If you're over 50 with less than $100,000 saved for retirement, you probably already know you are behind. You do not need another article telling you that retirement costs millions of dollars or showing how much you should have saved by now.
You need to know what to do next. According to the Federal Reserve, 70% of adults ages 55 to 64 had a tax-preferred retirement account in 2024, meaning nearly one-third did not, so this is not an unusual problem. It is serious, but someone with another 10 to 20 working years still has time to make the right moves.
Here is the honest plan, starting with decisions that can make the biggest difference.
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Find out what Social Security could actually provide
Start by signing in to your Social Security account and reviewing your estimated benefit at different claiming ages. The average retired worker receives an estimated $2,071 per month in 2026, but your personal amount depends on your earnings history.
This gives you a baseline. Instead of asking whether $100,000 is "enough," calculate the gap between your expected Social Security income and the amount you will need each month.
Make delaying Social Security a serious goal
For people born in 1960 or later, full retirement age is 67. Waiting beyond that age generally increases benefits by 8% for each full year, up to age 70. That means delaying from 67 to 70 could raise your monthly benefit by approximately 24%.
Someone entitled to $2,000 at 67 might receive $2,480 at 70, before future cost-of-living adjustments. Unlike investment returns, the delayed-retirement increase is built into Social Security's benefit formula.
Increase contributions, even if you cannot max them out
In 2026, workers can contribute up to $24,500 to a 401(k), 403(k), or most governmental 457 plans. Those age 50 and older may be allowed an additional $8,000 catch-up contribution, bringing the total to $32,500. Workers who turn 60 through 63 during the year have a higher $11,250 catch-up limit, potentially bringing their total to $35,750.
Those limits may be unrealistic for many households. The practical first target is getting the full employer match, then increasing contributions by 1% whenever your income rises, or a debt disappears.
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See what 15 focused years could accomplish
Starting late does not erase the value of compounding. Someone investing $500 per month for 15 years and earning an average annual return of 6% would end with approximately $140,000. At $800 per month, the balance would be around $225,000.
Those returns are not guaranteed, and investment fees or market performance can change the outcome. Still, the calculation shows why consistent contributions matter. You do not need to jump from saving nothing to maxing out a 401(k) overnight.
Lower the amount retirement must replace
Reducing future expenses can be just as important as building a larger account. A household that needs $40,000 annually will face a much smaller funding gap than one that needs $65,000.
Review the expenses that follow you into retirement: housing, vehicles, insurance, subscriptions, property taxes, and support for adult children. Cutting a few small purchases will not close a major savings gap. Reducing one or two large, recurring bills might.
Pay off consumer debt before leaving work
Retiring with credit card balances or a large car payment forces Social Security and savings to cover yesterday's purchases. It also increases the income your portfolio must produce each year.
A $400 monthly payment costs $4,800 annually. Using the commonly cited 4% withdrawal guideline, supporting that payment would require around $120,000 in additional retirement savings. Paying off the vehicle before retirement may improve your plan almost as much as adding another six-figure sum into your account.
Retirement News: Almost 80% of Americans fear a retirement age increase — here’s the real reason why
Consider working a few years longer
Working until 69 instead of 65 may not sound like a financial strategy, but it impacts several parts of the plan at once. You gain four more years to save, your existing investments get four more years of potential growth, and you avoid four years of portfolio withdrawals.
Working longer may also make delaying Social Security more practical. It does not necessarily require staying in the same demanding job. Part-time work or a lower-stress position could provide enough income to postpone withdrawals.
Treat home equity as part of the plan
For many people with modest retirement accounts, their home is their largest asset. That equity should not be ignored, but it also should not be treated like cash unless there is a realistic plan for using it.
Downsizing, moving to a less-expensive area, or selling a home with high taxes could free up substantial money while lowering monthly expenses. The amount will depend on local home prices, mortgage debt, selling expenses, and the cost of a replacement home.
Bottom line
Being over 50 with less than $100,000 saved calls for urgency, not panic. Delaying Social Security, increasing contributions where you can, paying off debt, and lowering fixed costs could still create a workable retirement plan.
It is also worth checking whether you may qualify for property-tax relief, utility assistance, Medicare Savings Programs, or other help with bills if you're living on just Social Security. These programs vary by state, but even modest savings on recurring expenses could make a limited retirement income stretch further.
More from FinanceBuzz:
- Retire like the rich: 14 ways you could build wealth in your 50s.
- Find out if you could pay less for car insurance in just a few clicks.
- Make these 7 savvy moves when you have $1,000 in the bank.
- 14 moves seniors could benefit from but often forget about.
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