Retirement planning can feel like trying to hit a moving target in the dark. Am I saving enough? Should I be doing more? Is everyone else further ahead than me?
Here’s a sobering statistic: according to the Federal Reserve’s 2024 Report on Economic Well-Being, a troubling 33% of Americans have no designated retirement assets whatsoever, and barely more than one-third (35%) of non-retired adults believe their retirement savings are on track..
But what if you’re doing better than you think?
After spending years in the corporate world and now running my own business, I’ve learned that financial security isn’t just about the numbers in your account. It’s about the habits, systems, and mindset you develop along the way.
I recently sat down with several financial planners to understand what really separates those who are ahead from those who are behind. Turns out, the signs might surprise you.
Let’s dive into eight indicators that suggest you’re actually winning the retirement game, even if it doesn’t always feel like it.
1. You’ve started saving something, anything
This might sound ridiculously basic, but hear me out.
If you’re putting away even $50 a month for retirement, you’re already ahead of millions of people. Remember that statistic I mentioned? A quarter of Americans have nothing saved.
Starting is the hardest part. I remember my first contribution to a retirement account back in my corporate days. It was laughably small. But here’s what matters: I started.
The compound effect is real. That tiny amount you’re saving today? Give it 20 or 30 years, and it becomes something substantial. Financial experts consistently emphasize that time in the market beats timing the market.
Are you contributing something regularly? Then congratulations, you’re already ahead of the curve.
2. You know roughly how much you’ll need
Ask most people how much they need for retirement, and you’ll get blank stares or wild guesses.
But if you’ve actually sat down and calculated a ballpark figure? You’re ahead.
It doesn’t have to be perfect. Maybe you’ve used an online calculator, or perhaps you’ve done the basic math of estimating 70-80% of your current income for 20-30 years. The exact number isn’t as important as having a target.
When I started my business, I quickly learned that you can’t hit a target you can’t see. The same applies to retirement planning.
3. You’re not relying solely on social security
Here’s an uncomfortable truth: Social Security was never designed to be anyone’s sole source of retirement income.
If you’re building additional income streams through 401(k)s, IRAs, or other investments, you’re demonstrating financial wisdom that many lack.
I’ve met plenty of smart people at the pub who assume Social Security will cover everything. It won’t. According to the Social Security Administration, benefits typically replace only about 40% of pre-retirement income.
Having any supplemental retirement savings puts you ahead of those banking everything on government benefits.
4. You increase contributions when you get raises
This one’s a game-changer that separates the financially savvy from everyone else.
Got a 3% raise last year? Did you bump up your retirement contribution by 1%?
If you’re automatically increasing your savings rate when your income grows, you’re practicing what experts call “lifestyle creep prevention.” Instead of spending every extra dollar, you’re quietly building wealth.
I learned this lesson the hard way. In my thirties, every raise meant a lifestyle upgrade. Now I know better. The truly successful people I’ve met save their raises, not spend them.
5. You’ve consolidated old retirement accounts
How many old 401(k)s are floating around from previous jobs?
If you’ve taken the time to roll them over into a single IRA or your current employer’s plan, you’re demonstrating organizational skills that most people lack.
It’s not just about convenience. Consolidated accounts are easier to manage, often have lower fees, and give you a clearer picture of your progress.
When I left corporate life, tracking down and consolidating my various accounts was eye-opening. Suddenly, I could see the full picture of my retirement savings. That clarity alone was worth the effort.
6. You understand and minimize fees
Here’s something that might shock you: a 1% difference in fees can reduce your retirement account by 25% over 30 years.
Do you know what fees you’re paying? Have you compared expense ratios? Switched to lower-cost index funds?
If you’re paying attention to fees, you’re ahead of the vast majority who never read their statements.
I once had a colleague who discovered he was paying 2.5% in annual fees on his retirement account. After switching to low-cost alternatives, he saved himself tens of thousands over time. The boring stuff matters.
7. You have a written plan
It doesn’t have to be a 50-page document drafted by a financial advisor.
But if you’ve written down your retirement goals, timeline, and basic strategy, you’re miles ahead of those keeping it all in their heads.
Research shows that people with written financial plans accumulate significantly more wealth than those without.
Running my business taught me the power of written plans. They force clarity and create accountability. Your retirement deserves the same intentionality.
8. You’re not panicking during market downturns
When markets dropped recently, what did you do?
If you stayed the course, maybe even bought more while prices were low, you’re showing the emotional discipline that separates successful retirees from the rest.
Every financial expert I’ve spoken with emphasizes this: the biggest threat to retirement success isn’t market crashes, it’s emotional decision-making.
Watching friends panic-sell during downturns while others quietly continued their regular contributions taught me everything about who actually understands long-term investing.
The bottom line
Being ahead on retirement planning isn’t about having millions saved or following complex strategies.
It’s about consistent habits, basic knowledge, and emotional discipline. If you recognized yourself in even half of these signs, you’re doing better than you might think.
The path to a secure retirement isn’t mysterious or complicated. It’s paved with small, smart decisions made consistently over time.
Sure, there’s always room for improvement. Maybe you could save a bit more, reduce fees further, or better understand your investments. But if you’re already doing the fundamentals? You’re ahead of the game.
Remember, retirement planning is a marathon, not a sprint. Every small step forward matters more than you realize today.
Keep going. You’re probably doing better than you think.

