Despite what traditional financial advice might dictate, the average retiree isn’t sitting on a million-dollar nest egg. A recent report from the Transamerica Center for Retirement Studies found that only 17% of current retirees have total household savings of $1 million or more, excluding home equity.

Here’s how much the average retiree actually has saved, plus where they’re keeping their money.

The report found that the estimated median total household savings for retirees, excluding home equity, is $126,000. One in 10 retirees (12%) have no savings, 25% have saved $1 to less than $100,000, 18% have $100,000 to less than $500,000, 12% have $500,000 to less than $1 million, and 17% have $1 million or more.

Yet, despite these figures, many retirees are doing just fine.

“What we see in the survey data is retirees are faring well in retirement,” said Catherine Collinson, CEO and president of the Transamerica Institute. “They’ve adjusted their expenses and their cash flow so they’re able to make it work — for the most part.”

Find Out: The Realistic Minimum Retirement Savings Needed, According to Experts

Read Next: 5 Clever Ways Retirees Are Earning Up To $1K per Month From Home

While retirees are able to get by on a day-to-day basis, Collinson did note that their household savings might not hold up if they face a financial shock. Two common and costly ones are major home repairs or a health incident that requires long-term care.

“Things like assisted living and in-home care have become increasingly expensive — and $126,000 would not go that far,” Collinson said.

It’s also important that retirees have sufficient access to liquid cash. The report found that the median emergency fund balance among retirees is $13,000, which may not be enough.

“More is better,” Collinson said. “That $13,000 might not even cover a roof repair. It is really important for retirees to have cash on hand to be able to cover those types of things. We hope that if we have an emergency, it isn’t as much as that, but it can happen.”

Having liquidity is especially important for retirees.

“Retirees are more susceptible to fluctuations of the financial markets,” Collinson said. “You don’t want to take a withdrawal from a down market because it further depletes your savings. So retirees [should have an] adequate amount of emergency savings available in liquid assets, like cash or money market funds.”

When retirees were asked where they keep their savings and investments, they most often cited a bank account (78%), primary residence (54%), IRA (41%), brokerage account (38%), life insurance policy (37%), 401(k), 403(b) or similar plan (27%), and annuities (22%). Only 9% have real estate other than their primary residence and 5% have a health savings account.