Retirement Planning at Age 50
At 50 years old, you have 15 years until the traditional retirement age of 65. While the window is shorter, focused saving can still make a significant impact. Understanding how different savings levels translate into retirement wealth is the first step toward a secure financial future.
Saving $1,000 per month at age 50 with 7% annual return accumulates approximately $316,962 by age 65. Of that, $180,000 comes from contributions and $136,962 from compound interest - that is 43% of your final balance earned by your money working for you.
Savings Benchmarks for Age 50
By age 50, financial experts recommend having 4-6x your annual salary saved for retirement. If you are below this target, the most important action is to increase your savings rate now rather than trying to time the market or chase high returns.
The 4% Rule and Your Target
The 4% rule suggests withdrawing 4% of savings annually for a 30-year retirement. For $60,000/year in retirement income, you need $1.5 million (minus Social Security). At age 50, reaching $1 million requires saving $3,155/month at 7% return.
Investment Strategy for Age 50
At 50, a balanced approach works well. Consider 60-75% stocks and 25-40% bonds. As you get closer to retirement, gradually shift toward more conservative allocations.
Maximizing Tax-Advantaged Accounts
At 50, take advantage of catch-up contributions: up to $31,000 to 401(k) and $8,000 to IRA. Always contribute enough to capture the full employer match - this is essentially a 50-100% instant return on your contribution.
Social Security Considerations
Social Security provides a foundation of retirement income but should not be your only source. The average monthly benefit in 2026 is approximately $1,900. Plan for Social Security to cover about 40% of needs and personal savings to cover the rest. Delaying benefits from 62 to 67 increases your monthly check by roughly 30%.