RETIREMENT CALCULATOR

Retire at 50 With $2 Million?

Answer it in seconds. Put in what you've saved and what you spend — we'll show you whether the money lasts, and for how long. Free, no sign-up.

It’s tight. At the textbook 4% — about $80,000 a year — $2 million at 50 runs a couple of years short of a 45-year retirement. Trim to around $75,000 and it lasts.

Fifty is genuinely early: 45 years to fund, 15 years of your own health insurance, and 17 years until Social Security. The margin is thin — watch it. Put in your own numbers below to see your answer.

THE HEADLINE NUMBER
$80,000
the 4% rule on $2M each year, before Social Security — but 45 years is a long stretch
ENTER YOUR NUMBERS

Change anything — the answer updates as you type.

Annual spending
$Start here — this changes the answer more than anything else.
ASSUMPTIONS5% return · 3% infl · to 95
Expected return5.0%
Nominal, before inflation. A retiree's safer mix of stocks and bonds — not all stocks.
Inflation3.0%
Withdrawal rate (4% rule)4.0%
Drives the 4%-rule spending option and the longevity table below.
Plan until age95
Real return after inflation: 1.9% · a 4% draw on $2M = $80,000/yr
THE VERDICT — RETIRE AT 50
It's tight
It runs dry at age 93 — 2 years short of your plan.
Your money lasts toage 93
Safe to spend each year$78,224/yr
You plan to spend$80,000 · $24,000 from SS
$2M OVER TIME — SPENT DOWN, YEAR BY YEAR
$0$625K$1.25M$1.88M$2.5M506070809095AGE →SPENDING IT DOWNSS · 67retire · age 50runs dry · age 93
With Social SecurityWithout Social Security
That's the general answer. Get yours.
The app runs these numbers on your real accounts and tracks the gap to your own target, month after month.
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THE OTHER PHRASING

How long will $2M last?

How long the money lasts comes down to one thing: how much you take out each year. Here's how long $2M lasts on its own — before Social Security — if it earns about 1.9% a year after inflation:

If you spendThat'sMoney lasts
$60,000/yr3% a year50+ yrs
$80,000/yryour plan4% a year34 yrs
$100,000/yr5% a year25 yrs

This is your savings alone — Social Security makes it last even longer. Spend less and it can last for good; spend more and it runs out faster.

One more thing the numbers can't show: where you live. The same $2M goes much further in the Midwest or South than in an expensive coastal city. If you're open to moving, your money effectively stretches further.

WHAT IT DEPENDS ON

The 6 things that decide the answer

Whether you can retire at 50 with $2M depends on your life, not a magic number. These six things move the answer most — the calculator handles the first four.

1 · How much you spend. By far the biggest factor. A $60,000 life and a $90,000 life are the difference between the money lasting for good and running out early.

2 · When you retire. Stopping at 50 means more years of spending and fewer of growth — plus a longer wait for Social Security and Medicare. Every year earlier is harder.

3 · Social Security. A paycheck for life that rises with inflation. Waiting until 70 instead of 62 makes it over 75% bigger — and every dollar it pays is one you don't pull from savings.

4 · Health insurance before 65. Retire before Medicare and you buy your own — often $1,000+ a month per person. It's the most-forgotten cost; add it to your spending.

5 · Bad timing. A market drop in your first few retired years hurts far more than one later, because you're selling while prices are low. Keep some cash and stay flexible.

6 · Taxes. A pre-tax dollar isn't a spendable dollar — money pulled from a 401(k) is taxed as income. This tool uses pre-tax, today's dollars, so treat the result as a starting point.

WHAT $2 MILLION AT 50 MEANS FOR YOU

Retiring at 50 on $2M: doable, with a real margin to watch

Stopping at 50 is genuinely early — the money may need to last 45 years, and almost two decades pass before Social Security or Medicare help. That long runway is what separates this from retiring at 60 with the same $2M.

At a safe rate $2M supports around $75,000–$80,000 a year. That’s a solid middle-class retirement, but with less cushion for a bad market early on. Keeping a couple of years of cash and staying flexible on spending matters more here than at a later age.

Two structural issues bite at 50: account access (most retirement money is locked until 59½, so you need a bridge) and sequence risk (a downturn in your first few years hurts most). Move the spending field above to find the level the money comfortably supports.

QUESTIONS

Retiring at 50 with $2 Million — common questions

Can I retire at 50 with $2 million?
Yes, but with a thin margin. It supports roughly $75,000–$80,000 a year over a 45-year retirement — at the textbook 4% it runs a hair short, so trim a little or stay flexible. Health insurance and account access are the early hurdles.
Is $2 million enough to retire at 50?
For a careful middle-class life, usually yes. For a high-spending one, often not — 45 years is a long time to stretch it. Your spending level decides the answer.
How long will $2 million last if I retire at 50?
At $75,000 a year it can reach into your 90s with cautious returns; spend $90,000+ and it runs short of a full retirement. Social Security from your late 60s helps.
How do I bridge to 59½ and Medicare?
Keep some money in taxable accounts or use a Roth conversion ladder / 72(t) withdrawals to reach age 59½, and budget $1,000+ a month per person for health coverage until Medicare at 65.
Is $2 million at 50 enough to never work again?
Often yes if you live near $75,000 a year and stay flexible. Many people at 50 keep light part-time income for a few years anyway, which sharply reduces the risk.
HOW THIS IS CALCULATED

Methodology & assumptions

This isn't a rule of thumb — it's a year-by-year simulation. Each year it subtracts what you spend (minus Social Security), grows what's left, and checks whether the money reaches your planning age. The defaults are deliberately cautious:

ASSUMPTIONS THIS USES
  • 5% nominal return — a retiree's de-risked mix of stocks and bonds, not an all-equity portfolio.
  • 3% inflation — so every figure stays in today's dollars (about 1.9% real).
  • Age 95 planning horizon — plan long; outliving the money is the costly error.
  • 4% withdrawal rate — the Trinity Study baseline, used for the 4%-rule option and the longevity table. The engine itself depletes year by year rather than assuming a flat draw — important over an early-retirement horizon longer than the 30 years the 4% rule assumes.
  • Social Security is treated as an inflation-adjusted income stream from its start age — get your real estimate from ssa.gov. All figures are pre-tax and in today's dollars.

Full method, sources, and edge cases: FIRE Projection methodology →

Educational, not financial advice. Markets don't deliver a steady return, sequence-of-returns risk is real, and taxes depend on your accounts and state. Use this to build intuition and frame the question — not as a plan to act on without advice tailored to your situation.

FIRE PROJECTION · iOS

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