The post Why a $1.8 Million Nest Egg at 65 Only Buys $54,000 of Real Annual Spending appeared first on 24/7 Wall St..
A married couple turning 65 this year with $1.8 million saved and $44,000 in combined annual Social Security has done almost everything right. They are also about to discover that their big retirement portfolio number and their actual spending power live in two very different worlds.
Apply a 3.8% gross withdrawal to that $1.8M and the portfolio kicks off at roughly $68,000. Add Social Security and the gross household income is about $112,000. That sounds like a comfortable middle-class retirement. But the amount this couple can actually direct toward groceries, gas, golf, and grandkids lands closer to $54,000, or about $4,500 a month.
For context, Schwab’s annual participant study pegged the retirement “magic number” at $1.6 million in 2025, down from $1.8 million in 2024. This couple has hit the older, higher target. But they still need to understand what it actually buys.
Start with $112,000 of gross household income and subtract:
What is left? About $54,000 of money this couple can actually spend. For reference, the average U.S. household spent $78,535 in 2024.
Inflation must also be considered. The 2026 Social Security COLA of 2.8% does not fully recapture medical inflation, which historically runs faster than the broader index.
Fortunately, the safe-withdrawal backdrop has actually improved. The 10-year Treasury sits at 4.4% and the Fed funds upper bound is 3.75%, so a 3.8% gross withdrawal is conservative against risk-free yields. The harder drag is tax and healthcare friction.
The most expensive accidental mistake at this income level is crossing the $218,000 joint MAGI line. Pull from the taxable brokerage account first, use Roth withdrawals to top up spending without raising MAGI, and stagger large traditional IRA distributions across calendar years. At the first tier, the Part B premium jumps to about $284 per month per spouse, and IRMAA follows you for the full calendar year you trigger it.
Instead of locking in a flat 3.8% for life, use a withdrawal band. If the portfolio falls 20% below its starting trajectory, cut spending 10%. If it climbs 20% above, give yourself a raise. Historically these rules support starting rates above the rigid 4% benchmark because they adapt to sequence-of-returns risk.
Once required minimum distributions begin at age 73, Qualified Charitable Distributions let you send IRA dollars directly to charity. The distribution counts toward the RMD but never enters MAGI, which can be a great way for keeping IRMAA, Social Security taxation, and bracket creep in check while still giving.
To wrap up, audit the gap before celebrating the big portfolio number. Build one spreadsheet that walks gross income down to spendable cash using your state, your insurance, and your healthcare assumptions. Then model a single Roth conversion year and watch what happens to MAGI. Treat $1.8 million as a $54,000 paycheck with a long-term-care self-insurance fund attached. Planning around that real number can be the difference between a relaxed 30-year retirement and a stressful one.
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The post Why a $1.8 Million Nest Egg at 65 Only Buys $54,000 of Real Annual Spending appeared first on 24/7 Wall St..


