You will find financial terms in this report — but never without a plain-English explanation first. No acronyms are used without being spelled out. No concept is left unexplained. Every number tells a story, and this report is written so you can understand that story on the first read — written to help you genuinely understand your situation, not to impress you with complexity. This roadmap exists to educate, guide, and help you make the most of every opportunity on the path to the retirement you have worked toward.
You are 37 years from retirement, and that distance is one of the most valuable things you have right now. Your household brings in $58,000 a year, and you're directing $12,220 of that — more than 21 cents of every dollar earned — straight into your future, which is a genuinely strong savings rate at this stage. Starting from $12,700 today, that discipline compounds into a projected portfolio of $1,642,268 by age 65, and time is doing enormous work on your behalf between now and then. The foundation here is real, and it was built by choices you're already making.
The part worth watching closely is the gap between what you're building and what retirement actually costs. Your projected monthly expenses at retirement are $7,979 — nearly $95,750 per year — and while your portfolio projects well, that spending level will test how long your assets last depending on market conditions, inflation, and sequence of returns in your early retirement years. The good news is that at 28, the controllable decisions still carry enormous weight: the rate at which you increase contributions as your income grows, the age at which you actually stop working, and how you structure withdrawals once Social Security enters the picture. Every one of those levers is still fully in your hands.
Social Security benefits do not begin until Full Retirement Age (FRA) 67 at the earliest for maximum value. Retiring at 65 means 2 years of drawing exclusively from the investment portfolio — at $7,979/mo in inflation-adjusted expenses with zero Social Security income. The $1,634,984 portfolio generates only $5,450/mo at the 4% withdrawal rate. The monthly income versus expenses gap of ($2,529/mo) consumes the portfolio. Retiring at 69 instead of 65 adds 4 years of contributions, reduces the Social Security bridge to -2 years, and changes the retirement picture significantly. That four-year difference is the single most powerful decision in this plan.
All projections in this report assume income remains at current levels throughout the projection period. This is intentionally conservative. Any income increase that flows into retirement contributions compounds significantly over time. If you expect meaningful income growth — a raise, a business revenue increase, or a new income stream — you can resubmit with an annual growth rate to see the updated retirement picture. Use your complimentary 7-Day Data Refresh to resubmit with an income growth rate and receive an updated report — see your action plan for details.
"Travel the world. Own a home someday."
The vision of traveling the world and owning a home is genuinely achievable here — not as a wish, but as a math problem you are already solving. At 28, with $12,220 flowing into your portfolio every year, 37 years of compounding is the engine that builds your $1.6 million retirement. The two decisions that will determine whether the travel and the home both happen are whether you keep those contributions intact through the inevitable life disruptions ahead, and how you sequence the home purchase without letting it hollow out the retirement savings you've already started building. Get those two things right, and the numbers say the vision is real.
| Account | Owner | Tax character | Balance |
|---|---|---|---|
| 401(k) | Maya | Pre-tax · RMD at 73 | $8,500 |
| Roth IRA | Maya | After-tax · tax-free growth · no RMD | $4,200 |
| Cash savings | Joint | Liquid reserve · no tax obligation | $6,000 |
| Total investable assets | $18,700 | ||
| Income source | Structure | Annual | Tax character |
|---|---|---|---|
| Maya — W-2 | W-2 | $58,000 | W-2 · FICA withheld · employer match eligible |
| Combined household income | $58,000/yr | ||
| Debt | Balance | Rate | Monthly | Priority |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Student loan | $28,000 | 5.5% | ~$302/mo | ELIMINATE FIRST |
| Total debt | $28,000 | |||
Starting from $12,700 today and adding $12,220 every year for the next 37 years, your portfolio is projected to grow to $1,634,984 in the base case — with a conservative scenario landing at $1,305,162 and an optimistic one reaching $2,287,085, all calculated using geometric, volatility-adjusted returns that account for the real-world drag of market swings rather than simple averages. consistent contributions matter far more than your starting balance at this
★ Base case $1,634,984 at 6.72% geometric — a deliberately conservative assumption. Returns shown as geometric (volatility-adjusted) means. Actual results will vary by asset allocation and market conditions.
Monte Carlo simulation runs 10,000 different versions of your retirement portfolio using randomly different annual returns — some years great, some terrible, most in between. All three results below show the projected portfolio value at retirement age 65, the same point measured by the scenario bars above. The portfolio projection table shows what happens after retirement across the full planning horizon.
The base case ($1,634,984 at 6.72% geometric) uses a volatility-adjusted return applied consistently. The Monte Carlo median runs 10,000 randomized scenarios at 7.0% average return with 16% volatility. Both account for volatility — which is why the numbers are close. The base case provides one honest central number. The Monte Carlo shows the full range of outcomes around it. The P50 median will naturally differ slightly from the deterministic projection due to the mathematical properties of randomized return sequences — this is expected and does not indicate an error in either calculation.
At just 28, you have 45 years of compounding ahead of you, and what starts as $8,500 today is projected to grow into a balance that triggers a first-year Required Minimum Distribution (RMD) of over $62,000 at age 73 — taxable income you'll be required to take whether you need it or not. The eight-year window between your retirement at 65 and that first RMD is worth paying close attention to, because that stretch of time offers Required Minimum Distributions (RMD) are mandatory annual withdrawals the IRS requires from traditional pre-tax retirement accounts starting at age 73 under the SECURE 2.0 Act. The amount is calculated by dividing the prior year-end account balance by a life expectancy factor from the IRS Uniform Lifetime Table.
Based on the projected traditional account balance at age 73 of approximately $1,644,169 — after 8 years of retirement withdrawals and investment growth — the first-year RMD is approximately $62,044 ($1,644,169 ÷ 26.5 IRS divisor at age 73). This becomes ordinary income in the year received and is added to Social Security income for tax bracket purposes. RMD amounts increase each year as the divisor decreases with age.
Between retirement at 65 and RMD start at 73, there is a 8-year window to convert pre-tax traditional account balances to Roth IRAs at potentially lower tax rates. With no W-2 income in retirement and before Social Security peaks, taxable income may be significantly lower — creating room to convert at favorable rates. Each dollar converted reduces the future RMD obligation dollar for dollar. Roth IRAs carry no RMDs during your lifetime and pass to heirs income-tax-free. Work with a qualified financial professional — a CPA or Certified Financial Planner (CFP®) — to model the optimal annual conversion amount each year.
Maya's Full Retirement Age (FRA) is 67 in 2065. Retiring at 65 creates a 2-year bridge with no Social Security — the most financially vulnerable period of the plan.
| Who | Strategy | Monthly benefit | Annual | Note |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Maya | Claim at 62 — early | $1,293/mo | $15,515 | 30% permanent reduction · not recommended |
| Maya | Claim at FRA 67 — recommended | $1,847/mo | $22,164 | Full benefit — baseline |
| Maya | Age 70 — maximum ★ | $2,290/mo | $27,483 | +$443/mo vs FRA · 24% delayed credit |
If Maya waits until 70 rather than claiming at FRA 67, the combined Social Security income increases from $1,847/mo to $2,290/mo — an additional $443/mo permanently. Over 20 years of retirement, that single decision adds approximately $106,387 in lifetime Social Security income. Given the retirement income picture in this plan, every dollar of Social Security income matters. Waiting to 70 is worth serious consideration if the portfolio can sustain the bridge.
Every projection in this report assumes income remains at current levels with no increases over the next 37 years. This is intentionally conservative. Any income increase that flows into retirement contributions compounds for the remaining years before retirement. The projections below represent the floor — not the ceiling — of what this retirement could look like.
A healthy emergency fund of 3–6 months of expenses is approximately $19,200. The current cash reserve of $6,000 is below the recommended level — continue building to the 6-month target before redirecting excess to investment accounts. Cash earns 2.5%/yr — investment accounts have historically earned significantly more over long time horizons.
Inflation-adjusted expenses grow significantly over a 30-year retirement while Social Security covers only a portion of them. The retirement date shifts the depletion age — but intentional expense management changes the entire picture. If monthly expenses in retirement can be reduced by even 20–25%, the portfolio survives meaningfully longer. Deliberate spending aligned with what actually matters is one of the most powerful financial tools available in retirement.
Your portfolio projection tells an encouraging story — your savings are built to last through age 90, giving you a full 25-year runway from the moment you retire at 65. Social Security stepping in at 67 gives that $1,634,984 a meaningful boost early in retirement, easing the draw on your investments during those first two years and helping the whole plan hold together across the decades ahead.
| Age | Year | Phase | Investment Portfolio | SS Income/yr | Expenses/yr | From Portfolio | Cash Reserve | Total Assets | Rate | Note |
|---|
7.5% arithmetic · 5.875% geometric (volatility-adjusted) base case · $12,220/yr contributions through age 65 · Expenses inflated 2.5%/yr from $3,200/mo. SS $1,847/mo ($22,164/yr) begins at Full Retirement Age (FRA) 67. Cash reserve grows at 2.5%/yr — not drawn given portfolio surplus. All figures annual. Withdrawal = Expenses − SS Income.