A $60,000 salary is a useful benchmark because it sits just below the national average. Current average hourly earnings were $37.64 in June 2026, which annualizes to more than $60,000, and median usual weekly earnings for full-time workers were $1,235 in the first quarter of 2026, or roughly $64,000 annually. So $60,000 is a realistic starting point for a typical worker asking whether a seven-figure retirement is actually reachable on that paycheck. The math says yes. The behavioral data says most people stop at around $251,400.
The math that turns $60,000 into $1 million
Compound growth does the heavy lifting. Saving $5,010 a year, or about $418 a month, and earning a 7% real return over a 40-year career produces just over $1 million. That is a savings rate of roughly 8.4% of a $60,000 salary. Push the rate up to the 15% of pre-tax income that Fidelity uses in its retirement guidelines, and the same $60,000 earner ends the career closer to $1.8 million. The path is straightforward: a workplace plan, a diversified allocation, and four decades of consistency.
The Fidelity milestone schedule frames the same idea in salary multiples: 1x salary saved by age 30, 3x by 40, 6x by 50, 8x by 60, and 10x by 67. For a $60,000 earner, 10x is $600,000, and Fidelity assumes Social Security fills the rest of the income replacement gap. Reaching $1 million on top of that requires either a higher savings rate, a longer runway, or income growth over the career, which BLS data confirms is happening in nominal terms.
Why most stop well short
The gap between the math and the outcome is a savings rate problem. The personal savings rate was 3.9% in the first quarter of 2026, down from 6.2% in the first quarter of 2024. At a 3.9% savings rate, a $60,000 earner is putting away about $2,340 a year. If you run that through the same 40-year, 7% real-return assumption, the finish line comes out to be near $467,000. That is less than half of the $1 million target.
Spending explains the shortfall. The BLS Consumer Expenditure Survey pegged average annual household spending at $78,535 in 2024, which is higher than a single $60,000 salary before taxes. Housing services accounted for $3,950.3 billion of annualized spending in May 2026, and healthcare added another $3,716.0 billion to that total. Housing, healthcare, and food together form a non-negotiable floor, leaving limited room for a higher savings rate.
Inflation makes the squeeze worse. Real average hourly earnings sat at $11.23 in May 2026, and core PCE inflation stood at 130.08 in May 2026, which was its 90.9th percentile reading over the trailing year. Wage growth in nominal terms has been steady, but real purchasing power has not moved much. Consequently, the room for higher savings has to come from spending trade-offs rather than automatic income gains.
Where the average American actually lands
Fidelity’s Q3 2025 retirement analysis, covering 24.8 million participants across 26,000 plans, shows how the balances stack up by age at the end of 2024:
- Ages 30-34: $45,700
- Ages 40-44: $109,100
- Ages 50-54: $199,900
- Ages 60-64: $246,500
- Ages 65-69: $251,400
The typical 401(k) participant stops accumulating at around $251,400. That is the average, which is pulled up by high balances at the top. The Transamerica survey reports a median household retirement balance of $270,000 for Baby Boomers, which lines up with the Fidelity averages but reinforces that half of that cohort has less. Both figures fall well short of the $1.6 million Schwab respondents said they needed for a comfortable retirement in 2025.
What the data shows
The path from $60,000 to $1 million is arithmetic. A savings rate a few points above the current national average, invested consistently for a career, gets there. Most workers stop near $251,400 because spending kept pace with income, real wages barely moved, and the savings rate drifted below 4%. The $1 million figure is achievable on a $60,000 salary. Reaching it requires a savings rate higher than what the current aggregate data show.
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