$1.36 million.
Retirement is one of those big questions every Singaporean thinks about but few have a clear answer to. Some say you need a million dollars, others say it depends on lifestyle.
So the Piranha Profits team went back out to the streets to find out. We asked Singaporeans across generations about their ideal retirement age, how much monthly income they’d need, and what kind of lifestyle they’re really aiming for.
Retirement Age Goals: 55, 65… or Never?
Most people still defaulted to the conventional idea of retiring at 60 or 65. Some, however, linked retirement not to age but to achieving “financial freedom”: “As long as I can build a big enough pool of money to fuel my lifestyle, that’s retirement to me.”
Others leaned toward staying active even beyond 65, seeing work as contribution, not burden.
Responses varied from as little as $1,800 (“enough for a simple life in HDB”) to $5,000 (“if you want a luxury lifestyle”).
One female respondent pointed out that even staying in a private estate, by forgoing a car and domestic helper, it’s possible to reduce monthly expenses and settle somewhere in the middle.
We showed interviewees OCBC’s Financial Wellness Index chart:
Most aimed for Lifestyle B — “comfortable but not over the top.” Some hoped for C if circumstances allowed, while a few felt Lifestyle A was realistic if costs stayed lean.
OCBC Financial Wellness report 2022
When asked about the 4% retirement rule (the idea that a sustainable portfolio can pay out 4% yearly), almost no one had heard of it.
*The 4% rule says you can withdraw 4% of your retirement portfolio annually and expect it to last about 30 years.
Reactions were telling:
Property rentals, dividends from local banks, and even money market funds were mentioned. But most acknowledged that saving alone isn’t enough: “You need to invest if you want to survive in Singapore.”
When asked what $5,000 would be worth in 20 years, few realized it could erode to half its value. At 3% annual inflation, you’d need $10,000 a month in 2045 to match today’s $5,000 lifestyle.
Singaporeans know retirement is expensive but many still underestimate how much capital is needed, how inflation erodes savings, and why passive income streams are essential.
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