Quickstart Retirement Calculator
Quickstart gives a fast baseline so you can move from vague goals to measurable retirement actions.
Use conservative assumptions first, then refine through calculators and scenario pages.
The fastest improvement path is baseline plus one focused lever change at a time.
Treat every quickstart run as a decision checkpoint: if assumptions changed, re-run baseline and preserve a record before making major spending or investing commitments.
How to run quickstart effectively
Run one baseline and one stress case, then compare differences before making decisions.
After baseline, move to calculator pages for deeper control of your highest-impact variable.
- Conservative assumptions first
- Save baseline output
- One variable set per iteration
- Monthly check-ins
Related tools and guides
How to use these results
Run the calculator with your own numbers to see personalised projections. Start with conservative assumptions, then adjust one variable at a time to understand which levers have the most impact on your outcome. This approach builds intuition that helps with real financial decisions.
Compare at least two scenarios: a baseline case using moderate assumptions, and a stress case using conservative assumptions. If both scenarios lead to acceptable outcomes, your plan has genuine resilience. If only the optimistic case works, consider adjusting your savings rate, target retirement age, or spending assumptions before committing to a course of action.
Financial planning works best when treated as an ongoing process rather than a one-time calculation. Review your inputs quarterly to reflect changes in income, expenses, or goals. Small corrections made early are significantly more effective than large corrections made late. The most successful planners are those who check in regularly and make incremental adjustments rather than attempting dramatic overhauls.
Building a resilient financial plan
A resilient plan is one that works across a range of economic conditions, not just the most likely outcome. Market returns, inflation rates, and personal circumstances can all deviate from expectations. By testing your plan against multiple scenarios, you develop confidence that your strategy can adapt to changing conditions.
Consider the interaction between different financial variables. For example, higher inflation reduces the real value of fixed savings, but may also increase nominal income and property values. Understanding these relationships helps you make better decisions about asset allocation, savings targets, and retirement timing.
Sequence-of-returns risk is particularly important in the years immediately before and after retirement. Poor market performance during this critical window can significantly impact outcomes even if long-term averages are favourable. Conservative assumptions during this period provide a meaningful safety margin.
Practical planning tips
- Document your baseline assumptions so you can track how they change over time and understand what drove previous decisions.
- Focus on contribution consistency first, then optimise investment allocation second. Regular saving behaviour has more impact than portfolio optimisation for most people.
- Use the country-specific defaults as starting points, then personalise based on your actual income, expenses, tax situation, and retirement goals.
- Share your results with a qualified financial adviser for professional guidance tailored to your circumstances and jurisdiction.
- Revisit your plan when major life events occur: job changes, marriage, children, property purchases, or inheritance.
This calculator is designed for education and awareness. It shows how different variables interact to shape long-term financial outcomes. The projections are estimates based on simplified assumptions and should not be treated as guarantees or professional financial advice. Always consult qualified professionals before making significant financial commitments.
Launch your baseline
Run quickstart now and define one 30-day improvement target.