Retirement Planning Calculator Singapore
Project your retirement corpus, CPF LIFE payout, and monthly income gap — in under 2 minutes. Free, Singapore-specific.
Your current age (18–70)
When do you plan to stop working?
Average SG life expectancy: ~84 years
Used to project monthly CPF contributions
Bank savings, investments, SRS, unit trusts
Amount you invest each month outside CPF
S-REITs/ETF portfolio ~5–7%, bank ~1–2%
Today's dollars — inflation is applied automatically
MAS target: ~2–3% p.a. long-term
Earns 2.5% p.a. — check CPF website
Earns 4% p.a. — sweeps to RA at 55
Understanding Retirement Planning for Singapore Investors
Retirement planning in Singapore sits at the intersection of CPF, personal savings, and investment income. Unlike many countries where retirement relies on a single pension system, Singapore’s three-pillar approach — CPF LIFE annuity, personal investments, and property — gives you multiple levers to pull. Our Retirement Planning Calculator models all three, helping you set a realistic target based on your age, income, savings rate, and expected investment returns.
According to the CPF Board, the Full Retirement Sum (FRS) for members turning 55 in 2026 is S$205,800. While CPF LIFE provides a baseline monthly payout, most Singaporeans need additional income streams to maintain their pre-retirement lifestyle. MAS data shows that Singaporeans spend an average of S$2,300–S$3,500 per month in retirement (excluding housing), meaning a 25-year retirement could require S$690,000–S$1,050,000 in total savings beyond CPF.
Not financial advice. All figures are for educational reference only. Data as at Q1 2026 unless noted.
The 4% Rule in a Singapore Context
The widely cited 4% withdrawal rule originated from US research (the Trinity Study) and assumes a 60/40 stock-bond portfolio. For Singapore, this needs adjustment. Our lower cost of living (relative to the US), absence of capital gains tax, and CPF LIFE providing a guaranteed income floor mean that many Singapore retirees can use a 3.5–4.5% withdrawal rate. Our calculator lets you model different withdrawal rates and see how they affect your retirement timeline.
Why Start Planning Early Matters
Compound interest is the most powerful force in retirement planning. Starting at age 25 with S$500/month invested at 6% annual returns yields approximately S$1,000,000 by age 60. Starting the same contributions at age 35 yields only about S$500,000. That 10-year head start doubles your nest egg. Our calculator shows this compounding effect clearly across different contribution periods and return assumptions.
How to Use This Retirement Calculator
This free Singapore retirement planning calculator takes just 2 minutes to complete and gives you a comprehensive picture of your retirement readiness — combining your personal investments, CPF balances, and CPF LIFE projections.
Step 1 — About You: Enter your current age, target retirement age, life expectancy, and monthly salary. Your salary is used to project ongoing CPF contributions based on CPF Board’s published contribution rates.
Step 2 — Your Money: Enter your current savings (excluding CPF), monthly investment amount, expected return, planned retirement expenses, and your current CPF OA and SA balances. The calculator applies inflation to your future expenses automatically.
Step 3 — Your Results: Get a Retirement Readiness score, projected personal savings corpus, estimated monthly income vs. expenses, a full CPF analysis against 2026 BRS/FRS/ERS benchmarks, and personalised tips to close any gap.
Contents — Click to Expand
- What Is a Retirement Number?
- How Retirement Savings Grow: The Compound Interest Effect
- CPF LIFE vs Personal Investment Income in Retirement
- Best Investment Platforms for Retirement Savings in Singapore
- CPF, SRS and Tax-Advantaged Retirement Planning
- Building Passive Income Streams for Retirement
- Frequently Asked Questions
What Is a Retirement Number?
Your retirement number is the total investment portfolio value you need to sustain your desired lifestyle without employment income. It is calculated by multiplying your annual retirement expenses by 25 (the inverse of the 4% withdrawal rule) or by a more conservative factor if you plan for a longer retirement or lower withdrawal rate.
For example, if you need S$4,000 per month in retirement (S$48,000/year) and plan to withdraw 4% annually from your portfolio, your retirement number is S$48,000 ÷ 0.04 = S$1,200,000. However, if you will receive S$1,500/month from CPF LIFE, your supplementary need drops to S$2,500/month (S$30,000/year), reducing your retirement number to S$750,000.
This is why our calculator factors in CPF LIFE payouts, expected rental income, and other passive income sources — they directly reduce the portfolio you need to build.
How Retirement Savings Grow: The Compound Interest Effect
The core formula behind retirement planning is the future value of a series of contributions growing at a compound rate:
FV = PMT × [((1 + r)^n – 1) / r]
Where PMT is your monthly contribution, r is the monthly return rate, and n is the number of months until retirement. At 6% annual returns (0.5% monthly), contributing S$1,000/month for 30 years yields approximately S$1,004,500 — of which S$644,500 is pure investment gains.
Our calculator uses this formula with adjustments for inflation (defaulting to 2.5% for Singapore based on MAS’s historical core inflation data), varying contribution amounts over time, and different return assumptions for the accumulation vs. drawdown phases. You can model scenarios like increasing contributions by 3% annually as your salary grows, which significantly improves outcomes.
Use our DCA Investment Calculator to see how dollar-cost averaging smooths out market volatility during your accumulation phase.
CPF LIFE vs Personal Investment Income in Retirement
Singapore retirees have two primary income pillars, each with distinct characteristics:
CPF LIFE provides a guaranteed monthly payout for life starting from your payout eligibility age (currently 65). The Standard Plan pays approximately S$1,400–S$2,150/month depending on your retirement sum, while the Basic Plan pays S$1,250–S$1,890/month with a larger bequest. Use our CPF LIFE Calculator for personalised estimates.
Personal investment income from dividend portfolios, S-REITs, bonds, and ETFs offers potentially higher returns but with more volatility. A well-diversified S-REIT portfolio yielding 5.5% on S$500,000 generates S$27,500/year (S$2,290/month), but distributions can fluctuate with property market conditions.
The optimal strategy combines both: CPF LIFE as your guaranteed income floor (covering essential expenses like food, utilities, insurance) and investment income for discretionary spending (travel, dining, hobbies). Our calculator models this hybrid approach, showing how each pillar contributes to your total retirement income.
Best Investment Platforms for Retirement Savings in Singapore
The platform you choose for retirement investing affects your returns through fees, fund selection, and tax efficiency. Here are the top options for Singapore in 2026:
Endowus — The only robo-advisor with full CPF, SRS, and cash access. Their 100% trailer fee cashback means lower effective fund costs. Excellent for a globally diversified retirement portfolio using Dimensional and PIMCO funds. Get our Endowus referral bonus →
Syfe — Their Core portfolios offer low-cost global diversification ideal for long-term retirement accumulation. The REIT+ portfolio is perfect for building a passive income stream as you approach retirement. Claim your Syfe referral bonus →
FSMOne — Best for self-directed investors who want to build their own retirement portfolio from individual S-REITs, ETFs, and bonds. Low SGX commissions and excellent dividend tracking. Use our FSMOne referral code →
For a comprehensive comparison, see our Best S-REITs 2026 guide for building the income portfolio component of your retirement plan.
CPF, SRS and Tax-Advantaged Retirement Planning
Singapore’s tax system offers powerful tools for retirement savers that most Singaporeans underutilise:
CPF Special Account (SA) earns a guaranteed 4.08% (4% base + 0.08% extra interest) — one of the highest risk-free rates globally. Topping up your SA via cash (up to S$8,000 tax relief) or transferring from OA to SA can significantly boost your retirement savings. Check our CPF OA/SA Allocation Calculator to optimise your split.
SRS contributions provide dollar-for-dollar tax relief up to S$15,300/year for Singapore citizens. At a marginal tax rate of 15%, that is S$2,295 in annual tax savings. At retirement, only 50% of SRS withdrawals are taxable, and the first S$40,000 of total income is tax-free for residents aged 55+. See our SRS Account Guide for the full optimisation strategy.
Our calculator factors in CPF SA interest rates and SRS tax savings to give you a complete picture of your tax-advantaged retirement accumulation. Refer to our CPF Investment Strategy guide for step-by-step instructions.
Building Passive Income Streams for Retirement
A successful retirement in Singapore requires multiple income streams that together cover your monthly expenses. Beyond CPF LIFE, the most common passive income sources include:
S-REIT dividends — A portfolio of diversified S-REITs can generate 5–7% annual yield. With S$400,000 invested, that is S$20,000–S$28,000 per year. See our Dividend Portfolio Yield Calculator to model your income.
Singapore Savings Bonds (SSB) — Currently yielding around 2.8–3.0% for 10-year average, SSBs provide a risk-free income component with full capital guarantee. Ideal for the conservative portion of your retirement portfolio.
Rental income — For those with investment properties, net rental yields in Singapore average 2.5–3.5% after expenses. While stable, this requires significant capital outlay and ongoing management.
The key insight is diversification across income types. Our Retirement Planning Calculator helps you model how combining CPF LIFE (guaranteed), dividend income (market-linked), and other sources creates a resilient retirement income floor. For a complete guide, read our Passive Income Singapore 2026 Guide.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is the CPF Full Retirement Sum (FRS) in Singapore 2026?
How much do I need to retire comfortably in Singapore?
What return rate should I use for my investments?
How does CPF LIFE work in Singapore?
What happens to my CPF OA at age 55?
Is this calculator accurate for all ages?
How does inflation affect my retirement planning in Singapore?
MAS data shows Singapore’s core inflation has averaged 2–2.5% over the past decade. This means S$4,000 in today’s purchasing power will require approximately S$6,600 in 25 years at 2% inflation. Our calculator includes an inflation adjustment to show your retirement target in both today’s dollars and future dollars, giving you a more realistic savings goal.
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