25x Rule in action: If you plan to spend $5,000/month ($60,000/year) in retirement, your target nest egg is $60,000 × 25 = $1,500,000. If you'll receive $1,500/month from Social Security, you only need to fund $3,500/month from savings — meaning your target drops to $3,500 × 12 × 25 = $1,050,000.

Investment Strategy: What to Actually Own

For most people, a simple approach works best:

  • Low-cost index funds — Track the entire market rather than trying to beat it. Funds like Vanguard's VTSAX (total US market) or a simple S&P 500 index fund cost as little as 0.03% annually.
  • Target-date funds — "Set it and forget it" funds that automatically shift from stocks to bonds as you approach retirement. Great for beginners.
  • Asset allocation — A common rule: subtract your age from 110 to get your stock percentage. At 35: 75% stocks, 25% bonds. At 60: 50% stocks, 50% bonds.

The single biggest drag on investment returns isn't market performance — it's fees. A 1% annual fee difference can cost you 25% of your final balance over 30 years. Always check the expense ratio before investing.

Common Retirement Planning Mistakes

  • Cashing out your 401(k) when changing jobs. This triggers taxes plus a 10% early withdrawal penalty. Roll it over to a new 401(k) or IRA instead.
  • Not capturing employer match. This is a 50–100% instant return on investment. Always contribute enough to get the full match.
  • Waiting to start. Every year of delay costs you significantly more than a year of contributions.
  • Underestimating healthcare costs. Fidelity estimates the average couple will spend $315,000 on healthcare in retirement (2024 data). Plan for it.
  • Ignoring inflation. $5,000/month today will only buy roughly $3,000 worth of goods in 20 years at 2.5% inflation.
  • Claiming Social Security too early. Claiming at 62 vs. 70 can mean 76% less per month — a major lifetime income difference.

Creating Your Retirement Plan: A Simple Framework

  1. Know your number. Use the 25x rule and our calculator to find your target balance.
  2. Know your gap. Subtract current savings from your target. This is what you need to build.
  3. Know your timeline. Years until retirement determine how aggressively you need to save.
  4. Automate contributions. Set up automatic transfers so you never "forget" to save.
  5. Increase contributions annually. When you get a raise, increase your savings rate first.
  6. Review annually. Check your allocation, contributions, and projected balance every year.

Frequently Asked Questions

As soon as you have earned income. Even saving $50/month at 22 is better than $500/month starting at 35, thanks to compounding. If you're already in your 40s or 50s, don't panic — focus on maximizing contributions and catch-up contributions (allowed starting at age 50).
It depends on your current vs. expected future tax rate. If you're in a low tax bracket now and expect to be higher in retirement, the Roth IRA wins (pay taxes now, withdraw tax-free later). If you're in a high bracket now, the traditional 401(k) or IRA (deduct now, pay later) often wins. Many financial planners recommend diversifying across both.
Start with whatever you can — even 1% or 2%. Then increase by 1 percentage point each year or with every raise. The most important thing is building the habit and getting started. Don't let perfect be the enemy of good.
Fidelity's benchmark: by 30, have 1× your salary saved. By 40: 3×. By 50: 6×. By 60: 8×. By 67: 10×. These are rough guides — use our calculator for a personalized projection based on your specific income, spending, and retirement goals.
You have four options: (1) Leave it with your former employer, (2) Roll it to your new employer's 401(k), (3) Roll it to an IRA — often the best choice for more investment options and lower fees, or (4) Cash it out — almost always the worst choice due to taxes and penalties. Rollover is generally recommended.

Related guides: How Much Do I Need to Retire? | 401(k) vs Roth IRA: Which Is Better?