The majority of Americans say they want and need income replacement projections for financing their retirement, but most do not have access to the data nor an understanding of how to translate their 401(k) savings into a stream of retirement income, according to new research.
A recently released white paper from J.P. Morgan, "
Eighty-six percent of respondents said that they will need to know how much of their pre-retirement salary they can replace, yet almost one quarter (22%) aren't even sure what they are on track to receive after they stop working. Overall, only 40% of respondents even feel comfortable that they will be able to reach their financial goals in retirement.
Americans are also dangerously underestimating how much money they will need in retirement. Among respondents who had a target retirement income replacement level in mind, nearly half (45%) thought they would need less than 75% of their pre-retirement salary level. However, extensive J.P. Morgan research shows that a minimum guideline for successful retirement income is a replacement ratio of at least 70% or more.
“On the positive side, some 91% of participants agreed that they were personally responsible for their own financial futures,” said Diane Gallagher, vice president of product development, J.P. Morgan Retirement Plan Services. “However, there’s still a significant gap between acknowledging responsibility and acting upon it.”
The survey found that two-thirds of respondents admitted that they don’t even know how much they should be saving for retirement. Nearly half of the respondents said they are scared that they will outlive their retirement savings. Of the participants who said they would need 75% to 100% of their pre-retirement salary after they stop working, less than a third even had enough savings to provide this income.
— This story originally ran in Accounting Today, a SourceMedia publication.