
Retirement readiness is rarely a feeling. It’s a numbers game. Yet many Americans approaching retirement age struggle with a nagging sense of uncertainty, even when their financial house is in order.
According to NerdWallet research, only 23% of Americans evaluated their progress toward retirement savings goals in the past year, leaving the vast majority in the dark about where they stand.
The disconnect between financial reality and emotional confidence is more common than you might think. Vanguard’s 2025 Retirement Outlook found that more than four in 10 Americans are on track to maintain their lifestyle in retirement yet many of these same individuals express doubt about their preparedness.
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I’m a financial planner with nearly two decades of experience, and if you’ve been questioning whether you can afford to leave the workforce, these seven concrete indicators suggest you might be more ready than you realize.
1. Your retirement savings meet or exceed age-based benchmarks
Financial planners use age-based milestones to gauge retirement readiness. Fidelity recommends saving 10 times your annual income by age 67, with incremental goals along the way: One times your salary by 30, three times by 40, six times by 50 and eight times by 60.
If you’ve met or exceeded these benchmarks, you’re likely in strong shape. These guidelines account for a retirement lifestyle that maintains your pre-retirement standard of living, assuming you’ll need 70% to 80% of your preretirement income annually.
2. You have multiple income streams in place
Financial experts consistently point to diversified income as a hallmark of retirement readiness. Relying solely on Social Security or a single pension creates vulnerability to policy changes or plan failures.
Strong candidates for retirement typically have three or more income sources: Social Security benefits, retirement account distributions (401(k)s, IRAs, Roth IRAs) and potentially pension income, rental property revenue or part-time work.
This diversification provides both financial security and flexibility to adjust withdrawal strategies based on market conditions and tax planning opportunities.
3. Your debt is eliminated or manageable
Carrying significant debt into retirement dramatically increases the income you’ll need to maintain your lifestyle. Most financial advisers recommend entering retirement either debt-free or with only low-interest, manageable debt remaining.
If you’ve paid off your mortgage (or will within the first few years of retirement) and carry no high-interest credit card balances, you’ve cleared one of the most significant obstacles to retirement security.
The exception: Strategic debt like a low-rate mortgage that allows you to keep more funds invested might make sense depending on your tax situation and investment returns.
4. You’ve stress-tested your retirement budget
Wishful thinking has no place in retirement planning. If you’ve created a detailed retirement budget that accounts for essential expenses (housing, healthcare, food, insurance) and discretionary spending (travel, hobbies, entertainment) and your projected income covers these costs with a buffer, you’re demonstrating the kind of preparation that indicates true readiness.
Financial planners suggest running multiple scenarios: One for your expected lifestyle, one for a reduced spending scenario if markets underperform and one for increased healthcare costs or other contingencies.
If your retirement income comfortably covers your baseline expenses across multiple scenarios, you’re likely ready.
5. Your healthcare strategy is funded and understood
Healthcare represents one of the largest and most unpredictable retirement expenses. If you’re under 65, the gap between retirement and Medicare eligibility requires a solid plan, whether that’s COBRA coverage, marketplace insurance or a spouse’s employer plan.
Research shows that financially prepared retirees have not only identified their healthcare coverage strategy but have also funded it. This includes understanding Medicare parts A, B, D and potential Medigap or Medicare Advantage coverage, plus maintaining an emergency fund specifically for out-of-pocket medical expenses.
If you’ve modeled healthcare costs into your retirement budget and have a clear coverage plan, this uncertainty is behind you.
6. Your portfolio is positioned for distribution, not just accumulation
The shift from saving to spending requires a different investment approach. If you’ve worked with an adviser to restructure your portfolio for retirement (creating a more conservative allocation, establishing a withdrawal strategy and potentially creating a bucket approach with short-term cash reserves), you’ve done the strategic work that separates hopeful retirees from prepared ones.
This includes understanding the tax implications of your withdrawal strategy. Smart retirees consider which accounts to tap first (taxable, tax-deferred or tax-free) to minimize lifetime tax liability and avoid pushing themselves into higher brackets or triggering additional Medicare premiums.
7. You can articulate your Social Security strategy
Social Security claiming decisions have lifetime implications, yet many people approach this choice casually. If you’ve analyzed your break-even points, considered spousal benefits and survivor benefits, and made a deliberate decision about when to claim (whether at age 62, full retirement age, or age 70), you’re exhibiting the kind of strategic thinking that characterizes successful retirees.
Delaying Social Security until age 70 increases benefits by roughly 8% per year after full retirement age, a guaranteed return that’s difficult to replicate elsewhere. Understanding this trade-off and how it fits your overall income plan is a sign of readiness.
The confidence gap
If you’ve checked most or all these boxes but still feel uncertain, you’re not alone. The psychological transition to retirement often lags the financial reality. Consider working with a financial adviser to run a comprehensive retirement analysis, which can provide objective validation of your preparedness.
Remember that retirement readiness isn’t about achieving perfection. It’s about having sufficient resources to maintain your desired lifestyle with acceptable risk.
Vanguard’s research shows that younger generations are on track to be better prepared for retirement than current retirees, thanks to improved access to workplace retirement plans and stronger plan design.
The question isn’t whether you feel ready. It’s whether your numbers say you’re ready. If the financial indicators are in place, your hesitation might be the natural anxiety that comes with a major life transition, not a reflection of insufficient preparation.

