The 4% Rule Done – 5 Signs Your $1 Million Retirement Portfolio Can Survive The New Exit Reality


A million dollars can provide a comfortable lifestyle in retirement.
A million dollars can provide a comfortable lifestyle in retirement. – Getty Images/iStock

For decades, reaching a seven-figure portfolio meant you made it. Conventional wisdom suggested following the “4% rule” – withdraw 4% of your portfolio in the first year, adjust for inflation annually, and your money should last 30 years. For someone with $1 million, that’s $40,000 a year. Along with Social Security, many believed they would be elected.

But economic realities have now changed these calculations significantly.

According to Morningstar’s latest retirement-income research, the safe withdrawal rate for new retirees has fallen to 3.9% by 2026—meaning a $1 million portfolio now generates $39,000 in the first year. While the difference between $40,000 and $39,000 may seem small, the underlying reasons for this adjustment reveal why the million-dollar mile isn’t the finish line it once was.

The real shock comes when you examine what retirement actually costs.

Healthcare alone can destroy even carefully planned budgets. According to Fidelity Investments’ 2025 Retiree Health Care Cost Estimate, the average 65-year-old couple will need about $345,000 saved specifically for health care expenses throughout retirement. This number is up nearly 5% from last year.

Let’s put this into perspective: If you have $1 million saved, health care costs alone can consume more than a third of your total savings. And that $345,000 does not include dental care, vision costs, over-the-counter drugs or long-term care. An individual retiree can expect to spend about $172,500 on health care.

A safe exit rate of 3.9% means taking $39,000 from a $1 million portfolio in the first year. But here is where social security becomes very important. The average Social Security benefit in 2025 was about $2,000 a month, or about $24,000 a year per person. For a married couple receiving both benefits, that’s about $48,000 a year.

That combination — $39,000 from the portfolio and $48,000 from Social Security — provides about $87,000 in annual retirement income, which can support a comfortable lifestyle for many couples, especially those without mortgage payments. But only if you have modest spending needs and manageable healthcare costs.

Where you retire is as important as how much you save.

A million dollars can provide a comfortable life in cities and towns where the cost of living is low. You can own a house properly, enjoy local restaurants and occasionally travel without financial stress. But try living in San Francisco, Miami, or New York City on $39,000 a year from your portfolio and Social Security—you’ll burn through savings quickly.

Housing costs, state taxes and local health care rates create different retirement experiences with the same nest egg.

Despite the challenges, there are scenarios where $1 million provides financial security.

If you retire without a mortgage, live at a low or moderate cost of living, have reasonable health care needs and can complete portfolio withdrawals with Social Security averaging $4,000 per month ($48,000 per year for a couple) – you can live comfortably. Your combined income will be about $87,000 a year, to accommodate occasional travel, support the grandchildren and maintain your lifestyle.

Here are five key factors that make $1 million enough:

Is a million dollars enough to retire on? The answer to depression is: it depends.

Here’s what financial planners know but many retirees discover too late: Portfolio numbers that seem impossible to reach often prove inadequate for the retirement they envisioned.

For some Americans who retire in low-cost areas with modest needs and no debt, that’s absolutely enough. Combined with Social Security, $1 million can fund a comfortable, fulfilling retirement.

But for others — especially those in expensive areas who retire before 65, or envision an active lifestyle — a million dollars represents a solid foundation, not a finish line.

The real question is not whether you have reached a certain number. It’s whether your savings, combined with Social Security and other income sources, can fund the specific retirement you want to live. This requires an honest assessment of your expected expenses, health care costs, location and longevity.

A seven-figure retirement balance is worth celebrating. But the advisor’s caution is also worth listening to.

Other: 12 Financial Benefits Where Smartspores Will Really Take Their Money By 2026

Also Read: Boomers are wasting money too. It’s the spending traps that fuel the wealthiest generation.

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