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Do You Really Need a Million Dollars to Retire?

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Spend any time reading about retirement, and you will run into the same frightening headline over and over: You need a million dollars.

Maybe two million. Maybe more.

Those numbers are real for some people, in some places. But they are not a universal rule. For many retirees, the real number depends less on a national headline and more on three personal questions: Where do you live? What do you spend? And what income will you already have coming in?

The Bureau of Labor Statistics reports that the average household headed by someone 65 or older spends about $5,000 a month. That is a serious amount of money, but it does not all have to come from savings.

Social Security provides a real foundation for many retirees. According to the Social Security Administration, the average monthly retirement benefit in early 2026 is about $2,076. For a couple in which both partners receive benefits, that can mean $4,000 or more each month before touching a retirement account, pension, investment, or savings.

That changes the conversation.

A household spending $5,000 a month and receiving about $4,000 from Social Security does not need to pull the full amount from savings. It needs to cover the gap. That gap may still be important, especially over a long retirement, but it is very different from needing to fund every dollar from a giant nest egg.

Another major factor is geography.

Where a person chooses to retire may be one of the most powerful financial decisions they make. Researchers at Boston College’s Center for Retirement Research have found that retirement costs vary sharply by location. A retirement budget that feels impossible in San Francisco, New York, or another high-cost coastal city may be far more workable in a smaller town or lower-cost state.

Money generally stretches further in places such as Indiana, Iowa, Oklahoma, and Minnesota than it does in the most expensive metro areas. Housing, taxes, insurance, utilities, food, and everyday services all shape the real cost of retirement.

That is why the “million-dollar” rule can be misleading. It treats retirement as if everyone has the same lifestyle, the same housing costs, the same health needs, and the same local prices. They do not.

A retiree who owns a modest home, has limited debt, lives in a lower-cost area, and receives Social Security may need far less in savings than someone renting in a high-cost city. On the other hand, a person who wants frequent travel, private care, a second home, or an expensive lifestyle may need much more.

There is one true wild card: health care.

Medicare covers a great deal, but it does not cover everything. Premiums, deductibles, prescriptions, dental care, vision care, hearing aids, and out-of-pocket costs can still add up. Supplemental coverage, often called Medigap, can help fill some of those gaps, though premiums may rise with age and become a meaningful monthly expense.

Long-term care is the bigger concern. Medicare generally does not cover extended nursing home care or long-term in-home help with daily needs. Those costs can quickly overwhelm even a careful plan. Long-term care insurance may be worth discussing with a financial advisor before it is needed. By age 75, it may be too late or too expensive for many people to get useful coverage.

The bottom line is that retirement planning should be personal, not panic-driven.

A million dollars may be necessary for some households. It may be more than enough for others. It may not be enough for people facing high housing costs, major medical needs, or expensive lifestyle goals.

The right number depends on your actual life.

That means looking at where you plan to live, what Social Security will provide, whether you have a pension or other income, what you truly spend each month, and how prepared you are for medical surprises. A conversation with a financial advisor about your specific situation is worth far more than a scary national average.

Retirement is not one number.

It is a plan.

 

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