Terms like “rich,” “wealthy,” and “upper class” are used interchangeably, but they are not synonymous in retirement planning. Each describes a different part of the American wealth distribution, and the dollar gap between them has widened sharply since 2020. Here’s what it actually takes to reach each level – and what your money buys once you get there.
Entry into the upper class: $714,000 – $2.1 million (75th–90th percentile)
The Federal Reserve’s Survey of Consumer Finances pegs the level of the upper class at about $714,000. If you’re debt-free, claim Social Security on time, and live in the right place, that’s enough to retire comfortably — but it doesn’t protect you from a bad market sequence or a long-term care event. The top of this band, about $2.1 million, is where real financial freedom begins.
Rich: $1.92 million (top 10%)
The 90th percentile sits at $1,920,758 — up about 5% from 2020. At this level, a 3-4% withdrawal rate generates a sustainable income of $60,000-$80,000 on top of Social Security. You can afford a paid-off home, regular international travel, and private-pay assisted living for a few years. What you can’t afford is to be careless.
Elite: $3.78 million (top 5%)
The 95th percentile crossed $3.77 million – a jump of nearly 10% from 2020. It’s the flag of most level-headed financial planners as a practical destination for an “affluent” lifestyle in high-cost areas. Major continuing care retirement community admission fees of $400,000-$1 million become affordable here, and concierge medicine in the $5,000-$10,000 range fits comfortably into the annual budget.
Ultra Rich: $13.67 million (top 1%)
The top 1% cap increased from $11.1 million in 2020 to $13.67 million in 2023 – a 23% increase that outpaced every bottom tier. At this stage, the conversation begins with “Do I have enough?” changes from. “How do I prevent my heirs from giving 40% to the IRS?” Spousal Lifetime Access Trusts, Irrevocable Life Insurance Trusts and 1031-in-DST real estate strategies become standard tools rather than exotic. Family health care retainers in the $20,000-$40,000 range start to make sense.
0.1%: $61.8 million
The top 0.1% range works out to about $62 million. Family-office-style services, $40,000 per adult medical teams with access to a global expert network, and dynasty trust planning are the table stakes. Money at this scale isn’t actually retired – it’s managed, and the planning horizon spans generations rather than decades.
Geography rewrites mathematics
A net worth of $2.1 million in the Midwest carries the same social and expense burden as $3 million on the West Coast or $2.4 million in the Northeast. South Carolina, for example, exempts Social Security from state taxes and offers a $15,000 income tax deduction for residents over age 65. A retiree settling in an affluent Greenville suburb of $4 million can cost a Manhattanite more than $7 million — home prices in the Five Forks-area are about 85% lower than in Manhattan, and even routine expenses like utilities and health care visits are 20-35% lower.
bottom line
The “upper class” is the entrance. “Rich” is comfortable. “Elite” is where the lifestyle begins to feel untouched by market shocks. The “ultra-wealthy” is where wealth planning eclipses retirement planning. And the gap between each level is getting wider every year – the higher you climb, the faster the next rung will rise. Choosing your number is not enough. You also have to choose your level and plan accordingly.
