Advertisements
Advertisements
Markets
S&P 500 5,782 \u25b2 +0.42% DOW 43,211 \u25b2 +0.31% NASDAQ 18,104 \u25b2 +0.58% 10-YR YIELD 4.28% \u25bc -0.04 GOLD $2,924 \u25b2 +0.21% SCHD $84.72 \u25b2 +0.19% JEPI $57.33 \u25b2 +0.11% VNQ $89.14 \u25b2 +0.34% S&P 500 5,782 \u25b2 +0.42% DOW 43,211 \u25b2 +0.31% NASDAQ 18,104 \u25b2 +0.58% 10-YR YIELD 4.28% \u25bc -0.04 GOLD $2,924 \u25b2 +0.21% SCHD $84.72 \u25b2 +0.19% JEPI $57.33 \u25b2 +0.11% VNQ $89.14 \u25b2 +0.34%

The Best Retirement Investments of 2025: A Complete Guide to Securing Your Financial Future

Expert-reviewed strategies for 401(k)s, IRAs, dividend stocks, and annuities \u2014 designed to grow and protect your wealth through every market cycle.

$1.46M
Median retirement goal (2025)
4.6%
Safe withdrawal rate
$23,500
2025 401(k) contribution limit
37%
Americans behind on savings

Retirement planning in 2025 is simultaneously more urgent and more achievable than at any point in the past two decades. Interest rates remain elevated, dividend yields are competitive, and tax-advantaged account limits have reached all-time highs. The question is no longer whether you can retire comfortably \u2014 it is whether you are using the right tools to get there.

Advertisements
Advertisements

This guide, reviewed by a Certified Financial Planner, walks you through every major retirement investment vehicle available today: which accounts to prioritize, which assets to hold inside them, and how to structure a portfolio that generates reliable income \u2014 no matter what the market does.

01 Why 2025 Is a Critical Turning Point for Retirement Savers

Three structural shifts have permanently changed the retirement investment landscape heading into 2025 \u2014 and most Americans are not taking full advantage of them.

Higher interest rates create genuine income. The Federal Reserve’s rate cycle left behind a world where money market funds yield 4.5\u20135.2%, short-term Treasuries yield 4.2\u20134.8%, and investment-grade corporate bonds yield 5\u20136.5%. For the first time since 2007, you do not need to accept significant risk to earn meaningful income from fixed-income assets in your retirement portfolio.

SECURE Act 2.0 expanded retirement account benefits. New rules effective 2024\u20132025 increased the Roth IRA income phase-out thresholds, eliminated required minimum distributions (RMDs) for Roth 401(k) accounts, and allowed employers to match student loan payments into 401(k)s. These are game-changing provisions for savers at every age.

The “4% rule” has been updated to 4.6\u20134.7%. The landmark research from William Bengen, updated by Morningstar’s 2024 analysis, now suggests a 4.6% initial withdrawal rate is sustainable for a 30-year retirement given today’s higher starting yields \u2014 the best reading in fifteen years.

\ud83d\udcac
Expert Insight \u2014 Michael Weston, CFP\u00ae

“The biggest mistake I see in 2025 is investors still operating with a 2015 playbook. Bonds are back. High-quality dividend stocks offer yields that genuinely compete with growth. And the account limits have never been higher. The opportunity cost of being under-invested has never been greater.”

02 How Much Money Do You Actually Need to Retire?

The most searched retirement question on Google \u2014 and the most critical to answer correctly. The answer depends on three variables: your desired annual spending, your expected retirement age, and your withdrawal rate assumption.

Retirement Nest Egg Required by Annual Spending Goal (4.6% Withdrawal Rate)
Annual Spending Monthly Income Portfolio Required Timeline (Starting $50K, saving $2K/mo) Achievability
$48,000 $4,000/mo $1,043,500 ~22 years Very Achievable
$72,000 $6,000/mo $1,565,200 ~27 years Achievable
$96,000 $8,000/mo $2,086,900 ~31 years Requires Discipline
$120,000 $10,000/mo $2,608,700 ~35 years Significant Commitment
$180,000 $15,000/mo $3,913,000 ~40+ years High Earner Target
\ud83d\udd11 Key Rule of Thumb

Multiply your desired annual retirement income by 21.7 (the inverse of the 4.6% withdrawal rate) to calculate your target nest egg. Example: $80,000 desired annual income \u00d7 21.7 = $1,736,000 target portfolio. Social Security can meaningfully reduce this number \u2014 the average 2025 benefit is $1,907/month ($22,884/year).

03 Best Retirement Accounts in 2025: Where to Put Your Money First

Account selection is arguably more important than investment selection \u2014 because tax treatment can account for 1\u20132% of additional annual return over a 30-year horizon. Here is the priority order for most Americans:

Traditional 401(k) / IRA
  • Tax deduction today \u2014 reduces taxable income now
  • 2025 limit: $23,500 (401k) / $7,000 (IRA)
  • Employer match is free money \u2014 always capture 100%
  • Ideal for high earners in 32%+ brackets today
  • RMDs required starting at age 73
  • All withdrawals taxed as ordinary income
Roth IRA / Roth 401(k) Best for Most
  • Tax-free growth AND tax-free withdrawals in retirement
  • No RMDs for Roth accounts (SECURE 2.0)
  • Contributions (not earnings) can be withdrawn penalty-free
  • Ideal for younger investors and those expecting higher future taxes
  • Income limits: $161K single / $240K married (phase-out)
  • Backdoor Roth available for high earners above limits

Account Priority Order (Follow This Sequence)

  1. 401(k) up to employer match \u2014 always, without exception. This is a 50\u2013100% instant return on your contribution.
  2. Max your HSA (if eligible) \u2014 triple tax advantage: deductible, grows tax-free, and withdrawals for medical expenses are tax-free. In retirement, used like a traditional IRA for non-medical expenses.
  3. Max your Roth IRA \u2014 $7,000 in 2025 ($8,000 if 50+). Best long-term tax treatment for most investors.
  4. Max your 401(k) beyond the match \u2014 additional $16,500 beyond employer match, up to $23,500 total.
  5. Taxable brokerage account \u2014 no limits, full flexibility, preferential capital gains rates.

04 The Best Retirement Investments in 2025

\u2460 Target-Date Funds: The “Set and Forget” Foundation

For investors who want simplicity above all else, target-date funds (e.g., Vanguard Target Retirement 2045, Fidelity Freedom 2045) automatically shift from aggressive growth to conservative income as you approach retirement. They offer instant diversification across thousands of global stocks and bonds \u2014 with a single fund. Expense ratios at Vanguard and Fidelity are as low as 0.10\u20130.15%.

\u2461 Total Market Index Funds: The Core Growth Engine

VTI (Vanguard Total Stock Market ETF) and FXAIX (Fidelity 500 Index Fund) give you exposure to the entire U.S. economy in one position. Over any rolling 20-year period, the S&P 500 has delivered positive returns 100% of the time, with an average annualized return of approximately 10.2%. These form the equity backbone of every serious retirement portfolio.

\u2462 Dividend Growth Stocks and ETFs

As you approach and enter retirement, shifting toward dividend-paying stocks provides income without forcing you to sell assets. SCHD (Schwab U.S. Dividend Equity ETF) has delivered 12%+ annualized total returns since inception with a current yield of 3.5\u20134%. Its strict quality screen \u2014 based on dividend growth rate, cash flow to debt, and ROE \u2014 selects companies with durable competitive advantages.

\u2463 Real Estate Investment Trusts (REITs)

REITs provide real estate exposure without the headaches of property ownership. They must distribute 90%+ of taxable income, resulting in reliable quarterly or monthly income. In 2025, industrial REITs (data centers, cold storage, logistics) and net-lease REITs offer the most compelling combination of yield, growth, and balance sheet strength.

\u2464 Treasury Inflation-Protected Securities (TIPS) and I-Bonds

Inflation is the silent destroyer of retirement savings. TIPS and I-Bonds automatically adjust principal and interest payments with CPI \u2014 guaranteeing your purchasing power is protected. They should constitute at least 10\u201315% of any retirement portfolio within 10 years of the target date.

Top Retirement Investments Compared \u2014 2025 Data
Investment Type Approx. Yield/Return Best Account Risk Level Best For
VTI / FXAIX Index ETF ~10% long-run Roth IRA / 401k Moderate Growth (20\u201340 yrs out)
SCHD Dividend ETF 3.5\u20134% yield + growth Taxable / Roth Low-Mod Income + Growth balance
JEPI Covered Call ETF 6.5\u20139% current yield Roth IRA / Trad IRA Moderate High current income
BND / AGG Bond ETF 4.5\u20135.2% Trad 401k / IRA Low Stability, near-retirees
VNQ / O REIT / REIT ETF 4.5\u20136% Trad IRA / Roth Moderate Inflation hedge + income
TIPS / I-Bonds Gov. Securities CPI + 1.5\u20132.3% Trad IRA / Taxable Very Low Inflation protection
Fixed Annuities Insurance Product 4.8\u20136.2% guaranteed IRA / Non-qualified Low Guaranteed lifetime income

05 Optimal Retirement Portfolio Allocation by Age

Model Portfolio: Age 55, Retiring at 65 \u2014 Balanced Growth & Income
U.S. Total Market Equity (VTI)
35%~10% hist. return
Dividend Growth ETF (SCHD)
20%~3.8% yield
Bonds / TIPS (BND + SCHP)
25%~4.7% yield
REITs (VNQ)
10%~4.5% yield
International Equity (VXUS)
10%~8% hist. return

“The greatest risk in retirement is not a market crash \u2014 it is outliving your money. A properly allocated portfolio with both growth and income components is your best defense against longevity risk.”

\u2014 Michael Weston, CFP\u00ae | Senior Analyst, Global Money Daily

06 Age-by-Age Retirement Investment Roadmap

20s

The Compounding Decade \u2014 Maximize Growth Ages 20\u201329

Time is your most valuable asset. Invest aggressively in total

Advertisements
Advertisements

Leave a Comment

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Scroll to Top