Enter your estimated business sale price, net proceeds, desired annual income, and depletion timeline. Get an instant retirement readiness score — and three strategies to close the gap.
If you sell your business for $X, you can generate $Y/year in retirement income using a 4% safe withdrawal rate. The Business Sale to Retirement Calculator estimates this by taking your net sale proceeds after capital gains taxes, multiplying by 4%, and comparing the result against your desired annual retirement income. It outputs a retirement readiness score (0-100), the income your proceeds generate at 4%, and the estimated depletion year if you draw down the capital over your target timeline. For example, a $1.2M business sale nets approximately $960K after the 23.8% federal long-term capital gains rate (plus state tax). At a 4% withdrawal rate, that produces $38,400/year — which falls below the $80,000+ many pre-retirees target. The calculator identifies the income gap and recommends three conversion strategies: a commercial SPIA (~6.5% payout rate for ages 60-65), a dividend stock portfolio (~3%), and a Treasury bond ladder (~4.5%). Sources: BizBuySell 2025 Market Report, IRS Publication 544, SBA.gov 7(a) program.
Source: BizBuySell 2025 shows median deal size is $1.2M for owner-operated businesses
After federal capital gains (23.8%), state tax (5-7%), broker fees (8-12%), and legal. Use the default 76% estimate if unsure.
The IRS requires RMDs starting at age 73 from traditional retirement accounts
Annual Income from Proceeds
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at 4% safe withdrawal rate
Income Gap vs Target
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annual shortfall
Maximum Annual Draw
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over your depletion period
Depletion Year
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based on target income
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| Strategy | Est. Annual Income | Risk Level |
|---|---|---|
| Commercial SPIA | — | Low |
| Dividend Stock Portfolio | — | Medium |
| Treasury Bond Ladder | — | Low-Medium |
* Income estimates are illustrative. SPIA rates as of 2026; consult a financial advisor for personalized projections.
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This tool answers the most important question for business owners approaching exit: will my sale proceeds actually fund the retirement I want? It combines four inputs — gross sale price, net proceeds after taxes/fees, desired annual income, and your target depletion period — and outputs a retirement readiness score, annual income at the 4% safe withdrawal rate, and an estimated depletion year.
The first calculation is the hardest: what actually lands in your account after the sale closes. Federal long-term capital gains tax is 20% plus the 3.8% net investment income tax (NIIT) = 23.8% total federal. Most states add 5-7%. Business brokers charge 8-12% commission, and legal/accounting typically adds another $5,000-$25,000. Plan on retaining 65-75% of your gross sale price. The calculator defaults to 76% if you don't have a net proceeds figure yet — this assumes roughly 24% combined cost (23.8% federal + 3% average state + 2% fees, partially offset by basis deductions).
William Bengen's 1994 research established that a 4% initial withdrawal rate — adjusted annually for inflation — survived every 30-year historical period in U.S. markets since 1926. This is the standard benchmark this calculator uses. Divide your net proceeds by 0.04 to find the annual income those proceeds can generate. To generate $80,000/year requires $2M in liquid capital. If your after-tax proceeds are $960K, the gap is $1.04M.
The readiness score (0-100) measures how well your proceeds cover your target income over your depletion timeline. A score of 80+ means your capital generates at least 80% of your target income. A score below 50 flags a significant gap requiring one or more of the following: reducing lifestyle targets, delaying retirement to accumulate more, finding part-time income post-exit, or buying a SPIA to generate guaranteed income from a portion of proceeds.
The tax treatment of your business sale directly determines how much retirement capital you have to work with. The structure of the deal matters as much as the price.
In an asset sale (most common for small businesses), the buyer purchases individual assets — equipment, customer lists, goodwill, intellectual property. You pay capital gains on the gain above your cost basis in each asset. In a stock sale, you sell the entity itself, which can sometimes result in long-term capital gains treatment on the entire gain, potentially reducing your tax burden. An S-Corp or C-Corp stock sale may qualify for the Section 1202 qualified small business stock exclusion (up to $10M or 10x cost basis tax-free) if held 5+ years and certain requirements are met.
If you carry a note from the buyer (seller financing), you can elect installment sale treatment under IRC Section 453, spreading the capital gains tax recognition over the payment years rather than recognizing the full gain at closing. This can keep you in a lower tax bracket each year and defer a large lump-sum tax bill. A CPA specializing in business exits should model both approaches before closing.
Proceeds reinvested into a Qualified Opportunity Zone fund within 180 days of sale can defer and reduce capital gains. The tax benefit phases out if the QOZ investment is held less than 5 years. This is most relevant for deals above $500K in areas with designated opportunity zones.
Business owners who built a retirement plan through their business — a SEP-IRA, Solo 401(k), defined benefit plan, or ESOP — have specific options for deploying those funds after the sale closes.
A Simplified Employee Pension IRA (SEP-IRA) holds retirement funds accumulated in your business. After the sale, you can roll SEP-IRA funds into a Rollover IRA to maintain tax-deferred growth while gaining access to a broader investment menu. Alternatively, leave funds in the SEP-IRA — there's no requirement to roll over. A SEP-IRA allows contributions up to 25% of net self-employment income (capped at approximately $69,000 in 2026), but after the sale, you can no longer make contributions since there's no longer self-employment income. IRS Publication 560 covers SEP-IRA rules.
A Self-Employed 401(k) (Solo 401(k)) can hold both employee deferrals (up to $23,500 in 2026, plus catch-up contributions if age 50+) and employer profit-sharing contributions (up to 25% of net self-employment income). Post-sale, you can roll the entire balance into a Rollover IRA or Roth IRA. Converting traditional pre-tax funds to a Roth triggers immediate tax on the converted amount — worth modeling if you expect higher tax rates in retirement.
If your business had a 401(k), Profit Sharing Plan, or Defined Benefit pension, plan assets roll into an IRA or directly to a new employer's 401(k) if allowed. For a defined benefit plan, the PBGC insures benefits up to specified limits. ERISA-qualified plans receive priority creditor protection — meaning business sale proceeds held in a QRP are generally shielded from creditors in bankruptcy proceedings, unlike proceeds held in a personal brokerage account.
Once proceeds land in your account, the withdrawal strategy determines how long your capital lasts and how much income it generates. Three primary approaches are modeled in this calculator:
The standard approach: withdraw 4% of your starting portfolio balance in year one, then increase withdrawals by inflation each year. This strategy has a ~95% historical success rate over 30 years in balanced portfolios. The risk: if markets crash in the first 5 years, you're withdrawing from a depleted base. The mitigation: a cash buffer of 2 years' expenses in a high-yield savings account allows you to avoid selling equities during a downturn.
Segment your portfolio into time horizons: Years 1-3 in cash/short-term bonds, Years 4-10 in bonds, Years 10+ in equities. Replenish the near-term bucket annually from the intermediate bucket. This reduces sequence-of-returns risk by ensuring you never need to sell equities in a down year. The tradeoff: lower long-term growth since less capital is in equities.
Allocate $300K-$500K to a Single Premium Immediate Annuity at retirement to generate a guaranteed income floor. For a 62-year-old as of 2026, a $400K SPIA produces approximately $2,000-$2,400/month ($24,000-$28,800/year) — replacing Social Security if you claim early, or supplementing it. The remaining capital is available for discretionary spending and legacy goals. RetireStack's Annuity Calculator compares current SPIA rates from 60+ carriers.
Sequence of returns risk is the danger that a market crash in the early years of retirement will permanently impair your portfolio — even if long-term average returns are healthy. The math is brutal: a 30% crash in year 1 of a 20-year retirement, followed by 7% average annual returns thereafter, leaves you with roughly 40% less capital at year 20 than if the crash happened in year 15.
For business owners, sequence risk is elevated because:
Mitigation strategies:
The tax treatment, access rules, and investment options differ significantly between business sale proceeds and traditional IRA/401(k) balances:
| Feature | Business Sale Proceeds | Traditional IRA / 401(k) |
|---|---|---|
| Tax Treatment at Deposit | Already taxed (LTCG paid at sale). Proceeds are after-tax dollars. | Pre-tax dollars (Traditional). Taxed at ordinary income rates upon withdrawal. Roth contributions are after-tax. |
| Capital Gains Rate | 23.8% federal LTCG + 3.8% NIIT + state (5-7%). Already incurred at sale. | N/A for Traditional. Roth grows tax-free. |
| Access / Penalties | No restrictions. Fully liquid after closing. | 10% early withdrawal penalty before age 59.5 (exceptions: SEPP, disability, first home). RMDs at 73. |
| Investment Control | Full control. Any asset class, real estate, private placement, annuity — no restrictions. | Plan document controls investments. Typically mutual funds, ETFs, company stock. Limited alternatives. |
| Creditor Protection | Limited. Federal exemptions vary by state ($12,575–$1.25M for homestead, $4K-$50K for cash/bank). Proceeds in brokerage accounts are exposed. | ERISA plans: unlimited creditor protection in bankruptcy. IRA: ~$1M+ protection (varies by state). 401(k): unlimited (ERISA-covered). |
| Required Distributions | None. You control the draw schedule. | RMDs mandatory at age 73 (Traditional). IRS can force distributions and tax deemed distributions. |
| Estate / Legacy | Full step-up in basis at death for heirs (for investments with basis). Inherited proceeds receive no additional tax step-up on pre-sale gains. | Inherited Traditional IRA: 10-year distribution rule (post-SECURE Act). Inherited Roth IRA: 10-year rule, tax-free. Heirs may face large tax bills on Traditional. |
| Suitable for SPIA Purchase | Yes. After-tax dollars can purchase SPIA; income is fully taxable at ordinary rates. | Yes. Can exchange QRP funds for a QLAC (deferred annuity inside the plan). Some plans allow direct SPIA purchase. |
Divide your desired annual retirement income by 0.04. To generate $80,000/year requires $2M in liquid capital after taxes. If you net $960K from a $1.2M sale (after 20% federal capital gains on a $1.2M deal), you have a $1.04M gap. Closing that gap requires either reducing your income target, delaying retirement to save additional capital, finding part-time income post-exit, or allocating a portion of proceeds to a SPIA that generates guaranteed income at lower capital requirements.
Bengen's 1994 rule: a 4% initial withdrawal rate adjusted annually for inflation survived every 30-year historical period tested across U.S. market data since 1926. A $960K after-tax proceeds produces $38,400/year at 4%. In the elevated-rate environment of 2026, some financial planners suggest 3.5-3.7% for longer retirements (35+ years) — which reduces the $960K example to $33,600/year. The calculator uses 4% as its baseline; enter your own rate if you expect different returns.
Federal long-term capital gains tax is 20% plus 3.8% NIIT = 23.8% total. Most states add 5-7%. On a $1.2M sale, you typically net $780K-$900K after combined tax burden. If your business is structured as an S-Corp or C-Corp, additional taxes may apply at the corporate level before the sale proceeds reach you. Installment sales can defer recognition under IRC Section 453. A CPA specializing in business exits typically produces a net after-tax model that pays for itself on deals $500K and above.
If your business had a SEP-IRA, Solo 401(k), or qualified retirement plan, post-sale options include: (1) Roll to a Rollover IRA — maintains tax-deferred growth, removes employer plan restrictions, gains access to broader investment menu; (2) Roll to new employer's 401(k) — keeps funds ERISA-protected (unlimited creditor protection), may offer stable value funds; (3) Leave in SEP-IRA — no requirement to roll over, can still make contributions if generating self-employment income. ERISA plans have unlimited creditor protection in bankruptcy; Traditional IRAs are protected up to ~$1M+ by federal law (varies by state). IRS Publication 560 covers SEP and SARSEP plan rules.
Sequence risk: a market crash in the first 5 years of retirement permanently impairs your capital because you're selling low to fund living expenses, leaving a smaller base for recovery. The same crash in year 15 is much less damaging because you had a decade of gains first. A 30% crash in year 1 of a 20-year retirement, followed by 7% average annual returns, can leave you with 40% less capital at year 20 vs. the same crash in year 10. For business owners, this risk is elevated by the size of proceeds, the potential for behavioral panic-selling, and the timing of converting a concentrated illiquid asset into a diversified portfolio at market peaks. Mitigation: 2-year cash buffer, bond ladder for years 1-10, SPIA for baseline income.