Historical backtest

Retiring in 2011: How That Retirement Is Going, 13 Years In

A $1,000,000 60/40 portfolio, retiring in 2011 and spending $40,000/yr (inflation-adjusted), tested against the 13 years of real market history available since then.

By · Updated July 15, 2026
3.5% withdrawal
$35,000/yr
STILL FUNDED
Funded 13 years so far (through 2023), with $1,472,000 remaining (today's real dollars).
4% withdrawal
$40,000/yr
STILL FUNDED
Funded 13 years so far (through 2023), with $1,378,000 remaining (today's real dollars).
5% withdrawal
$50,000/yr
STILL FUNDED
Funded 13 years so far (through 2023), with $1,191,000 remaining (today's real dollars).

Year by year: the 4% plan

YearAgeStocksBonds60/40WithdrawalEnd balance
1 65 −1% +14% +5% $40,000 $1,008,000
2 66 +14% +1% +9% $40,000 $1,053,000
3 67 +30% −11% +14% $40,000 $1,151,000
4 68 +12% +9% +11% $40,000 $1,231,000
5 69 −1% −1% −1% $40,000 $1,179,000
6 70 +10% −1% +6% $40,000 $1,203,000
7 71 +19% 0% +11% $40,000 $1,295,000
8 72 −6% −2% −4% $40,000 $1,200,000
9 73 +29% +7% +20% $40,000 $1,395,000
10 74 +17% +9% +14% $40,000 $1,541,000
11 75 +21% −6% +10% $40,000 $1,655,000
12 76 −24% −20% −22% $40,000 $1,253,000
13 77 +22% +1% +14% $40,000 $1,378,000

What this sequence teaches

Over the first five years of this retirement (2011–2015), a 60/40 portfolio's cumulative real return was +42%. The single worst year in the tested window was 2022, when the 60/40 blend returned −22% in real terms.

Under the 4% withdrawal plan, the real portfolio balance bottomed out at $1,008,000 in 2011, before recovering in later years.

Because the first five years were strongly positive, this retirement built a real cushion early. A strong start is one of the best protections against sequence-of-returns risk, since later downturns bite a larger balance instead of a depleted one.

What RetireOdds actually simulates

The table above is the transparent skeleton: one portfolio, one withdrawal rule, one sequence of real historical returns, before taxes. It's meant to be checkable by hand.

Inside RetireOdds, the same year-by-year loop runs against your plan and adds what a real retirement actually has to deal with: federal and state taxes with account buckets (taxable, tax-deferred, Roth) drawn in order, Social Security claiming and its partial taxability, Required Minimum Distributions, healthcare costs (ACA subsidies before 65, Medicare and IRMAA after), Roth conversions, and one-time life events.

It also runs three engines instead of one: Monte Carlo (1,000 lognormal real-return paths calibrated to this same 1928–2023 dataset), a block bootstrap of this history, and the historical replay shown on this page. A plan fails if any year is unfunded — including the last one.

Read the full method on /methodology, walk through the product in the user guide, or try your own numbers in the free calculator.

Returns are approximate, rounded, planning-grade real (inflation-adjusted) totals for US large-cap stocks and 10-year Treasuries — this is educational modeling, not financial advice.

Run this against your own plan

This page tests one fixed portfolio against history. RetireOdds tests your numbers — your accounts, your Social Security, your taxes — across three simulation engines.