Many Americans are not prepared for retirement. In fact, "nearly half of families have no retirement account savings at all," the Economic Policy Institute (EPI) reported. Just how much has the average American family saved up? According to the EPI, the mean retirement savings of all families is $95,776. But that number doesn't tell the whole story. Since so many families have zero savings and since super-savers can pull up the average, the median savings, or those at the 50th percentile, may be a better gauge. The median for all families in the U.S. is just $5,000, and the median for families with some savings is $60,000.

"The large gap between mean retirement savings ($95,776) and median retirement savings ($5,000) indicates inequality — that the large account balances of families with the most savings are driving up the average for all families," the researchers explained. When it comes to retirement, the rich get richer and the poor barely scrape by, the EPI reported: "Participation in retirement savings plans is highly unequal across income groups. In 2013, nearly nine in 10 families in the top income fifth had retirement account savings, compared with fewer than one in 10 families in the bottom income fifth." To see how the size of your nest egg stacks up against your peers, check out the average amount families have saved broken down by age:

CEO annual compensation (in thousands) Worker annual compensation (in thousands) Stock market (adjusted to 2016) CEO-to-worker compensation ratio Based on options realized Based on options granted Private-sector production/nonsupervisory workers Firms industry S&P 500 Dow Jones Based on options realized Based on options granted 1965 $843 $800 $40.00 n/a 587 6,066 20.2 18.4 1973 $1,102 $1,046 $46.90 n/a 519 4,464 22.5 20.5 1978 $1,508 $1,431 $48.00 n/a 325 2,774 30.1 27.4 1989 $2,808 $2,664 $45.60 n/a 604 4,694 58.9 53.7 1995 $5,947 $6,595 $45.70 $53.10 848 7,042 122.6 136.8 2000 $20,664 $21,313 $48.30 $56.00 1,989 14,947 376.1 411.3 2007 $19,112 $13,282 $50.20 $56.00 1,710 15,255 347.5 240.8 2009 $10,746 $10,341 $52.20 $58.20 1,061 9,941 196.6 183.9 2010 $12,827 $11,677 $52.40 $59.00 1,255 11,744 230.3 206.3 2011 $12,958 $11,997 $51.80 $58.70 1,353 12,760 232.7 213.2 2012 $15,261 $11,587 $51.40 $58.30 1,442 13,554 281.5 209.8 2013 $15,603 $11,986 $51.70 $58.50 1,694 15,465 291.8 214.5 2014 $16,569 $12,469 $51.90 $58.80 1,958 17,011 298.7 224.5 2015 $16,341 $12,496 $52.70 $59.70 2,087 17,810 286.1 219.7 2015 (June 2016) $15,699 $12,173 $52.90 $59.20 2,087 17,810 275.4 215.4 2016 (June 2017) $15,021 $12,636 $53.30 $60.80 2,095 17,927 259.8 218 2016(projection) $15,636 $12,970 $53.30 $60.80 2,095 17,927 270.5 223.8 Percent change Change in ratio 1965-1978 78.90% 78.90% 19.90% n/a -44.70% -54.30% 9.9 9 1978-2000 1270.10% 1389.50% 0.60% n/a 512.70% 438.80% 346 383.9 2000-2016 -24.30% -39.10% 10.50% 8.50% 5.30% 19.90% -105.6 -187.5 2009-2016 45.50% 25.40% 2.20% 4.50% 97.50% 80.30% 73.9 39.9 1978-2016 936.70% 806.50% 11.20% n/a 545.20% 546.30% 240.4 196.4

Again, due to retirement inequality, the median savings broken down by age is very different. Whereas the average savings of a family with members between 32 and 37 is $31,644, the median savings is less than $500. At the other end, the average savings of families close to retirement — ages 56 to 61 — is $163,557. The median is $17,000.