Retirement used to feel like a distant calculation – something you’d figure out closer to the finish line. Today, with healthcare costs climbing, Social Security adjustments shifting annually, and inflation reshaping what a dollar buys, that approach is becoming harder to sustain. The numbers coming out of recent surveys and federal data are sobering, but they’re also clarifying.
What does it actually cost to retire comfortably in 2026? The answer depends on your income, your health, and where you live. Still, the updated estimates from institutions like Fidelity, the Bureau of Labor Statistics, and the Social Security Administration give us a much clearer picture than most people expect.
The Baseline: How Much Retirees Are Actually Spending

According to the most recent Bureau of Labor Statistics data, retiree households led by individuals aged 65 or older spent an average of $61,432 in 2024, a 2.2% increase from the previous year. That works out to roughly $5,100 per month, which surprises many people who assume retirement means dramatically lower expenses.
Recent U.S. Census Bureau income data shows that households with a householder age 65 or older had a median household income of $56,680 in 2024, which works out to roughly $4,723 per month before accounting for taxes, location, debt, and health needs. When you subtract that from the average spending figure, a gap becomes visible – one that can quietly strain household finances even for those who feel reasonably prepared.
The Savings Gap Is Real and Wider Than Expected

The “magic number” Americans think they need to retire comfortably in 2026 is $1.46 million. That’s $200,000 more than the comparable figure from 2025 and remains a far cry from what most people have saved. The median retirement savings for those aged 55 to 64 is $185,000, and for those aged 65 to 74 it is $200,000.
Over half of American households – roughly 54% – report having no dedicated retirement savings, according to the Federal Reserve’s Survey of Consumer Finances. Meanwhile, roughly seven in ten non-retired Americans don’t expect to have enough money saved for retirement, and nearly half are very concerned about their ability to fund it. These are not fringe worries.
What the 4% Rule Looks Like in Practice Today

The 4% rule states that you can withdraw 4% of your savings in your first year of retirement, adjust for inflation annually, and expect the money to last 30 or more years with a high probability of success. Under this model, $1 million in savings generates $40,000 per year. That sounds reasonable until you weigh it against actual spending data.
Most financial estimates suggest retirees need between 70% and 85% of their pre-retirement income annually. Fidelity’s estimates align closely with this, suggesting a range of roughly 55% to 80% of pre-retirement income per year, rising toward the higher end for retirees who plan an active lifestyle. The variance between a quiet, stay-at-home retirement and one involving regular travel can represent tens of thousands of dollars a year.
Housing: Still the Largest Single Expense

In 2024, retiree households spent an average of $22,193 per year on housing – including mortgage payments, rent, property taxes, insurance, maintenance, and repairs. That works out to about $1,849 per month and accounts for more than 36% of annual spending.
While roughly 80% of people aged 65 and older own their homes, almost a third of monthly spending for retirees still goes toward housing-related costs. The difference between a high-cost city and a lower-cost rural area can add up to thousands of dollars each year, which is why location has become one of the most consequential retirement planning decisions many households will make.
Healthcare Costs: The Estimate Most People Underestimate

The average 65-year-old retiring in 2025 can expect to spend about $172,500 on healthcare and medical expenses during retirement, not including potentially catastrophic long-term care costs, according to an annual survey by Fidelity. A healthy 65-year-old woman could face $313,000 in total healthcare expenses over her retirement, compared with about $275,000 for a man, according to the 2025 Milliman Retiree Health Cost Index.
The standard Medicare Part B premium has risen to $202.90 per month in 2026, up nearly 10% from the prior year and about 66% higher than a decade ago. The annual deductible is also increasing, from $257 to $283. These increases might seem incremental, but over time they can meaningfully affect retirement budgets, especially when combined with other out-of-pocket healthcare expenses.
Long-Term Care: The Expense With No Safety Net

Long-term care, including nursing homes, assisted living, and extended in-home support, is often the single largest uncovered expense in retirement. Nearly 70% of retirees will require some form of long-term assistance, but Medicare covers very little of the cost.
According to Genworth’s Cost of Care Survey, the estimated median cost of long-term care in 2026 is $5,900 per month for assisted living and $10,965 per month for a private room in a nursing home. Estimated for 2026, the nationwide average annual cost for a shared nursing home room is $119,340. Few retirees have meaningfully planned for numbers at this scale.
Social Security: What You’ll Actually Receive in 2026

According to the Social Security Administration’s 2026 COLA fact sheet, the average monthly benefit payable in January 2026 is $2,071 for a retired worker. Social Security recipients received a 2.8% benefit increase in January 2026, with the average monthly retirement payment rising by an estimated $56, from $2,015 to $2,071.
The base rate for Medicare Part B is going up by 9.7% in 2026, and since most enrollees have premiums deducted directly from their Social Security payments, the Part B increase effectively reduces their COLA by $17.90 per month. In practical terms, the increase in benefits is partially absorbed before it even reaches a retiree’s bank account.
Contribution Limits Have Increased – But the Gap Persists

For 2026, the 401(k) employee contribution limit is $24,500, up from $23,500 in 2025. Workers aged 50 to 59 or 64 and older can contribute an additional $8,000 as a catch-up, for a total of $32,500. Workers aged 60 to 63 have a “super catch-up” option of $11,250, bringing their total to $35,750.
For IRAs, the standard contribution cap for the 2026 tax year is $7,500, up from $7,000 in 2025. The maximum catch-up contribution for savers age 50 and older is going up from $1,000 to $1,100, meaning older adults can set aside up to $8,600 in an IRA in 2026. Higher limits help, but only for those with the income and discipline to actually reach them. For most households, the gap between what’s possible and what’s happening remains wide.
How Spending Changes Across Retirement Itself

Research from the Employee Benefit Research Institute shows many retirees actually spend more in the first five to ten years of retirement – on travel, home projects, and hobbies – before spending declines later, following what planners sometimes call a “go-go, slow-go, no-go” spending curve.
The median household income drops from nearly $69,000 for households aged 65 to 69 to under $48,000 for those age 75 and older, reflecting reduced work activity and declining spending needs. Interestingly, 21% of workers believe they’ll need $2 million or more to retire, but only 12% of those already retired feel the same. One third of those already retired say they need less than $500,000 to cover their expenses, showing that retirement spending often looks different than expected.
The Income Source Mix That Most Retirees Rely On

In 2024, Social Security remained the most common source of retirement income, with 81% of retirees also having one or more sources of private income. This included 56% with pension income, 50% with interest, dividends, or rental income, and 32% with labor income.
Retirees tend to rely on a mix of Social Security benefits, withdrawals from retirement accounts like 401(k)s and IRAs, pensions for those who have them, and sometimes part-time work. A common benchmark is to replace about 80% of pre-retirement earnings to maintain a prior standard of living, though the right number varies considerably depending on housing, healthcare, and lifestyle choices. The clearest takeaway from the data is that no single income stream is enough on its own for most Americans – and the ones who fare best in retirement are typically the ones who built multiple sources well before they needed them.





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