Goldman Sachs Asset Management survey shows retirees with written personalized retirement plans have a 5.92x savings-to-income ratio versus 4.68x for those without plans, and 83% of working respondents with a plan believe they are on track for retirement compared to only 41% without one.
Competing financial priorities—housing costs rising from 21% to 36% of income since 2000, childcare up to 25%, healthcare coverage at 33%, and college expenses doubled—form a structural squeeze that makes written retirement planning the mechanism converting intention into outcomes rather than an optional exercise.
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Goldman Sachs Asset Management’s latest retirement survey puts a number on something advisors have long suspected. Retired respondents with a written, personalized retirement plan report a savings‑to‑income ratio of 5.92x, compared with 4.68x for those without one. The difference is not abstract; it is the gap between entering retirement with nearly six years of income saved and less than five. A written plan does not raise income. It raises outcomes.
The confidence gap is even wider than the savings gap. Among working respondents with a personalized plan, 83% believe they are on track for retirement. Among those without one, only 41% say the same. Confidence rises when the household has a framework that spells out contribution rates, asset mix, and income targets. The plan becomes the structure that sentiment alone cannot provide.
The survey’s backdrop makes the planning premium more relevant. Workers report that competing financial priorities are pulling savings off course. Too many monthly expenses affect 67% of respondents. Financial hardship affects 64%. Caring for and financially supporting family members affects 62%. Credit card debt affects 58%. Paying down existing loans affects 57%. These pressures form the Financial Vortex that Goldman describes, a long‑running squeeze created by rising costs in housing, healthcare, childcare, and education.
The survey also captures how these pressures shape expectations. Sixty‑eight percent of workers say they are ahead, somewhat ahead, or on track with retirement savings, yet 58% believe they will outlive their savings. Optimism and concern sit side by side. A written plan helps bridge that gap by forcing decisions before the next bill arrives.
The report describes a structural reality that generic savings advice rarely captures. Competing priorities are not occasional disruptions. They are the baseline. Millennials and Generation Z report the highest levels of strain, with more than 75% of Millennials and more than 70% of Gen Z saying these priorities materially constrain their ability to save. Baby Boomers sit near 30%. The squeeze is generational and persistent.
The cost data in the report explains why. Home ownership rose from 21% of income in 2000 to 36% in 2025. Renting climbed from 18% to 29%, while childcare increased from 10% to 25%. Public college enrollment doubled from 8% to 16%, while private college enrollment rose from 9% to 33%. Family healthcare coverage increased from 12% to 33%. These categories are not optional. They are the fixed claims on income that shape every other financial decision.
One of the most useful shifts in the report is the shift from a single savings target to an income-replacement goal. Retirees in the survey receive about 60% of their pre‑retirement income, and 71% describe themselves as satisfied with that level. The industry’s typical 70% to 80% replacement guidance is higher than what most retirees report needing. The survey suggests that a more personalized, income‑first approach may better reflect how households actually live in retirement.
An income‑first plan starts with the question of how much monthly income a household will need, then works backward into the asset base required to produce it. The survey’s modeling shows that integrating protected lifetime income, such as annuity‑style products, can increase retirement income by about 23% compared with relying solely on portfolio withdrawals. The structure of income matters as much as the size of the balance.
The survey quantifies how individual interventions stack. Saving early adds about 14% to retirement outcomes. Personalized planning adds the 27% headline figure. Behavioral consistency, what the report calls Financial Grit, contributes another 49%. These are cumulative effects, not overlapping ones.
The report’s framework identifies four sequencing components that distinguish planned from unplanned households. The first is to set a target monthly retirement income and size the portfolio to that amount rather than a generic multiple of salary. The second is mapping current claims on income, such as debt, housing, and healthcare premiums, and assigning each a payoff or stabilization timeline before raising the contribution rate.
The third is allocating the income target across Social Security, portfolio withdrawals, and any annuitized or pension‑style income. The fourth is writing the plan down with a fixed review schedule, which is what converts the planning effect from a one‑time exercise into the long‑term behavioral consistency that produces the 49% grit contribution.
The personalized planning premium comes from sequencing. A household that has written down what its retirement income needs to be, where that income will originate, and which competing priorities take precedence in which year is making decisions that the unplanned household defers. In a world where the cost of basic needs continues to rise faster than wages, that sequencing is doing more work than it did in calmer periods. The survey makes the point clearly. Planning is not a luxury. It is the mechanism that turns intention into outcomes.
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