This calculator gives you a practical way to estimate how your current balance, monthly savings, and expected return could build over time. It is built to make the tradeoffs visible, not to replace personalized advice.
Use it to pressure-test the basics before a conversation with Zach. Then, if the numbers raise better questions about retirement income planning or investment strategy, you already have a cleaner starting point.
Useful if you want to see whether your current rhythm is moving fast enough before retirement gets close.
You get a range of outcomes so one assumed rate of return does not pretend to be certainty.
Bring the estimate into a real planning conversation when you want the next decisions tied to your full picture.
Adjust the assumptions below to see how compounding, time, and contribution consistency shape the outcome.
Based on the current assumptions, this estimate shows what the account could grow to by retirement if contributions stay consistent and returns track near the base scenario.
| Age | Year | Contributions | Estimated Value |
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This is an estimate, not a promise. Real portfolios move unevenly, and retirement planning decisions usually involve taxes, income sequencing, and risk tolerance in ways a simple calculator cannot fully model.
The base projection is useful, but a planning conversation gets better when you can also see how a modestly lower or higher return changes the long-term outcome.
If long-term returns come in lower than expected, this is the softer landing case to keep in view.
This reflects the exact annual return assumption you entered above.
A stronger long-term market path can create a meaningful gap over time.
If the outcome feels light, the issue may be contribution rate, timeline, return expectations, or all three. The point is not just to get a number. The point is to surface where the pressure really is.
Accumulation is only part of retirement planning. Once the savings picture is clearer, the next layer is often how income, taxes, and withdrawal sequencing may affect what retirement can actually support.
The most useful forecast is usually the one you can act on without fooling yourself. Conservative assumptions and a real plan tend to beat optimistic math and vague intentions.
If this calculator helps you see the gap more clearly, the next step is a real planning conversation. Zach can help connect savings assumptions to retirement timing, investment structure, and the bigger financial picture.