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Retirement Gap

Measure how much additional savings you may need by retirement.

Withdrawal rateChoose the planning rule you want to use.

Projection outlook

Track the projected balance against the target line so you can see whether the current plan fully closes the gap.

The projection still falls short of the target by roughly $155,587 by year 22.

Scenario comparison

Use the spread between scenarios to see how sensitive this outcome is to the assumptions you change first.

This comparison is easier to read in the scenario summaries below because the values are not on a shared numeric scale.

Optimistic currently leads conservative by about $1,734,336, which shows the approximate range across the modeled cases.

What changes the result most

Base

Funding gap: $155,587

$2,094,413

Optimistic

Fully funded under this scenario

$3,136,680

Conservative

Funding gap: $847,656

$1,402,344

Accessibility summary: Your projected balance at age 62 is $2,094,413 versus a target of $2,250,000. Base: $2,094,413 (Funding gap: $155,587) | Optimistic: $3,136,680 (Fully funded under this scenario) | Conservative: $1,402,344 (Funding gap: $847,656)

Results

You may need about $155,587 more to fully fund retirement readiness.

Your projected balance at age 62 is $2,094,413 versus a target of $2,250,000.

Projected balance

$2,094,413

Target portfolio

$2,250,000

Funding gap

$155,587

Time horizon

22 years

How to use this output

Start with the main result at the top. Then review the key numbers, look at how the chart changes over time, and compare the Base, Optimistic, and Conservative scenarios before making a decision.

Saved scenarios

Save multiple scenarios to compare optimistic, conservative, and custom planning paths later.

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Model overview

Understand the model at a glance

What this model does

  • Models your current plan in plain English.
  • Highlights the most decision-useful outputs instead of overwhelming you with raw math.
  • Shows base, optimistic, and conservative views to make tradeoffs clearer.

Key assumptions

  • Returns are smoothed estimates and do not reflect real-world market volatility.
  • All figures are in today's dollars unless the calculator is explicitly modeling inflation adjustments.
  • This tool is intended for planning, education, and comparison rather than certainty.

Example scenario

Households can use this tool to quantify how much more saving or time they may need before retirement.

How the math works

Open to review the formulas and planning logic behind this model.

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  • WealthyNest uses reusable finance formulas for compounding, withdrawal targets, and cash-flow projections.
  • Each tool pairs those formulas with calculator-specific assumptions and a concise summary.

Next steps

Insights and recommendations

Run base, optimistic, and conservative assumptions before anchoring on one retirement or FI date.
Use realistic return assumptions and compare them across scenarios before relying on the projection.
Include taxes, healthcare, and other major costs so the modeled target reflects the real plan.

Questions

FAQ

Are these outputs guarantees?

No. They are planning estimates based on your assumptions and should be updated as markets, taxes, and spending change.

Do these calculators replace professional advice?

No. They are a strong planning starting point, but tax, legal, and investment decisions should be reviewed with a qualified professional when appropriate.

How often should I revisit my inputs?

A good rule is to revisit assumptions after major income, spending, family, tax, or market changes and at least a few times per year.

Why do the optimistic and conservative scenarios matter?

They help you see how sensitive the result is to assumptions instead of anchoring on one exact output.

Should I include inflation separately?

Yes when the calculator allows it. Separating inflation from returns usually makes the planning logic easier to understand.

What if my real life differs from the model?

That is normal. Use the output as a planning range and update the scenario as new information arrives.

Which metric should I pay attention to first?

Start with the headline summary and the first two or three result cards. Those usually hold the most decision-useful information.

Can I share these results with someone else?

Yes. Major calculators support shareable URL state so you can copy the scenario link and send it directly.

Retirement Gap | WealthyNest