The average physician believes they need $4.01 million to retire comfortably. Most are only 40% of the way there — and the gap has nothing to do with income.
That shortfall comes down to nine retirement mistakes that doctors across every specialty and career stage keep repeating.
Doctors spend their 20s in training while friends in other fields spend those same years building investment portfolios. By the time a physician starts earning an attending salary, they are often carrying $200,000 or more in student debt, buying a home, and raising a family — all at once. Retirement planning gets pushed to the back of the queue. And by the time it feels urgent, a decade of compounding growth is already gone.
And the high income that should fix all of this gets swallowed up by lifestyle upgrades, the wrong financial products, and retirement accounts that were never properly set up.
The outcome is a profession packed with high earners who retire later than planned, with less than they expected, asking themselves where the money went.
This guide walks through exactly where things go wrong — and what you can do differently. Whether you are a resident just starting out or an attending ten years into practice, retirement planning for doctors is a different game from what most financial advice covers.
The 9 Most Common Financial Mistakes Doctors Make
Mistake #1Starting to Save for Retirement Too Late
This is the mistake that makes all the others worse.
Most physicians finish residency around age 30. Many complete a fellowship closer to 32 or 33. In those same years, college friends in finance, engineering, or technology have already been investing for nearly a decade. That head start is worth far more than it looks.
After just 25% of a 40-year investment timeline, an investor has accumulated roughly 4% of their eventual retirement wealth. At the halfway mark, they hold only about 16%. Those early years matter far more than most people ever calculate.
The trap most physicians fall into is treating residency like a financial waiting room. They plan to "get serious about money" once they are an attending. But even putting $200 or $300 a month into a Roth IRA during training can be worth tens of thousands more at retirement than much larger contributions made later. Time in the market is the reason. You cannot buy it back.
Mistake #2
Letting Your Lifestyle Grow Faster Than Your Savings
In physician finance circles, there is a well-known pattern called the "doctor lifestyle trap." After years of sacrifice — college, medical school, residency, fellowship — doctors fresh out of training feel they have earned the right to enjoy the income. A bigger house. A new car. Private school. Premium holidays.
None of those things are wrong on their own. The problem comes when they all happen at once — right as income rises — while savings rates stay flat or quietly shrink.
The numbers make this plain. Medscape's 2025 physician retirement survey found that doctors believe they need an average of $4.01 million to retire comfortably — but most are only about 40% of the way there. The income exists to close that gap. The problem is that spending tends to rise in step with it.
Financial advisors working with physicians consistently recommend saving 20–30% of gross income during peak earning years, largely to compensate for the late start. Most physicians are not reaching that figure.
Mistake #3
Not Using Tax-Advantaged Accounts Fully
Physicians are among the top earners in the country, which makes tax planning essential — not something to get around to eventually. Yet physicians leave enormous amounts of tax-advantaged contribution room unused every single year.
Here is what is available, and how much of it goes to waste:
- 403(b) / 401(k): The employee contribution limit is $24,500 in 2026. The combined employer and employee annual additions cap is $72,000. Those aged 50 and over can contribute up to $80,000 in total, or up to $83,250 for those aged 60 to 63 under the SECURE 2.0 Act's enhanced catch-up rules.
- 457(b): This plan is widely overlooked. Physicians employed by hospitals or non-profits can contribute an additional $24,500 to a 457(b) — and this limit is entirely separate from the 403(b)/401(k) cap. You can max both in the same year. Some plans also offer a special catch-up provision that allows up to $49,000 in the three years before normal retirement age.
- Backdoor Roth IRA: Because of their income, most physicians are phased out of contributing directly to a Roth IRA. The backdoor approach — contributing to a traditional IRA and immediately converting it to a Roth — gets around this. It is legal, well-established, and surprisingly underused. The IRA limit is $7,500 in 2026.
- HSA (Health Savings Account): If you are on a high-deductible health plan, an HSA offers a rare triple tax benefit: contributions go in pre-tax, the money grows tax-free, and withdrawals for qualified medical expenses are tax-free too. Invested consistently over a career, it becomes a meaningful retirement supplement.
Skipping even one of these accounts for several years costs tens of thousands in avoidable taxes and missed growth.
Mistake #4
Trusting the Wrong Financial Advisor
Physicians are attractive clients for financial services firms. High incomes, packed schedules, and a habit of trusting credentialed professionals make doctors easy targets for products they do not need.
Many physicians qualify as "accredited investors," which opens the door to complex offerings — hedge funds, alternative investments, variable annuities. These products typically carry high fees and, in most cases, underperform a simple low-cost index fund over the long run. Trust the wrong advisor and you will end up paying dearly for it.
Signs you may be working with the wrong advisor:
- They are not a fiduciary — they have no legal obligation to put your interests first
- They earn commissions from the products they recommend
- They cannot give you a clear breakdown of what you are paying in fees
- They are pushing annuities for someone with decades until retirement
- They have never asked about your goals, your timeline, or your tax situation
Mistake #5
Going Numb to Debt
Medical school debt has hit levels that would have been hard to imagine a generation ago. According to AAMC data, 70% of the Class of 2025 carried educational debt when they graduated, with a median of $223,130. The four-year cost of attendance for the Class of 2026 now averages $297,745 at public schools and $408,150 at private ones.
The real danger is not the debt itself — it is what prolonged exposure to it does to your financial instincts. After carrying six-figure loans for years, many physicians stop reacting to new debt the way they should. Student loans get refinanced and forgotten. Credit cards run up a balance. A boat gets financed. A vacation home lands on a second mortgage.
This pattern has a name: debt numbness. When you already owe $200,000, another $50,000 feels small. It is not. Debt that compounds quietly while you ignore it can hollow out the financial base you are trying to build for retirement.
Mistake #6
Not Having a Retirement Number
Ask most physicians what their retirement number is, and you will hear one of three things: a vague guess, something a financial advisor once mentioned, or silence. This is one of the most expensive gaps in physician retirement planning.
Without a clear target, your savings approach has no anchor. You put "something" into your retirement accounts each year, hope it is enough, and keep working until retiring starts to feel possible.
Medscape surveys consistently show physicians aiming for around $4 million in retirement savings. But the right number is personal — it depends on your specialty, your lifestyle, and how soon you want to retire. A family doctor planning to retire at 67 and live modestly has very different needs from a high-earning specialist who wants out at 58 with travel plans.
The calculation is not complicated:
- Estimate how much you will spend each year in retirement (most people use 70–85% of their current expenses)
- Multiply that by 25 (this gives you a portfolio that can support a 4% annual withdrawal indefinitely)
- Subtract any guaranteed income you will receive — Social Security, a pension, expected part-time earnings
- What remains is your personal savings target
For example: a physician who needs $200,000 a year in retirement, with $50,000 coming from Social Security, has a personal portfolio target of $3.75 million.
Why Your Home Down Payment Decision Matters More Than You Think
Where you put your money in your 30s has a direct bearing on when you can leave medicine. Putting 20% down on a $700,000 home ties up $140,000 in home equity — money that stops growing the moment it goes into a property.
A physician mortgage with 0% down keeps that same $140,000 available for investment during the years of your career when time is still on your side.
💡 Quick Calculation: What $140,000 Looks Like Over Time
Invested at a conservative 7% annual return, that $140,000 — preserved by using a physician mortgage instead of a conventional down payment — grows to:
| Time Horizon | $140,000 Grows To | What It Represents |
|---|---|---|
| 10 Years | $275,401 | A fully funded emergency reserve plus maxed retirement accounts |
| 20 Years | $541,756 | Over half a million from one early financial decision |
| 30 Years | $1,065,716 | More than $1 million — all from how you financed one house |
Retiring at 60 instead of 67 often comes down not to how much you earned, but where your capital was sitting in your 30s.
Mistake #7
Skipping Disability Insurance Early in Your Career
This one does not feel like a retirement mistake — until something goes wrong.
A physician in their 30s or early 40s who becomes disabled without proper coverage does not just lose income. They lose every retirement contribution they would have made going forward. They may have to draw down the savings they already have just to cover living costs. The retirement they were building stops completely.
Disability is more common than most physicians expect. Research consistently shows that roughly one in four people will become disabled before reaching retirement age. For those in physically demanding specialties — surgery, emergency medicine, orthopaedics — the odds are even less favourable.
Despite this, many physicians carry too little coverage. They rely on employer-provided group plans, which often have gaps and limitations that only become clear at claim time. Others delay buying an individual policy while they are still young and healthy enough to qualify for reasonable premiums.
Mistake #8
Working Longer Than You Have To
This is probably the most unexpected mistake on this list.
According to AMA Insurance Agency survey data, 58% of physicians retire after age 65. The general American male workforce typically retires between 62 and 64. Many doctors keep working years past the point where their savings could support a comfortable retirement — not because they want to, but because they never sat down and worked out that they could stop.
The "one more year" thinking runs deep in medicine. The income feels hard to replace. Leaving feels like losing your identity. And without a clear financial target, you never quite feel like you have saved enough.
There is nothing wrong with continuing to practise medicine because you genuinely love it. The problem is working because you are not sure whether you can afford to stop. Too many physicians end up there — missing years they could have spent with family, travelling, or simply doing the things they kept postponing — not because the money was not there, but because they never ran the numbers.
Mistake #9
Planning the Money but Not the Life
After 30 years of building a career around medicine, some physicians find that the financial side of retirement is the easy part. The harder question is who they are when they are no longer a doctor.
Research on physician retirement points to the same anxieties: loss of identity, loss of purpose, loss of structure, and the disappearance of the professional community that has anchored daily life for decades. Medicine gives you a reason to get up. Retirement removes all of that at once if the transition is not planned carefully.
Some physicians delay retirement even when the money is there, return to practice after stepping away, or feel genuinely lost in their first years out — not because they ran out of money, but because they had no plan for how to live.
How Much Have Doctors Actually Saved?
Medscape's 2025 physician retirement survey found that the average physician believes they need $4.01 million for a comfortable retirement. On average, male physicians have accumulated around $1.9 million, while female physicians have saved around $1.1 million. Both figures sit well above what most Americans have put away, but both fall well short of what physicians themselves say they need.
Three things explain that gap: a late start caused by years of training, heavy spending in the early attending years, and consistent underuse of the tax-advantaged accounts available to physicians.
The Right Time to Start Is Now
Retirement planning for doctors is genuinely harder than it is for most people. A late start, heavy debt, a complex tax picture, and a professional identity that has become part of who you are — these are real obstacles that standard financial advice was not written for.
But not one of these nine mistakes is unavoidable. None of them need a finance degree to fix. They need a clear target, some honest decisions, and a willingness to start before it feels necessary.
Compound growth does not care about your specialty or your income. It rewards the people who start early. Every year you wait is a year of growth you cannot get back.
The best time to have started was when you began residency. The next best time is today.
See how your home financing decision affects your long-term retirement picture.
Run the Free Calculator →Frequently Asked Questions
Q: What is the most common physician retirement mistake?
Starting too late. Because doctors do not begin earning attending-level income until their early to mid-30s, every year of delay carries a real cost. Even modest contributions during residency can end up being worth more at retirement than much larger contributions made later — simply because of the extra years of growth.
Q: How much do physicians need to retire comfortably?
According to Medscape's 2025 physician retirement survey, the average physician targets $4.01 million. The right number is personal and depends on your spending habits, specialty, and when you want to retire. A practical starting point: estimate your annual retirement spending, multiply by 25, and subtract guaranteed income like Social Security. That gives you a solid number to aim for.
Q: What retirement accounts should physicians prioritise?
Work through them in this order: employer 403(b) or 401(k) up to the $24,500 employee limit in 2026, then 457(b) if available (another $24,500 on a completely separate limit), then backdoor Roth IRA ($7,500 in 2026), then HSA if you are on a high-deductible plan. Taxable brokerage accounts come last, after you have used up all of the above.
Q: When do most doctors retire?
AMA Insurance Agency data shows that 58% of physicians retire after age 65, later than the general workforce, which typically exits between 62 and 64. Retirement often comes later than planned — not because physicians want to keep working, but because they never worked out when they could actually stop.
Q: Is a physician mortgage part of a smart retirement plan?
Yes, when used correctly. A physician mortgage with 0% down keeps capital free to invest rather than locking it up in home equity. At a 7% annual return, a $50,000 down payment — invested rather than put into a house — grows to roughly $380,000 over 30 years. That is a meaningful piece of any long-term retirement plan. See the full 30-year comparison with our free calculator.
This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute financial or tax advice. Please consult a licensed financial advisor or tax professional before making any retirement planning decisions.
Sources
| # | Statistic | Source | Published |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Average physician retirement target: $4.01 million | Medscape Physicians and Retirement Report 2025 | Jul 2025 |
| 2 | Physicians approximately 40% toward their retirement goal | Medscape Physicians and Retirement Report 2025 | Jul 2025 |
| 3 | Female physicians avg $1.1M saved; Male physicians avg $1.9M saved | Medscape Physicians and Retirement Report 2025 | Jul 2025 |
| 4 | 70% of Class of 2025 carried educational debt; median $223,130 | AAMC / Kaplan — Cost of Medical School 2026 | Apr 2026 |
| 5 | 4-year cost of attendance Class of 2026: $297,745 (public) / $408,150 (private) | AAMC Tuition and Student Fees Questionnaire 2025–26 | 2026 |
| 6 | 403(b)/401(k) employee contribution limit: $24,500 in 2026 | IRS Notice 2025-67 | Nov 2025 |
| 7 | Total annual additions limit (employer + employee): $72,000 in 2026 | IRS — Retirement Topics: 401(k) Contribution Limits | 2026 |
| 8 | 457(b) elective deferral limit: $24,500; special 3-year catch-up up to $49,000 | MissionSquare 2026 Retirement Plan Contribution Limits | 2026 |
| 9 | Roth IRA / Traditional IRA contribution limit: $7,500 in 2026 | IRS Notice 2025-67 | Nov 2025 |
| 10 | 58% of physicians retire after age 65; U.S. workforce retires 62–64 | AMA Insurance Agency — cited by Panacea Financial | 2024 |
| 11 | Recommended physician savings rate: 20–30% of gross income | SalaryDr — Best Investment Portfolio for Physicians 2026 | Apr 2026 |
| 12 | At 25% of 40-yr timeline investor holds ~4% of wealth; at halfway ~16% | GlobalRPH — The Truth About Physician Financial Myths | Nov 2025 |