How Much Should You Have Saved by 30, 40, 50?
Age-based retirement savings benchmarks, catch-up strategies for late starters, and why starting early matters more than saving more.
The Benchmarks
Financial planning firm Fidelity Investments publishes widely cited age-based retirement savings guidelines. These aren’t commandments, but they provide a useful framework for checking whether you’re roughly on track.
Fidelity’s Savings Milestones
| Age | Savings Target |
|---|---|
| 30 | 1x annual salary |
| 35 | 2x annual salary |
| 40 | 3x annual salary |
| 45 | 4x annual salary |
| 50 | 6x annual salary |
| 55 | 7x annual salary |
| 60 | 8x annual salary |
| 67 | 10x annual salary |
These assume you start saving at 25, save 15% of income annually (including employer match), retire at 67, and maintain a similar lifestyle in retirement.
Example: If you earn $80,000 at age 40, you should have approximately $240,000 in retirement savings.
Reality Check
The median retirement savings for Americans by age group:
| Age Range | Median Retirement Savings |
|---|---|
| 25-34 | ~$18,000 |
| 35-44 | ~$45,000 |
| 45-54 | ~$115,000 |
| 55-64 | ~$185,000 |
Most people are significantly behind the benchmarks. If that describes you, don’t panic. Understanding the gap is the first step to closing it.
By Age 30: Building the Foundation
Target: 1x salary saved for retirement
If You’re On Track
You’ve been saving consistently since your early-to-mid 20s. You’re likely contributing to a 401(k) with an employer match, possibly a Roth IRA as well. Your portfolio should be heavily weighted toward stocks (80-90%) since you have 35+ years until retirement.
Key moves at 30:
- Ensure you’re contributing at least 15% of income (including match)
- Max out a Roth IRA if eligible ($7,000/year)
- Choose low-cost index funds within your 401(k)
- Increase contributions by 1% with each raise
If You’re Behind
A 30-year-old earning $65,000 with $10,000 saved (instead of the $65,000 target) has time on their side. Here’s the catch-up math:
Contributing $800/month ($9,600/year) at 8% average return:
- By age 40: ~$161,000
- By age 50: ~$409,000
- By age 67: ~$1,178,000
$800/month is approximately 15% of a $65,000 salary. If you start at 15% at age 30, you can still reach a comfortable retirement. But every year of delay makes the required savings rate higher.
The Cost of Waiting
The difference between starting at 25 and starting at 30 (saving $500/month at 8%):
| Starting Age | Balance at 67 | Total Contributed |
|---|---|---|
| 25 | $1,745,504 | $252,000 |
| 30 | $1,147,890 | $222,000 |
| Difference | $597,614 | $30,000 |
Five years of delay costs nearly $600,000 in retirement wealth, despite only $30,000 less in contributions. This is compound interest’s most dramatic lesson.
By Age 40: The Critical Decade
Target: 3x salary saved for retirement
If You’re On Track
You have roughly $180,000-$300,000 saved. You’re in the accumulation phase where compound growth starts becoming visible. A $250,000 balance at 8% generates approximately $20,000 in investment returns per year, on top of your contributions.
Key moves at 40:
- Maximize 401(k) contributions if possible ($23,000/year)
- Evaluate your asset allocation (still 70-80% stocks is appropriate)
- Review your retirement plan: Are you on track for your desired retirement age and lifestyle?
- Avoid lifestyle inflation eating into savings capacity
- Consider a mega backdoor Roth if your plan allows it
If You’re Behind
A 40-year-old earning $90,000 with $50,000 saved (instead of the $270,000 target) needs an aggressive plan:
| Monthly Savings | Balance at 67 |
|---|---|
| $1,000 | $571,000 |
| $1,500 | $797,000 |
| $2,000 | $1,023,000 |
| $2,500 | $1,249,000 |
Includes the $50,000 starting balance, 8% average return
Saving $2,000/month ($24,000/year, about 27% of a $90,000 salary) would produce roughly $1 million by 67. That’s aggressive but not impossible. It may require:
- Cutting major expenses (housing, transportation)
- Increasing income (promotion, job change, side income)
- Delaying retirement by 2-3 years (which adds both contribution years and reduces withdrawal years)
By Age 50: The Catch-Up Phase
Target: 6x salary saved for retirement
If You’re On Track
You have roughly $500,000-$700,000 saved. Your investments are generating significant returns on their own. $600,000 at 8% adds about $48,000 per year in growth, which likely exceeds your annual contributions.
Key moves at 50:
- Take advantage of catch-up contributions: 401(k) allows an extra $7,500/year (total $30,500). IRA allows an extra $1,000 (total $8,000).
- Begin thinking about retirement income strategy: Social Security timing, withdrawal order, tax diversification
- Start shifting allocation slightly toward bonds (50-60% stocks, 40-50% bonds)
- Estimate your retirement expenses: What will you actually spend? Healthcare costs will be a major factor.
- Consider long-term care insurance
If You’re Behind
A 50-year-old earning $100,000 with $150,000 saved (instead of the $600,000 target) has limited but real options:
Aggressive saving: Max out 401(k) with catch-up ($30,500) + max Roth IRA ($8,000) + HSA ($4,150) = $42,650/year in tax-advantaged savings.
At 8% return with $150,000 starting balance and $42,650/year contributions:
- By age 67: ~$1,157,000
That’s achievable but requires saving over 42% of gross income. More realistic strategies:
- Delay retirement to 70: Adds 3 years of contributions, increases Social Security by 24%, and reduces the number of years the portfolio must sustain.
- Reduce retirement spending expectations: A lower lifestyle cost means a smaller portfolio is sufficient.
- Work part-time in early retirement: Even $20,000/year from part-time work reduces portfolio withdrawal needs by $500,000 (using the 4% rule in reverse).
- Downsize housing: Selling a paid-off home and moving to a smaller, cheaper property frees up significant capital.
By Age 60: Final Preparations
Target: 8x salary saved for retirement
Key Moves
- Finalize your retirement budget: Track actual spending for 6-12 months. Most retirees spend 70-80% of pre-retirement income, but healthcare costs can push this higher.
- Develop a withdrawal strategy: Which accounts to draw from first (generally: taxable, then tax-deferred, then Roth).
- Consider Roth conversions: If you’re in a low-income year before Social Security starts, converting Traditional IRA money to Roth at a low tax rate can save thousands in future taxes.
- Plan Social Security timing: Claiming at 62 vs 67 vs 70 is a critical decision (see our guide on Social Security timing).
- Review healthcare bridge: If retiring before 65 (Medicare eligibility), plan for ACA marketplace coverage.
- Reduce portfolio risk: Shift toward 40-50% stocks, 50-60% bonds and cash. Maintain 2-3 years of expenses in cash/short-term bonds.
The 15% Rule: Why It Works
Saving 15% of gross income (including employer match) from age 25 to 67 typically produces 10-12x final salary, which supports a retirement income of approximately 80% of pre-retirement income when combined with Social Security.
Here’s how 15% plays out:
| Starting Salary | Monthly Savings (15%) | Balance at 67 (8% return) |
|---|---|---|
| $50,000 | $625 | ~$2,175,000 |
| $75,000 | $938 | ~$3,262,000 |
| $100,000 | $1,250 | ~$4,349,000 |
Assumes 3% annual salary increases, with savings rate maintained at 15% of growing salary.
These numbers assume consistent 15% savings over a 42-year career. Interruptions (unemployment, medical leave, early career low savings) reduce the outcome, which is why catching up later requires more than 15%.
Strategies for Late Starters
Starting at 35 with $0
To accumulate $1 million by 67 at 8% return, you need to save approximately $700/month ($8,400/year).
Starting at 40 with $0
You need approximately $1,050/month ($12,600/year) for the same $1 million target.
Starting at 45 with $0
You need approximately $1,700/month ($20,400/year).
Starting at 50 with $0
You need approximately $2,900/month ($34,800/year) — very difficult but possible with high income and aggressive savings.
The pattern is clear: every 5 years of delay roughly doubles the required monthly savings for the same outcome.
What Counts Toward Your “Number”
Include in your retirement savings calculation:
- 401(k), 403(b), 457 accounts
- Traditional and Roth IRAs
- SEP IRAs and Solo 401(k)s
- HSA (if earmarked for retirement)
- Taxable brokerage accounts designated for retirement
Do NOT count:
- Home equity (you need somewhere to live)
- Social Security (count it separately as income in retirement)
- Pensions (count as income, not savings)
- Money saved for children’s education
- Emergency fund
The Three Levers
If you’re behind, you have three levers to adjust:
- Save more: Increase your savings rate by cutting expenses or increasing income
- Work longer: Each additional year of work adds contributions, lets existing savings compound, and reduces the number of retirement years to fund
- Spend less in retirement: A lower spending target means a smaller required portfolio
Most people use a combination of all three. The important thing is to have a plan, run the numbers, and start taking action. Being behind is solvable. Ignoring the gap is not.
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