The gap between the retirement ‘haves’ and ‘have-nots’ has grown since the recession: Retirement account savings of families age 32–61 by savings percentile, 1989–2016 (2016 dollars)

50th (median)  60th  70th  80th  90th 
1989 $0 $5,598 $14,927 $33,585 $93,293
1992 $0 $5,031 $16,771 $40,652 $93,916
1995 $2,349 $10,179 $25,056 $48,546 $117,450
1998 $6,197 $18,001 $39,837 $76,134 $165,251
2001 $8,129  $24,387  $49,859  $95,761  $230,325 
2004 $6,359 $20,349 $50,871 $105,558 $254,356
2007 $11,580 $31,266  $63,691  $127,382  $266,343 
2010 $5,527 $19,896 $44,213 $99,480 $254,226
2013 $5,156 $20,725 $51,555 $119,608 $282,523
2016 $7,800  $24,000  $56,000  $125,000  $320,000 

Note: Retirement account savings include funds in 401(k)-style defined contribution plans and in IRAs. Scale changed to accommodate larger values.

Source: EPI analysis of Survey of Consumer Finance data, 2016.

View the underlying data on epi.org.