The Real Net Worth Experts Say You Need To Retire Comfortably in 2026
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For decades, Americans have searched for a single “magic number” that guarantees a comfortable retirement. But as living costs keep increasing, especially healthcare, and retirement timelines stretch longer, the answer has become less straightforward.
Financial experts explained why you should look to your net worth over your savings in order to retire comfortably.
The Real Net Worth Range for Retirement in 2026
While some retirement calculators promote a single savings target, Michael Ryan, financial educator and founder of MichaelRyanMoney.com, said that readers should focus less on a single benchmark and more on how their spending will translate into retirement income.
“Forget the magic number,” he said. “What matters is the math behind your actual lifestyle.”
He explained that for many middle-class households, a wide net worth can support retirement depending on spending patterns, from $750,000 to $2 million or more (including home equity).
“Higher cost of living areas and more travel push you toward the top. Lower cost areas and a paid-off home let you get by on much less.”
Gil Baumgarten, founder and CEO of Segment Wealth Management, said many retirees should aim toward the higher end of that range.
How Retirement Net Worth Turns Into Annual Income
The more important question than net worth itself is how much income those assets can generate.
Baumgarten noted that a $2 million retirement portfolio would provide around $80,000 in annual distributions.
When combined with Social Security benefits, the income picture can look very different.
“Add Social Security and you’re looking at maybe $70,000 to $90,000 in total household income if you have two average benefits,” Ryan said.
Why Cost of Living and Geography Matter
Ryan said housing costs are often the biggest difference between comfortable and tight retirements. “A paid-off home in a low-cost state saves you hundreds of thousands compared to renting in an expensive city.”
And since many retirees have 25% to 50% of their net worth in home equity, downsizing or relocating can make a big difference — or hit hard, depending on the costs of living in that location, he explained.
Hidden Costs That Can Raise Your Retirement Target
One of the biggest reasons retirement plans fall short is underestimating future expenses, particularly healthcare costs, Ryan explained.
“Medicare premiums, IRMAA surcharges, dental, vision, hearing, long-term care — people consistently underestimate this. It can easily add thousands annually,” Ryan said.
Baumgarten added that inflation and taxes also eat away at one’s net worth, so retirement planning should have a solid tax strategy, too.
How To Know If You’re Actually on Track
Rather than focusing on a specific net worth figure, these experts recommended planning for conservative withdrawals.
Baumgarten holds by the commonly recommended 4% distribution rule. However, Ryan suggested running a more conservative calculation based on your actual finances.
“Take your net worth, excluding your primary home if you’ll stay there, [and] run it through a conservative 3.5% withdrawal rate. Add Social Security. Compare it to a realistic retirement budget with healthcare and discretionary spending. That’s your answer.”
Ways To Strengthen Your Retirement Plan Before You Stop Working
The final decade before retirement can have the biggest impact on retirement readiness. For those retiring in 2026, your choices may be limited. For those still planning to retire a decade or so from now, Ryan recommended focusing on debt reduction and housing decisions.
“Pay off high-interest debt. Right-size your housing before you need to. Build consistent savings habits. Gradually shift your allocation instead of going ultra-conservative overnight.”
Baumgarten urged people to stay invested in the stock market no matter their swings, and to stay disciplined on spending.
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