Can I Retire at 58 with $5 Million?
We simulated 5,000 different market scenarios to see how often your money lasts with $200,000/year spending. 74% of the time, it does — all the way to age 95.
What if you spent less or more? Three scenarios show how spending level affects your odds.
| Scenario | Withdrawal | Success |
|---|---|---|
| Lower spending (80%) | $160k/yr | 90% |
| Base case | $200k/yr | 74% |
| Higher spending (125%) | $250k/yr | 47% |
Starting with $5M at age 58. 75/25 stock/bond allocation. All values in today's dollars. Success = portfolio not depleted by age 95.
How did this plan do in real history?
Using 1871–2025 market data, we simulated 119 overlapping 37-year sequences — each starting one year apart. It survived 96% of them.
Survival rate
96% of 119 sequences
Data range
1871–2025
Starting years tested
1871–1989
Worst starting year
1965 (depleted at 87)
Best starting year
1921 ($57.0M remaining)
Median terminal wealth
$9.7M
Rolling-window backtest using Shiller S&P 500 + 10-Year Treasury real returns (1871–2025). 75/25 stock/bond allocation. Bond returns from Shiller Real Total Bond Returns index; results may differ from calculators using Treasury yields. Does not account for Social Security or pension income.
Curious why some cohorts fail while others thrive? Sequence-of-returns risk, visualized →
What moves the needle
Retire at 59 instead
age 59
78%
Spend $195,000/year instead
$195,000/yr
76%
Start with $5,100,000
$5,100,000
76%
The rule of 55 and the Social Security window
At age 58, the IRS rule of 55 allows penalty-free 401(k) withdrawals from the plan sponsored by the employer you most recently left at or after 55 — but only from that specific 401(k), not from IRAs or prior-employer plans. This is a common bridge strategy for retirees in their late 50s and early 60s.
Social Security claiming is the other lever: claiming at 62 locks in a ~30% permanent reduction vs. full retirement age 67, while delaying until 70 adds ~8% per year from 67 to 70. Households with a spouse often stagger claims to balance longevity risk against pre-SS portfolio drawdown. You are 9 years from full retirement age 67. Medicare eligibility is 7 years away.
This simulation models neither Social Security timing nor the rule-of-55 withdrawal sequencing. Use the Traditional calculator on the dashboard to add those income streams.
Insights
▲Moderate simulated success rate
The base scenario shows a 74% success rate. Many financial planning studies consider 75–90% a reasonable confidence range. Small adjustments to contributions, spending, or timing may improve outcomes. The reduced-spending scenario showed 90% success.
Explore related scenarios
Educational use only — not financial advice
This simulation is provided for educational and informational purposes under DOL Interpretive Bulletin 96-1 (Category 4 — general financial educational materials). It is not personalized investment advice, does not account for taxes, and does not consider your complete financial situation. Past market performance does not guarantee future results.
Consult a qualified financial professional before making retirement decisions.
Customize with your actual numbers
This page uses default assumptions. The full calculator lets you:
- Add Social Security and pension income
- Adjust risk tolerance and spending flexibility
- See 156 years of historical backtests