Is $1 Million Net Worth Good at 55? (2026 Benchmark Analysis)

$1 million at 55 is a strong position. You’re nearly 3x wealthier than the typical American your age and closing in on a comfortable retirement. The median net worth for ages 55–64 is about $364,000.

How You Compare

Net Worth Distribution: Ages 55–64

Percentile Net Worth
10th $2,500
25th $65,000
50th (Median) $364,300
75th $1,010,000
90th $2,580,000

$1M at 55 places you right around the 75th percentile.

Expert Benchmarks at Age 55

Benchmark Source Target at 55 $1M Verdict
Fidelity 7x annual salary ✅ On track if earning ≤$143K
T. Rowe Price 6.5x salary ✅ On track if earning ≤$154K

By Income Level

Your Income Fidelity Target (7x) Status
$80,000 $560,000 ✅ 1.8x ahead
$100,000 $700,000 ✅ 1.4x ahead
$125,000 $875,000 ✅ On track
$143,000 $1,001,000 ✅ Right on target
$175,000 $1,225,000 ⚠️ Behind by $225K

Retirement Projections: $1M at 55

Retire at Portfolio at Retirement 4% Withdrawal + SS (when eligible) Total Annual Income
55 (now) $1.00M $35,000 (3.5%) $17K at 62 $35K → $52K
58 $1.23M $49,200 $17K at 62 $49K → $66K
60 $1.40M $56,000 $17K at 62 $56K → $73K
62 $1.60M $64,000 $17K $81,000
65 $1.97M $78,800 $22K $100,800
67 $2.22M $88,800 $24K $112,800

Growth assumes 7% annual return, no additional contributions.

The Healthcare Gap (55–65)

If you retire before Medicare at 65, healthcare is your biggest expense:

Coverage Option Annual Cost (single) Annual Cost (couple)
ACA Marketplace (no subsidy) $8,000–$15,000 $16,000–$30,000
ACA with subsidy (income < $60K) $2,000–$6,000 $4,000–$12,000
COBRA (18 months max) $7,000–$12,000 $14,000–$24,000
Health sharing ministry $3,000–$6,000 $6,000–$12,000
Part-time job with benefits $0–$3,000 $0–$6,000

Managing healthcare costs before 65 is the #1 challenge for early retirees.

Maximize Your Final Working Years

Strategy Annual Impact
Max 401(k) + catch-up ($31,000) +$31,000
Max Roth IRA + catch-up ($8,000) +$8,000
Max HSA + catch-up ($9,550) +$9,550
Pay off mortgage Reduces retirement spending $12K–$24K/yr
Delay Social Security to 67 +35% higher monthly benefit vs. 62
Roth conversion (in low-income years) Tax-free income later

$1M Monthly Budget in Retirement

At 3.5% withdrawal = $35,000/year (pre-Social Security)

Category Monthly
Housing (paid-off home) $500
Healthcare (ACA marketplace) $600
Groceries $400
Transportation $300
Utilities $250
Insurance (auto, home) $200
Fun & travel $400
Buffer $267
Total $2,917

After Social Security at 62 = $52,000/year

Additional $1,417/month provides significantly more flexibility for travel, hobbies, and unexpected expenses.

Bottom Line

$1M at 55 gives you real options. You can retire now with lean spending, or work a few more years for a much more comfortable lifestyle. The biggest levers: delay Social Security, solve healthcare, and keep investing aggressively in your final working years.

See our can I retire with $1 million analysis or Social Security calculator for detailed planning.

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