• Home
  • News
  • Personal Finance
    • Savings
    • Banking
    • Mortgage
    • Retirement
    • Taxes
    • Wealth
  • Make Money
  • Budgeting
  • Burrow
  • Investing
  • Credit Cards
  • Loans

Subscribe to Updates

Get the latest finance news and updates directly to your inbox.

Top News

Amazon, Starbucks, Home Depot in the Hot Seat As Boycotts Heat Up

July 2, 2025

Check Your Budget: 15 Cities and States Are Hiking Minimum Wage in July

July 2, 2025

10 Budgeting Rules That Are Quietly Hurting Middle-Class Families

July 2, 2025
Facebook Twitter Instagram
Trending
  • Amazon, Starbucks, Home Depot in the Hot Seat As Boycotts Heat Up
  • Check Your Budget: 15 Cities and States Are Hiking Minimum Wage in July
  • 10 Budgeting Rules That Are Quietly Hurting Middle-Class Families
  • How One Founder Is Rethinking Supplements With David Beckham
  • Why Your Finance Team Needs an AI Strategy, Now
  • AI Startup TML From Ex-OpenAI Exec Mira Murati Pays $500,000
  • He Went From $471K in Debt to Teaching Others How to Succeed
  • Summer Financial Checklist
Wednesday, July 2
Facebook Twitter Instagram
FintechoPro
Subscribe For Alerts
  • Home
  • News
  • Personal Finance
    • Savings
    • Banking
    • Mortgage
    • Retirement
    • Taxes
    • Wealth
  • Make Money
  • Budgeting
  • Burrow
  • Investing
  • Credit Cards
  • Loans
FintechoPro
Home » Where $1 Million in Retirement Savings Lasts the Longest: Study
Investing

Where $1 Million in Retirement Savings Lasts the Longest: Study

News RoomBy News RoomFebruary 27, 20250 Views0
Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn WhatsApp Reddit Email Tumblr Telegram

A Northwestern Mutual study showed that the magic number for retirement, or the number that U.S. adults think they will need to save to retire comfortably, leaped to $1.46 million in 2024, up from $951,000 in 2019.

Americans, on average, reported having saved $88,400 for retirement in 2024, per the same study, leaving a $1.37 million gap between goals and reality.

Now, a new analysis from GoBankingRates released earlier this month examined just how far a hypothetical $1 million in retirement savings will stretch in each state when combined with Social Security benefits.

GoBankingRates used data from the U.S. Census American Community Survey, the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics Consumer Expenditure Survey, and Missouri’s Economic and Research Information Center to find how long a $1 million retirement nest egg will last given each state’s cost of living.

Related: Where Do You Have the Most Buying Power? In These 4 Cities, Your Paycheck Is Worth More Than It Seems.

The study calculated the cost of living by looking at the prices of necessities like housing, food, transportation, and utilities in each state. The researchers did not include federal and state income taxes in their estimates. The average monthly Social Security retirement check in January was $1,976, per the Social Security Administration.

The states where retirement funds run out the fastest usually have the highest cost of living and the greatest average monthly expenditures.

Hawaii tops the list; $1 million in retirement savings, plus Social Security benefits, would last less than 13 years in the state. One cause could be high housing costs due to restrictive land use regulations that only allow for 4% of the state’s land to be used for residential purposes. The resulting land scarcity means high home prices — the median price of a home in Hawaii is 2.7 times the national average with a median price of $850,000.

California and Massachusetts are also states where $1 million in retirement savings runs out in less than 20 years. GoBankingRates estimates that monthly expenses in those states are higher than $2,200, with Californians spending more on groceries per month than any other state’s residents. Housing in Massachusetts is priced 108% higher than the national average.

Related: $1 Million Retirement Savings Won’t Last 25 Years Anywhere in the U.S. — But It Will Go the Furthest in These 6 States

On the flip side, a $1 million retirement nest egg could last for over 70 years in five states where the cost of living is low: Oklahoma (71 years), Louisiana (76 years), Arkansas (76 years), Mississippi (87 years) and West Virginia (88 years). Factoring in Social Security, monthly expenses come out to less than $1,200 in these states, per GoBankingRates.

West Virginia has a cost of living 9% lower than the national average, with housing 21% lower than average, according to RentCafe. The World Population Review estimated in a 2024 ranking that Mississippi had the lowest cost of living in the U.S. with the lowest housing prices overall.

Here are the states where $1 million in retirement savings will last the longest, and where it will run out fast.

States Where $1 Million in Retirement Savings Will Run Out More Quickly

1. Hawaii

  • Average monthly expenditure cost: $2,761
  • Annual total cost of living for one person after Social Security benefits: $80,125
  • How many years $1M and Social Security benefits will last: 12.48

2. California

  • Average monthly expenditure cost: $2,269
  • Annual total cost of living for one person after Social Security benefits: $61,406
  • How many years $1M and Social Security benefits will last: 16.29

3. Massachusetts

  • Average monthly expenditure cost: $2,340
  • Annual total cost of living for one person after Social Security benefits: $51,686
  • How many years $1M and Social Security benefits will last: 19.35

4. Washington

  • Average monthly expenditure cost: $2,096
  • Annual total cost of living for one person after Social Security benefits: $45,629
  • How many years $1M and Social Security benefits will last: 21.92

5. New Jersey

  • Average monthly expenditure cost: $2,001
  • Annual total cost of living for one person after Social Security benefits: $41,315
  • How many years $1M and Social Security benefits will last: 24.20

6. Colorado

  • Average monthly expenditure cost: $1,899
  • Annual total cost of living for one person after Social Security benefits: $39,759
  • How many years $1M and Social Security benefits will last: 25.15

7. New Hampshire

  • Average monthly expenditure cost: $2,081
  • Annual total cost of living for one person after Social Security benefits: $38,052
  • How many years $1M and Social Security benefits will last: 26.28

8. Utah

  • Average monthly expenditure cost: $1,893
  • Annual total cost of living for one person after Social Security benefits: $37,797
  • How many years $1M and Social Security benefits will last: 26.46

9. Oregon

  • Average monthly expenditure cost: $2,017
  • Annual total cost of living for one person after Social Security benefits: $37,346
  • How many years $1M and Social Security benefits will last: 26.78

10. Rhode Island

  • Average monthly expenditure cost: $2,113
  • Annual total cost of living for one person after Social Security benefits: $36,920
  • How many years $1M and Social Security benefits will last: 27.09

States Where $1 Million in Retirement Savings Lasts the Longest

1. West Virginia

  • Average monthly expenditure cost: $1,833
  • Annual total cost of living for one person after Social Security benefits: $11,263
  • How many years $1M and Social Security benefits will last: 88.79

2. Mississippi

  • Average monthly expenditure cost: $1,784
  • Annual total cost of living for one person after Social Security benefits: $11,473
  • How many years $1M and Social Security benefits will last: 87.16

3. Arkansas

  • Average monthly expenditure cost: $1,725
  • Annual total cost of living for one person after Social Security benefits: $13,000
  • How many years $1M and Social Security benefits will last: 76.93

4. Louisiana

  • Average monthly expenditure cost: $1,785
  • Annual total cost of living for one person after Social Security benefits: $13,065
  • How many years $1M and Social Security benefits will last: 76.54

5. Oklahoma

  • Average monthly expenditure cost: $1,832
  • Annual total cost of living for one person after Social Security benefits: $14,048
  • How many years $1M and Social Security benefits will last: 71.18

6. Kentucky

  • Average monthly expenditure cost: $1,864
  • Annual total cost of living for one person after Social Security benefits: $14,456
  • How many years $1M and Social Security benefits will last: 69.17

7. Alabama

  • Average monthly expenditure cost: $1,794
  • Annual total cost of living for one person after Social Security benefits: $14,874
  • How many years $1M and Social Security benefits will last: 67.23

8. Iowa

  • Average monthly expenditure cost: $1,836
  • Annual total cost of living for one person after Social Security benefits: $15,158
  • How many years $1M and Social Security benefits will last: 65.97

9. Kansas

  • Average monthly expenditure cost: $1,801
  • Annual total cost of living for one person after Social Security benefits: $15,315
  • How many years $1M and Social Security benefits will last: 65.29

10. Ohio

  • Average monthly expenditure cost: $1,853
  • Annual total cost of living for one person after Social Security benefits: $16,099
  • How many years $1M and Social Security benefits will last: 62.12

Click here for the full report.

Read the full article here

Featured
Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email

Related Articles

Amazon, Starbucks, Home Depot in the Hot Seat As Boycotts Heat Up

Burrow July 2, 2025

Check Your Budget: 15 Cities and States Are Hiking Minimum Wage in July

Make Money July 2, 2025

10 Budgeting Rules That Are Quietly Hurting Middle-Class Families

Budgeting July 2, 2025

How One Founder Is Rethinking Supplements With David Beckham

Make Money July 1, 2025

Why Your Finance Team Needs an AI Strategy, Now

Investing July 1, 2025

AI Startup TML From Ex-OpenAI Exec Mira Murati Pays $500,000

Make Money July 1, 2025
Add A Comment

Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

Demo
Top News

Check Your Budget: 15 Cities and States Are Hiking Minimum Wage in July

July 2, 20250 Views

10 Budgeting Rules That Are Quietly Hurting Middle-Class Families

July 2, 20250 Views

How One Founder Is Rethinking Supplements With David Beckham

July 1, 20250 Views

Why Your Finance Team Needs an AI Strategy, Now

July 1, 20250 Views
Don't Miss

AI Startup TML From Ex-OpenAI Exec Mira Murati Pays $500,000

By News RoomJuly 1, 2025

The $10 billion AI startup Thinking Machines Lab (TML), which was founded by former OpenAI…

He Went From $471K in Debt to Teaching Others How to Succeed

July 1, 2025

Summer Financial Checklist

July 1, 2025

3 Gently Used Cars You Can Still Buy for Under $20,000

July 1, 2025
Facebook Twitter Instagram Pinterest Dribbble
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms of use
  • Press Release
  • Advertise
  • Contact
© 2025 FintechoPro. All Rights Reserved.

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.