For Gen X, a 'dream retirement' is a long shot

It’s a conundrum of dreams vs. reality.

Generation X — born between 1965 and 1980 — say they will need on average $1.1 million in savings to retire comfortably, according to a new survey from investment manager Schroders.

Sadly, they already figure they will fall far short of that elusive number. The amount they expect to have saved — $661,000 — barely meets half of their goal.

Perhaps that’s little surprise given that almost half (45%) of the Gen Xers surveyed confessed to not having done any retirement planning.

“It's a cliché because it is true, if you’re failing to plan, you’re planning to fail,” Deb Boyden, Schroders’s head of US defined contribution, told Yahoo Finance.

“The size of the retirement savings gap facing Gen X is concerning, as they are the first generation to rely on 401(k) plans instead of pensions and the next in line to retire,” Boyden added.

Read more: Retirement planning: A step-by-step guide

Senior woman sitting on sand and enjoying sunny day at the beach with pet dog
Six in 10 (61%) Gen Xers are not confident in their ability to achieve “a dream retirement.” (Getty Creative) · wundervisuals via Getty Images

Gen X trailing other generations

That savings gap — $451,170 — is far wider than the expected shortfalls facing millennials and non-retired baby boomers, which clock in at $403,626 and $291,496, respectively.

To be fair, the findings are discouraging for all generations. About 4 in 10 millennials (43%) and 30% of baby boomers say they, too, have kicked planning for their golden years down the road.

It is little surprise then that 6 in 10 (61%) Gen Xers are not confident in their ability to achieve “a dream retirement” compared to 49% of millennials and 53% of baby boomers, Schroders reports.

‘Zero’ savings

Gen X is under the klieg lights these days. A slew of research reports published this year have drawn attention to the alarming state of their retirement savings and, consequently, their future financial precarity.

These warnings are not to be taken lightly given that the oldest Gen Xers are less than a decade away from the hypothetical retirement age of 65.

Read more: How much money should I have saved by 50?

(Credit: Prudential)
(Credit: Prudential)

Just over half of Gen X have little to nothing socked away for retirement, according to research by Prudential Financial. Thirty-five percent of the 65 million US Gen Xers have less than $10,000 saved, and 18% have zero savings.

The typical Gen X household has only $40,000 in retirement savings — and those savings are concentrated among top earners — according to the findings published by the nonprofit National Institute on Retirement Security (NIRS). Also, Blacks and Hispanics have considerably lower savings and access to employer-provided retirement plans as compared to whites.

The nub of the NIRS research: The median account balance for an individual in Gen X is only $10,000, which means half of Gen Xers have less than that amount saved for retirement. One in four Gen Xers don’t have a retirement savings account, per these findings, which is even worse than the Prudential folks discovered.