Can I Retire at 67 With £750,000? Income It Supports
£750,000 at 67 supports about £30,000/year
Using the 4% rule — £2,500/month, designed to last 30+ years of retirement
- Annual income (4% rule)
- £30,000
- Monthly income
- £2,500
- Conservative (3.5%)
- £26,250
- Years to fund (to 95)
- 28 years
Representative rate used — enter your actual rate below for a precise result.
Your situation
Retirement
Projected nest egg
£1,728,497.48
Monthly income
£5,761.66
Years accumulating
35 yrs
Savings last
~NaN yrs
Savings milestones
| Age | Projected balance |
|---|---|
| 35 | £92,714.95 |
| 40 | £188,709.38 |
| 45 | £324,793.51 |
| 50 | £517,709.80 |
| 55 | £791,192.81 |
| 60 | £1,178,889.23 |
| 65 | £1,728,497.48 |
Returns are pre-tax and don't adjust for inflation. Does not account for Social Security, pension income, or required minimum distributions.
How to use this calculator
- 1 Compare income to your spending£750,000 supports roughly £30,000 a year. If your expected retirement spending is below that, the nest egg is in range; if above, you need more savings or later retirement.
- 2 Stress-test the withdrawal rateThe 4% rule is calibrated to 30-year retirements. Retiring at 67 means funding up to 28 years — earlier retirees often use 3.25–3.5%, which gives £26,250/year here.
- 3 Account for pensions and benefitsState/Social Security benefits typically start in your 60s and reduce how much the portfolio must cover — bridge the years before they begin.
- 4 Model your exact planUse the calculator above to project your current savings, contributions, and returns to your target retirement age.
Compare nearby scenarios
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Frequently asked questions
Can I retire at 67 with £750,000?
£750,000 supports about £30,000 a year (£2,500/month) under the 4% rule. Whether that's enough depends on your spending: comfortable if you live on less than that figure including healthcare and taxes, tight if not. Retiring at 67 means the money must last roughly 28 years, so many planners use a more conservative 3.5% — £26,250 a year.
How long will £750,000 last in retirement?
At a 4% initial withdrawal rate with inflation adjustments, a diversified portfolio has historically lasted at least 30 years in the large majority of scenarios. Spending materially more than £30,000 a year shortens that quickly; flexible spending in bad market years extends it.
What is the 4% rule?
Withdraw 4% of your starting balance in year one — £30,000 from £750,000 — then adjust that amount for inflation each year. It's a planning guideline from historical US market data, not a guarantee; earlier retirements and conservative planners use 3.25–3.5%.