Live Retirement Odds Tracker · July 2026

Retirement Success Odds by Age

For a household with a $1,000,000 portfolio drawing 4% ($40,000/year) at today's market valuation (CAPE 42.84), how often did the modeled portfolio last to age 95? Three example scenarios: portfolio only, with Social Security, and with Social Security reduced by the SSA's projected trust-fund cut.

Retirement ageHorizonPortfolio onlyWith Social SecurityWith SS reduced
6035 years64.9%99.2%96.6%
6530 years74.7%99.9%99.5%
6728 years79.1%100.0%99.7%
7025 years84.9%100.0%99.9%

For reference, Morningstar, The State of Retirement Income (2026) reports a 3.9% starting withdrawal rate targeting a 90.0% success probability over a 30-year horizon on a 30-50% equities allocation.

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These odds are portfolio-only-to-blended averages for one example household. See what the same Monte Carlo math looks like on your own age, balances, and Social Security — a year-by-year ledger with tax-aware success odds. Free, no signup required.

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Methodology

This tracker runs 5,000 Monte Carlo simulation paths per age and scenario, using an expected stock return derived from the current Shiller CAPE ratio (42.84). The CAPE earnings yield is blended 50/50 with the long-term average real stock return (7%) following standard financial planning practice (Morningstar P-CAPE research, Siegel critique of raw CAPE), producing a CAPE-adjusted expected stock return of 4.7%. Deterministic seeding makes every figure reproducible from the same inputs.

Portfolio only: the modeled household draws 4.0% ($40,000/year) from the portfolio alone, with no Social Security or other income — directly comparable to Morningstar's published 3.9% figure below.

With Social Security: the same household also receives $24,000/year in Social Security starting at age 67(today's dollars), which reduces the amount drawn from the portfolio.

With Social Security reduced: the same scenario, but Social Security income is modeled at 22.0%lower — the SSA Trustees' 2026 report projects the OASI trust fund may be depleted around 2032, after which continuing payroll tax revenue would only cover a reduced share of scheduled benefits unless Congress acts. This tracker applies that reduction as a flat percentage across the whole retirement, which is a simplification — in practice a benefit cut (if it happens) would only take effect from the depletion year forward, not retroactively. A household retiring well before 2032 would see a smaller real-world impact than this flat approximation shows; one retiring at or after it would see a similar impact. This is a modeling scenario, not a prediction — Congress may act to preserve full benefits.

Reference: Morningstar's published safe withdrawal rate

Morningstar, The State of Retirement Income (2026) publishes an independent, non-Monte-Carlo safe withdrawal rate estimate: 3.9% starting withdrawal, targeting a 90.0% probability of lasting 30 years on a 30-50% equities allocation. It is shown here as an independent reference point, not a RetireLab estimate — the two methodologies use different assumptions and are not directly interchangeable.

Assumptions and limitations

For example, a household retiring at 65 shows 74.7% modeled success odds on portfolio income alone, 99.9% with Social Security included, and 99.5% if that Social Security benefit were reduced as described above.

Curious how withdrawal rates move with market valuation month to month? See the live SWR tracker.

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This is an educational illustration based on historical return assumptions and Monte Carlo simulation for one example household. Results are hypothetical and do not guarantee future outcomes. Past performance does not predict future results. Consult a licensed financial advisor before making retirement decisions.