Americans Say They Need This Much to Retire Comfortably

Americans believe they will need $1.27 million to retire comfortably, according to the latest set of findings from Northwestern Mutual’s 2023 Planning & Progress Study.

That number continues to increase, up from $1.25 million reported last year.

Meanwhile, the average amount that U.S. adults have saved for retirement modestly increased by 3% to $89,300 from $86,869 in 2022.

“Americans’ magic number for retirement readiness continues to rise,” said Aditi Javeri Gokhale, chief strategy officer, president of retail investments and head of institutional investments at Northwestern Mutual. “The good news is that they are saving and investing more for tomorrow, even in this time of high inflation and market volatility. That is a step in the right direction and a reverse of what we saw last year when the gap widened rather than narrowed. The challenging news is that there continues to be a big disparity between what they think they’ll need to retire and what they’ve saved to date.”

Among age groups, people in their 50s expect to need the most for a comfortable retirement—over $1.5 million. The numbers drop considerably for people in their 60s and 70s, largely because many of them are already in retirement.

High-net-worth individuals—those with more than $1 million in investable assets—believe they’ll need $3 million to retire comfortably.

Retirement Readiness and Work Timelines

Among generations, Gen Z is the most confident they’ll be financially prepared for retirement when the time comes. Older generations are more pessimistic—more than half of Gen X say they won’t be ready, and nearly half of Millennials and Boomers+ (not yet retired) say the same.

These retirement readiness feelings impact how long people expect to work. Boomers+ plan to work the longest (71) while Gen Z expects to retire more than a decade earlier (60). Millennials and Gen Xers plan to work to age 63 and 65, respectively.

Overall, Americans on average plan to work until the age of 65, up from 64 last year and 62.6 in 2021.

Interestingly, the study found that people who identify as disciplined financial planners knock two years off their retirement age (63). Informal/non-planners add two years (67).

“One of the greatest gifts that financial planning provides is time,” said Javeri Gokhale. “Planning and discipline can unlock four years of life in retirement, and professional help is there for everyone regardless of where they are on their financial journey.”

On average, Americans say there is a 45% chance they outlive their savings and yet one third (33%) haven’t taken any steps to address it. For people who work with an advisor, the story is different—nine of out 10 (89%) have taken steps to address the possibility of outliving their savings.

Living to 100

The study found three in 10 (28%) Americans think it’s likely they’ll live to a 100. But expectations are much greater among younger adults, with 40% of Gen Z and Millennials expecting to hit triple digits.

Interestingly, more men (31%) than women (26%) think they’re likely to live to 100 when in fact mortality data suggests the opposite is true. Among centenarians in the United States today, 85% are women.

Social Insecurity

More than four in 10 Americans (42%) can imagine a time when Social Security no longer exists, according to the research.

And yet, people are relying on Social Security to provide 28% of their overall retirement funding. That’s more than personal savings (22%) and equal to retirement savings (28%).

Gen Z and Millennials have tempered expectations—they anticipate Social Security to deliver 15% and 19% of their overall retirement funding respectively. That’s a significant drop from what Boomers+ say—38%.

See the full study here.