Advertiser Disclosure
GOBankingRates works with many financial advertisers to showcase their products and services to our audiences. These brands compensate us through a variety of commercial arrangements, including advertising placements and performance-based compensation, such as when users click on links, submit applications, open accounts, or fund accounts. This compensation may impact how and where products appear on this site but does not affect the content of any product review or rating. We are not a comparison tool, and these offers do not represent all available deposit, investment, loan, or credit products.
Are You Smart Enough To Retire Early? Take This Money Quiz To Find Out
Written by
Travis Woods
Edited by
Chris Cluff

Commitment to Our Readers
GOBankingRates' editorial team is committed to bringing you unbiased reviews and information. We use data-driven methodologies to evaluate financial products and services - our reviews and ratings are not influenced by advertisers. You can read more about our editorial guidelines and our products and services review methodology.
20 YearsHelping You Live Richer
Reviewed by Experts
Trusted by Millions of Readers
Traditionally, retirement begins once you reach your mid to late 60s. That said, it’s not impossible to achieve a retirement earlier than that — far earlier, in fact. Through dedication, planning and sharp money management, you can ditch the rat race and live the high life much sooner than your later years.
Do you think you’ve got the smarts and financial know-how to retire early? Be sure to take this GOBankingRates quiz and find out.
How Much To Save
If you expect to retire before your 60s, you’ll likely need to set a high target savings rate for yourself, putting back more than just 5% to 10% of your annual income if you’d like to get ahead. How much do early retirees set aside to retire early?
A) 10-30%
B) 30-50%
C) 50-70%
The Answer: How Much To Save
Did you opt for (B) 30-50%? While it may sound extreme, SmartAsset notes that many early retirees put back nearly half of their annual income to ensure they have enough wealth for an extended retirement.
Tax-Advantaged Retirement Accounts
In order to build out your early retirement savings, you can maximize your contributions to certain tax-advantaged retirement accounts. Specifically, which kind of retirement accounts should you invest in to retire early?
A) Catch-up contributions
B) IRA contributions
C) Roth conversion accounts
D) Traditional 401(k) contributions
E) All of the above
The Answer: Retirement Accounts
Hopefully, you went with (E) all of the above. As Mutual of Omaha has noted, maximizing your contributions to each and every one of these types of retirement accounts (all of which are tax-advantaged), gives your money tax-free growth on your journey to early retirement.
How Big Should Your Nest Egg Be?
To retire early, you definitely need to plan on a specific amount for your nest egg — but how much is enough?
A) 10 times your estimated yearly expenses
B) 25 times your estimated yearly expenses
C) 50 times your estimated yearly expenses
Answer: Nest Egg
If you answered (B) 25 times your estimated yearly expenses, then you’re in good shape. As GOBankingRates has previously reported, your nest egg should be determined by “the Rule of 25.” The Rule of 25 means that you should have 25 times your yearly expenses put back before you retire. Let’s say your yearly expenses are $40,000. Having that amount 25 times over is $1 million — meaning that’s how much you’d need to cover your yearly expenses for at least 25 years.
Share This Article:
You May Also Like
I Retired a Millionaire: The Best $10,000 I Ever Spent Preparing for Retirement
April 03, 2026
3 min Read
How To Rebuild Your Nest Egg If You've Already Cashed Out Retirement Accounts
April 03, 2026
3 min Read
The Average Social Security Check at 62 vs. 70: Here's the Monthly Difference in 2026
April 02, 2026
3 min Read
Claiming Social Security in 2026? These Are the Tradeoffs Retirees Often Miss
April 02, 2026
3 min Read
Boomers, Beware: $9K a Year in Retirement Savings May Not Be Enough Anymore
April 02, 2026
3 min Read
I Asked ChatGPT What Seniors Over 65 Waste the Most Money On -- The Answer Surprised Me
April 02, 2026
3 min Read
Gen X Calls Age 'Just a Number' -- But $172K in Retirement Health Costs Begs To Differ
April 02, 2026
3 min Read
- How Long Will My Money Last?
- How Much Do You Need To Retire?
- How To Prepare For Retirement
- How To Save For Retirement Without A 401K
Learn More About Early Retirement Planning
Make your money work for you
Get the latest news on investing, money, and more with our free newsletter.
By subscribing, you agree to our Terms of Use and Privacy Policy. Unsubscribe at any time.

Thanks!
You're now subscribed to our newsletter.
Check your inbox for more details.

Sending you timely financial stories that you can bank on.
Sign up for our daily newsletter for the latest financial news and trending topics.
For our full Privacy Policy, click here.
Looks like you're using an adblocker
Please disable your adblocker to enjoy the optimal web experience and access the quality content you appreciate from GOBankingRates.
- AdBlock / uBlock / Brave
- Click the ad blocker extension icon to the right of the address bar
- Disable on this site
- Refresh the page
- Firefox / Edge / DuckDuckGo
- Click on the icon to the left of the address bar
- Disable Tracking Protection
- Refresh the page
- Ghostery
- Click the blue ghost icon to the right of the address bar
- Disable Ad-Blocking, Anti-Tracking, and Never-Consent
- Refresh the page





