🏞 Retirement Pension Estimator
Project defined-benefit pension income using standard actuarial formulas. Model retirement income replacement rates, contribution breakeven points, and lifetime pension value for comprehensive retirement planning analysis.
Personal Information
Pension Plan Details
📊 Pension Projection
📖 Usage Examples
🏫 Public School Teacher
A teacher retires at 60 with 35 years of service, a final salary of $82,000, and a 2% accrual rate.
🏨 Corporate Employee: Cash Balance
An engineer retires at 65 with 30 years, starting salary $55,000 and final $120,000. Cash balance plan at 1.2% accrual.
🏭 Late Starter: Government Worker
A government employee starts at 40, retires at 67 with 27 years, final salary $95,000, and 1.5% accrual.
❔ Frequently Asked Questions
A defined benefit (DB) plan (traditional pension) guarantees a specific monthly benefit at retirement based on a formula using salary, years of service, and accrual rate. A defined contribution (DC) plan (like a 401(k)) depends on contributions and investment returns — the final value is not guaranteed. This calculator models DB-style pensions and cash balance hybrid plans.
The accrual rate is the percentage of your salary you earn in pension benefits for each year of service. Typical rates: Public sector: 1.5-2.5% per year. Private sector DB plans: 1.0-1.5%. Union-negotiated: often 1.5-2.0%. Higher accrual rates mean faster pension growth — 2% over 30 years gives 60% final salary replacement.
This is how many years you need to receive pension benefits to recover your total employee contributions. For example, if you contributed $150,000 over your career and receive $30,000/year in pension, your break-even is 5 years. After that point, every dollar is effectively a net gain from your employer's contributions and investment returns.
Most DB plans apply early retirement reduction factors — typically 3-6% reduction per year before the normal retirement age. For example, retiring 5 years early might reduce your pension by 15-30%. Some plans also require a minimum age (often 55) or years of service (often 20-30 years) to qualify for unreduced benefits.
COLA (Cost of Living Adjustment) is an annual increase to your pension to offset inflation. Without COLA, a $3,000/month pension at age 65 would have the purchasing power of roughly $1,660/month by age 85 (assuming 3% inflation). Plans with full CPI-adjustment protect your buying power, while capped COLA (e.g., 2% max) provides partial protection. This calculator shows base figures without COLA applied.
This is an unofficial planning estimate. Actual benefits depend on your specific plan documents, vesting status, legislative changes, and plan funding health. Key factors not modeled include: survivor benefit options (which reduce monthly amounts), Social Security integration (some plans offset for Social Security), and lump-sum vs. annuity choices. Always obtain an official benefit statement from your plan administrator.
🏞 About the Retirement Pension Estimator
This calculator provides an analytical projection of defined-benefit (DB) pension income using the standard formula: annual pension = salary basis × years of pensionable service × accrual rate. This formula architecture, in its various modifications, underpins the vast majority of traditional DB pension plans across public and private sectors globally. Understanding the mechanics of this calculation is essential for retirement readiness assessment and total compensation analysis.
The calculator supports three pension plan types reflecting common design variations. Final Salary (Career Average Revalued Earnings) uses the projected final salary as the income basis, representing the most generous formula structure common in public-sector plans. Defined Benefit — Flat Percentage applies a fixed accrual rate across all service years. Cash Balance / Hybrid Plan uses a career-average salary approach, increasingly common in private-sector plan designs as organizations transition from traditional DB structures.
Forward-looking analytical outputs include: the income replacement rate (pension as a percentage of final salary, indicating adequacy relative to pre-retirement income), estimated total employee contributions over the career, the breakeven period (years of retirement needed for cumulative benefits to exceed cumulative contributions), and projected lifetime pension value at ages 75, 85, and 90. These metrics provide a framework for assessing whether the pension alone will be sufficient or whether supplemental retirement savings vehicles (401(k), IRA, taxable accounts) will be needed to close income gaps.
The Cost of Living Adjustment (COLA) selector enables modelling of inflation protection scenarios. Over a 25-30 year retirement horizon, inflation can erode fixed pension purchasing power significantly — at 3% annual inflation, a fixed $3,000/month benefit loses approximately half its real value over 25 years. Plans with full CPI indexing preserve purchasing power, while capped COLAs provide partial protection. The calculator presents base figures without COLA applied; users should interpret results in light of their plan-specific inflation adjustment provisions.