Personal profile
The foundation of your retirement plan
About you
Your profession
Your retirement target
Physician averages: The median physician retires at 65 (Medscape 2025), but 58% retire later than they originally planned due to financial shortfalls, career identity, or unexpected events. Setting your target early — even if it changes — gives your plan time to work.
Specialty considerations: Surgeons and proceduralists often retire earlier (58–62) due to the physical demands of the specialty. Psychiatrists, internists, and primary care physicians frequently practice into their late 60s or early 70s. Your chosen age here drives every projection in this calculator.
Your kids
Each child affects education funding, cash flow, and your retirement timeline
Assets — what you own
Everything that holds value and can be converted to fund your retirement
Liabilities — what you owe
Debts that reduce your net worth and compete with retirement savings every month
Complete income picture
All income sources — earned, passive, and investment
Earned income
Passive & investment income
Income trajectory
Savings behavior
Risk, insurance & protection
The gaps that derail retirement plans — especially for physicians
Disability insurance
Any-occupation only pays if you cannot work in any job at all. A physician who can no longer perform surgery but could work as a consultant would receive nothing. Far weaker protection.
Employer group plan covers 60% of base salary only, excludes bonuses, and terminates the day you leave the employer. It provides no protection for your specialty and no portability.
No coverage is the highest financial risk a physician can carry. 1 in 4 physicians will experience a disability before retirement age. A disability today eliminates all future earnings.
Life insurance
Term life provides a death benefit for a fixed period (10, 20, or 30 years) at low cost. This is the right choice for most physicians — you need income replacement coverage during your working years while building wealth, and the need largely disappears once you're financially independent.Permanent / whole life lasts your lifetime and builds cash value. It is significantly more expensive and complex. It can be useful in specific estate planning or business succession scenarios, but is often oversold to physicians.
Employer group plan — typically 1–2× salary, not portable when you leave. Most physicians need additional personal coverage on top of this.
The standard rule of thumb is 10–12× gross annual income in total coverage. For a physician earning $500,000, that means $5–$6M combined across all policies.
Long-term care & malpractice
Standalone LTC policy: Traditional insurance that pays a daily or monthly benefit for qualifying care needs. Premiums can increase over time — a known drawback.
Hybrid life/LTC policy: Combines life insurance and LTC benefits in one product. If you never need LTC, the death benefit passes to heirs. Premiums are typically fixed. Increasingly popular with physicians for the certainty it provides.
Self-insure: Valid if you have or expect to have a $2M+ portfolio. Requires a funded, deliberate strategy — not simply hoping you won't need care.
The ideal time to purchase LTC coverage is in your 50s, before health conditions that could make you uninsurable.
Claims-made policy: The most common type. It covers claims only while the policy is active. When you retire and cancel the policy, you need a "tail" (extended reporting endorsement) to cover claims filed after retirement for incidents that occurred during your career. Tail premiums typically cost 1.5–2.5× your annual malpractice premium — for a surgeon, that can be $30,000–$150,000+ paid in a lump sum at retirement.
Occurrence policy: Covers any incident that occurred during the policy period, regardless of when the claim is filed. No tail needed. Less common but no retirement cost.
If you have a claims-made policy, confirm whether your employer covers the tail or whether it is your responsibility. Many physicians discover this only when they resign.
Investment risk tolerance
Retirement income design
What retirement actually looks like — and what it costs
Annual retirement spending
Income sources in retirement
Age 62 — early filing: You can claim as early as 62, but your benefit is permanently reduced by up to 30% compared to your full retirement age (FRA) benefit. This makes sense if you have health concerns or need the income — but if you live past your late 70s, claiming early is usually the worse financial choice.
Age 67 — full retirement age: For anyone born in 1960 or later, FRA is 67. This is the baseline benefit amount used in the SSA's projections. Most financial planners use this as the default assumption.
Age 70 — delayed filing: Every year you delay past FRA, your benefit grows by 8% — guaranteed. Waiting from 67 to 70 increases your benefit by 24%. For a high-earning physician with a long life expectancy and sufficient portfolio assets, delaying to 70 is often the highest-returning "investment" available. The break-even age versus claiming at 67 is typically around 82–83.
Any age 62–70: You can claim at any whole age in this range. The benefit adjustment is calculated monthly — each month earlier than 67 reduces the benefit, each month later increases it.
Defined-benefit pension: Common in academic medicine, VA, military, and some large hospital systems. Pays a fixed monthly amount for life, often based on years of service and final salary. If you have one, it is one of the most valuable assets in your retirement plan — treat it as guaranteed income that reduces your portfolio withdrawal needs.
NQDC plans: Non-qualified deferred compensation allows high earners to defer salary above IRS limits into a future payout. Unlike a 401(k), NQDC is an unsecured promise by the employer — if the employer goes bankrupt, the funds can be lost. Enter the expected annual payout amount here.
Enter $0 if you have no pension or NQDC plan — most employed physicians in private practice do not.
What it covers: Monthly premiums for a private or ACA marketplace health plan, plus out-of-pocket costs (deductibles, copays, prescriptions). A healthy physician couple in their late 50s can expect $2,000–$4,000/month in total healthcare costs before Medicare.
ACA marketplace plans: Available to early retirees without employer coverage. Premiums are income-based — managing your taxable income in early retirement (through Roth conversions, capital gains harvesting, and portfolio withdrawal strategy) can significantly reduce your ACA premium. Some physicians engineer their income to qualify for substantial ACA subsidies in the years before Medicare.
COBRA: If you leave an employer, you can continue your employer plan for up to 18 months via COBRA — but you pay the full premium including the employer's share, which is typically expensive.
Medicare at 65: Part B (outpatient) costs $185/month per person in 2026 at standard income levels. Higher-income retirees pay more via IRMAA surcharges. Part D (prescriptions) adds further cost. Budget $400–$600/month per person for comprehensive Medicare coverage in retirement.
Why it matters: A $1M legacy goal increases your required nest egg by $1M. At a 4% withdrawal rate, leaving $1M to heirs means you need $1M more saved — not just $1M drawn down. This is one reason legacy goals can dramatically change how much you need to accumulate.
2026 estate tax: The federal exemption is $15,000,000 per individual ($30,000,000 for married couples). Estates below this pass to heirs free of federal estate tax. Most physicians won't owe federal estate tax, but state estate taxes vary — several states have exemptions as low as $1,000,000.
Tools to consider: Donor-advised funds, charitable remainder trusts, 529 superfunding, and irrevocable life insurance trusts (ILITs) are commonly used by physician households to transfer wealth tax-efficiently. Enter $0 if legacy is not a current priority — you can revisit this later.
Physician Retirement Assessment —
Generated by PhysicianMortgageCalculator.com · For educational purposes only · Not financial advice
You're on track
💡 What is a Roth conversion and why should I care?
Most physicians contribute to a traditional 401(k) or IRA — meaning you get a tax deduction today, but you'll pay income tax on every dollar you withdraw in retirement. With a high physician income, that means you're deferring tax at 32–37% today.
A Roth conversion moves money from your pre-tax account to a Roth account. You pay tax now — but every dollar in the Roth account then grows completely tax-free and comes out tax-free in retirement. No taxes ever again on those dollars.
The opportunity: Between retirement and starting Social Security, many physicians have a window of 5–10 years with dramatically lower income — sometimes as low as $0. Converting during this window means you pay tax at 12–22% instead of the 32–37% you'd pay during peak earning years. That difference can be worth hundreds of thousands of dollars over retirement.
The bonus: Large pre-tax balances trigger Required Minimum Distributions (RMDs) at age 73 — forcing you to withdraw and pay tax whether you need the money or not. Converting now reduces future RMDs and gives you more control over your tax bill in retirement.