Americans Need $1.6 Million to Retire. The Median 55-Year-Old Has $205,341.
Quick Read
Charles Schwab (SCHW) pegs the 2025 retirement magic number at $1.6 million, but the median 55 to 64-year-old holds only $205,341, which is roughly one-eighth of that target.
The personal savings rate has dropped from 6.2% to 3.7% even as disposable income rose, because Americans are spending faster than their earnings grow.
Workers who contributed continuously for 15 years averaged $613,200, proving that staying invested through market cycles outweighs any single contribution decision.
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Charles Schwab’s (NYSE:SCHW) most recent 401(k) Participant Survey put the retirement ‘magic number’ at $1.6 million in 2025, down from $1.8 million in 2024. For years, Americans have given pollsters some version of that same answer. The number is meant to represent a comfortable retirement: enough to cover housing, healthcare, travel, and the gap left by Social Security. The real problem is the distance between that target and what the typical saver has actually accumulated. That gap is the whole story.
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What the Average Account Actually Holds
Fidelity’s Q4 2025 retirement analysis, which tracks more than 53 million IRA, 401(k), and 403(b) accounts, pegged the average 401(k) balance at $146,400 and the average IRA at $137,095. Those numbers point to another strong year for balances, but the averages only tell part of the story.
The averages are misleading on their own. A mean balance gets pulled upward by a small group of high earners with decades of compounding. The median, the balance at which half of savers have more and half have less, is the more accurate read of a typical American’s position. Vanguard’s How America Saves 2025 report tracks both, and the gap between the two is wide at every age.
Median 401(k) Balances by Age
Looking at Vanguard’s 2024 participant data, the median balances tell a different story than the headline averages:
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Under 25: median $12,479, average $15,559
25–34: median $36,110, average $43,149
35–44: median $84,156, average $95,057
45–54: median $151,890, average $164,663
55–64: median $205,341, average $217,851
65 and older: median $184,142, average $194,654
The median saver in the 55–64 bracket, the group closest to actually using the money, is sitting on roughly one-eighth of the $1.6 million figure. That is the population with a Vanguard account in the first place. Workers without access to a workplace plan, or those who never enrolled, are not included in this table.
Why the Gap Has Been Hard to Close
The savings math has gotten harder. The personal savings rate has fallen from 6.2% in the first quarter of 2024 to 3.7% in the first quarter of 2026, even as per capita disposable income rose from $63,638 to $68,391. Disposable income grew, but consumption grew faster. Inflation is part of the explanation, while the Consumer Price Index reached 333.979 in May 2026, and real average hourly earnings slipped to $11.24 in May 2026 from $11.32 a year earlier.
Median weekly earnings for full-time workers were $1,235 in the first quarter of 2026, which, annualized, amounts to roughly $64,000 per year. The current total 401(k) savings rate stands at 14.2%, with employees contributing 9.5% and employers adding 4.7%. The participants who actually hit meaningful savings targets, however, look quite different from these averages. Those who have contributed continuously for 15 years had an average balance of $613,200, while five-year continuous savers averaged $304,200. Staying invested through a full market cycle ultimately changes the outcome far more than any single contribution decision ever could.
What the Numbers Suggest
For savers trying to close the distance, the contribution ceilings are the most direct lever. The 2026 employee 401(k) limit is $24,500, with a $8,000 catch-up for ages 50–59 and 64+ and a $11,250 super catch-up for ages 60–63. Additionally, the IRA contribution limit is $7,500, with a $1,100 catch-up. Fidelity’s guideline is to save 15% of pre-tax income and accumulate 10 times one’s salary by age 67.
The big takeaway is that the $1.6 million target is not arbitrary. Applied to a 4% withdrawal rate, it produces roughly $64,000 of annual income, close to the current median full-time wage. Most savers are not on a trajectory to reach it on personal accounts alone, which is why Social Security still matters: the average retired worker currently receives about 40% of preretirement income from the program. The gap between the magic number and median balances documents where the typical American household sits right now, and the people who hit the target are almost always the ones who never stopped contributing.
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