Are you looking for a 401(k) savings guide? This post will go through how much I think you should have in your 401(k) by age in order to have a comfortable retirement in your 60s and beyond. My goal is for all of you to become 401(k) millionaires before your retire.
I've been retired since 2012 after working 13 years in investment banking and maxing out my 401(k) each year since 1999. Since 2012, my 401(k), which is now a rolled over IRA, is worth over $1.35 million today. And that is with zero contribution from 2012 until now.
In addition, I've been maxing out my Solo 401(k) each year since 2012. A Solo 401(k) is for small business owners, where you can contribute both the employee maximum and employer maximum, if your business generates enough profits.
Suggestion: In addition to maxing out your 401(k) for a wealthier retirement, diversify into real estate as well. Fundrise manages over $3 billion in private real estate investments, mainly in the Sunbelt region where valuations are lower and yields tend to be higher. With the Fed embarking on a multi-year interest rate cut cycle, there should be increased demand in real estate in the coming years. I've personally invested over $300,000 with Fundrise so far.
401(k) As A Retirement Savings Account IS Not Enough
Unfortunately, the 401(k) is one of the most woefully light retirement instruments ever invented. The 2025 401(k) contribution limit goes up by only $500 to $23,500.
A 401(k) is part of your new three-legged retirement stool. The other two legs include your after-tax investment accounts and your side hustles. In other words, it's up to all of us to take care of our own retirement needs and not depend on anything else.
Although the 401(k) pales in comparison to a nicely funded pension, even more disappointing than the 401(k) is the IRA. With the IRA retirement plan, you can only contribute $7,000 in pre-tax dollars for 2024. Further, you can only contribute pre-tax dollars if you make under $87,000 a year as an individual and $143,000 as a married couple. You can only contribute the maximum $7,000 if you make less than $77,000 as an individual and $123,000 as a married couple. What about the rest of us?
Meanwhile, you have to make less than $161,000 a year as a single person or $240,000 as a married couple for the privilege of contributing after- tax dollars to a Roth IRA. You can only contribute the maximum $7,000 in 2024 if you earn less than $146,000 as an individual or $230,000 as a married couple.
Give me a pension that pays 70% of my last year's salary for the rest of my life over a 401k or IRA any time! At least with the 401(k), anybody can contribute.
Average 401(k) Retirement Balances
Based on Fidelity's 2024 report, the average 401(k) balance is around $127,000. Here’s a more filtered breakdown of the average 401(k) balance by age range in 2022.
- Age 20-29: $14,600
- Age 30-39: $51,200
- Age 40-49: $120,200
- Age 50-59: $206,100
For historical perspective, according to Vanguard, another money management giant, the average participant 401(k) account balance at Vanguard was $112,572 at the end of 2022, down 20% from the close of 2021. The median 401(k) balance at Vanguard was $27,376 at the end of 2022, an annual drop of 23%.
In 2024, the average 401(k) balance by age is around $120,000 thanks to a rebound in the stock market. However, if you look at the average and median 401(k) balances by generation, they are all still pitifully low.
For more perspective, here is Fidelity's 401(k) balances by generation as of 1Q 2023.
The Average 401(k) Balance By Age
Let's focus on what people should have in their 401(k) by age. The entire goal is to accumulate enough money in your 401(k) and other retirement accounts to eventually live financially free.
Given the median age in America is about 36 years old, the average 36-year-old should have a 401(k) balance of around $121,700. Unfortunately, $121,700 is still pretty low. But the median 401(k) balance overall is only about $35,000.
As an educated reader who is logical and believes saving for retirement is a must, I've proposed a 401(k) savings by age recommendation table that shows how much each person should have s(a)ved in their 401k at age 25, 30, 35, 40, 45, 50, 55, 60, and 65. The amounts are much greater than the average 401k savings by age in America.
We stop at 65 because you are allowed to start withdrawing penalty free from your 401(k) at age 59 1/2. Meanwhile, I pray to goodness you don't have to work much past 65. By age 65, you will have had 40+ years to save and investment already!
401k Savings By Age: How Much You Should Have
To determine how much you should have saved in your 401k by age, I've come with some assumptions that have encapsulated in a chart below. The goal is to accumulate as much in your 401(k) as possible to that by the time you can withdraw without penalty after age 59.5, you can live a comfortable retirement life.
The assumptions for the below chart are as follows:
- Low End column accounts for lower maximum contribution amounts available to savers above 45.
- Mid End column accounts for lower maximum contribution amounts available to savers below 45.
- High End column accounts for savers who are under the age of 25. After the first year, one maximizes their contribution every year to their 401k plan without failure.
- Average starting working age is 22. But you can follow the number of years working as a different guideline if you graduate later or earlier.
- $18,000 is used as the conservative base case maximum contribution amount for one's entire working life.
- No after-tax income contribution, although more power to you if you have the disposable income to do so.
- The rate of return assumptions are between 0% – 10%.
- Company match assumption is between 0% – 100% of employee contribution. $61,000 is the total 401k contribution for 2022. But in 2024, the total 401(k) contribution between employee ($23,000) and employer ($46,000) is $69,000. Hence, find yourself a good employer! Employer profit sharing can be a huge benefit for your retirement.
- The Low, Mid, and High columns should successfully encapsulate about 80% of all 401(k) contributors who max out their contributions each year. There will be those with less, and those which much greater balances thanks to higher returns.
- You are logical and not a knucklehead. Just by searching this topic, you are taking ownership of your retirement and are thinking ahead with an action plan.
Financial Samurai 401(k) Savings By Age Guide
Here is my 401(k) savings targets by age.
From the results, we can see that even after 38 years of consistent saving, you'll only have around $1,000,000 to $5,000,000 in your 401k in a realistic cycle of bull and bear markets. In other words, I believe everybody should become 401(k) millionaires by 60.
If you're just starting your 401(k) savings journey, you could get lucky and achieve the high end column with consistent 8%+ annual growth and company profit sharing after 38 years. After all, the maximum 401(k) contributions will be much higher over the next 38 years than the previous 38 years.
But it's most likely that most people reading this article should follow the middle-to-low end columns as a 401(k) savings guide. The median age in America is roughly 36. Meanwhile, the median age of a Financial Samurai reader is closer to 38.
Investing Matters Because Inflation Matters
Let's say you live for 25 years after retiring at 60. You only get to live on $40,000 – $100,000 a year on the low-to-mid end. Sounds feasible in today's dollars, but not so much in future dollars due to inflation.
If goodness forbid you live for 35 years after retiring at 60, then you can only live off of $28,571 – $71,000. If we use a 2% inflation rate to calculate what $1,000,000 – $5,000,000 is worth today, its only worth about $550,000 – $2,355,000.
We know that due to inflation, a dollar today will not go as far as a dollar 30+ years from now. Private university tuition will probably cost over $100,000 a year in 20 years. That is ridiculous since education is now free thanks to the internet.
Then there is the incredible growth of healthcare costs that is the most worrisome for retirees. For example, I've been paying $23,000+ a year in healthcare premiums for a platinum plan for my family of three. This is despite us all in good health.
Does that sound affordable for the average American household who makes $76,000 a year? Absolutely not, which is why employees should not underestimate the value of their overall work benefits.
In fact, inflation is the reason why it takes $3 million to be a real millionaire today. Make sure you own assets like stocks, real estate, and more to let inflation work for you!
Inflation Chart Of Consumer Goods And Services
Below is a great inflation chart by consumer goods and services. Medical, college tuition, food, and housing are categories that have inflated the most. This chart is a great visualization of why you must save aggressively in your 401(k) for retirement and boost your taxable investment portfolio.
To help grow your net worth, I recommend diligently tracking your net worth with Empower. Technology has come a long way since tracking our money by hand or with an Excel spreadsheet. Remember, what is measured can be optimized.
Depend On Nobody But Yourself For Retirement
Contribute the maximum pre-tax income you can to your 401(k) for as long as you work. This is the absolute MINIMUM you can do to by on the right 401k savings by age path.
Below is a chart that shows what you could have in your 401(k) if you max it out each year starting in 2023. The right hand column shows what you would have in your 401(k) with 8% compound annual returns.
In other words, everybody who consistently maxes out their 401(k) each year will likely be a 401(k) millionaire by the time they turn 60.
After you contribute a maximum to your 401k every year, try and contribute at least 20% of your after-tax income after 401k contribution to your savings or retirement portfolio accounts.
This way, you will have potentially DOUBLE the amount in total retirement saving if your household income is $100,000 or more. If your household income is closer to $50,000, you should still see a nice 30% boost to your retirement savings if you consistently save 20% of your after tax income. Here is the recommended order to contribute to your retirement accounts.
Do Not Count On Social Security Or Government Funds For Retirement
Treat your 401k just like Social Security and write it off completely from your mind. Do not expect either accounts to be there for you when you retire. It's just like how you should never expect the government to ever help you when you're in need.
Just imagine 30 years from now, the government deciding to raise penalty free 401k withdrawal to age 75 from 59.5? Unfortunately, you need the money at age 60. Because you withdraw, the government imposes a 30% penalty on top of the taxes you have to pay. Don't think it can't happen. Expect it to happen!
Taxable Investment Portfolio Is Key
The only thing you can count on is after-tax money you've invested or saved. This is why after maxing out your 401k, it's good to open up an after-tax brokerage account. Consistently contribute a percentage of your paycheck each mont into your taxable investment portfolio. I recommend at least 20%.
Your goal should be to then build as many passive income streams as possible. The more passive income streams and active income streams you have, the more financially free you will be.
Challenge yourself to raise your after-tax and 401k contribution savings percent to possibly 50%. It won't be easy. But if you practice raising your savings rate by 1% a month until it hurts, you'll find it easier than you think.
A straightforward way to maximum savings is to make your 401(k) maximum contribution automatic. Save every other paycheck for the rest of your working life.
Max out your 401k and save over 50% of your after-tax income for at least 10 years in a row. If you do, you will be financially free to do whatever you want!
Recommendation To Growing A Larger 401(k)
Now that you know what the appropriate 401(k) savings by age is, it's time to manage your finances like a hawk. To do so, sign up for Empower, the web's #1 free wealth management tool. Empower will enable you to get a better handle on your finances.
In addition to better money oversight, run your investments through their award-winning Investment Checkup tool. I will show you exactly how much you are paying in fees. I was paying $1,700 a year in fees I had no idea I was paying.
After you link all your accounts, use their Retirement Planning calculator. It pulls your real data to give you as pure an estimation of your financial future as possible using Monte Carlo simulation algorithms. Definitely run your numbers to see how you're doing.
To track my 401(k) savings by age guide you must max out your 401k each year. With investment returns coupled with company matching, you'll be amazed how much you will accumulate over the years.
I've been using Empower since 2012. In this time, I have seen my net worth skyrocket thanks to better money management.
Build More Wealth Through Real Estate
In addition to investing in stocks and bonds through your 401(k), I recommend diversifying into real estate. Real estate is a core asset class that has proven to build long-term wealth.
It's important to own a tangible asset that provides utility and a steady stream of income. Unlike stock values, real estate values tend to be much less volatile. Use real estate to generate passive income and distributions before age 59.5 which is when you can withdraw from a 401k penalty-free.
My Favorite Private Real Estate Platform
Take a look at Fundrise, my favorite private real estate platform. Fundrise runs about $3 billion in assets for almost 400,000 investors today. Its funds focus on the Sunbelt region, where valuations tend to be lower and yields tend to be higher.
You can also check out Crowdstreet, a leading private real estate platform for accredited investors. Crowdstreet finds the best deals offered by the best sponsors for users to individually invest. Most of the deals are in 18-hour cities where there's greater growth and lower valuations.
I've personally invested $954,000 in real estate crowdfunding across 18 projects. My goal is to take advantage of lower valuations in the heartland of America. My real estate investments account for roughly 50% of my current passive income of ~$300,000.
Both platforms are Financial Samurai sponsors and Financial Samurai is a six-figure investor in Fundrise.
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Follow my 401k savings by age guide. But in the meantime, also build a passive income portfolio so you can live a better life today. Given you cannot withdraw from your 401k without penalty until 59.5, it is your passive investment portfolio that matters even more.
How Much Should I Have Saved In My 401k By Age is a Financial Samurai original post. Everything I write is based off first hand experience because money is too important to be left up to pontification. Join 65,000+ others and sign up for my free weekly newsletter as well.
Great stuff here, I have been reading since 2010, while everyone’s journey is different, I like to take what I can and apply it to my own journey. 43 years old 6m in investment accounts, 1.4 m in 401k accounts, homes paid for cars paid for, zero debt. Bottom line I think people save too much for retirement and get in a rut of always comparing and wondering if they can retire that they don’t enjoy life while they can. My grandfather passed away at 93 he had enough left to pay for a casket and buy everyone in the family (4) a coffee. at the end of the day don’t be the richest guy in the graveyard.
Are you finding it difficult to spend down your wealth? It’s definitely important to be intentional. Otherwise, it could easily compound at a much faster rate than you can spend.
Mid-40s is definitely a good time to start IMO.
Related: Best Ways To Decumulate
Hi Samurai, long time reader, first time poster. I feel great comparing my finances to your charts I am definitely above average. 37 years old, $650,000 TSP, $300,000 Vanguard funds, $70,000 savings accounts. Net worth maybe 1.3 million. Own my home, no kids, have a lot of toys, federal pension starts when I retire in 9 years. I need advice, when should I get a financial advisor/fiduciary? I have been making decent gains for my whole career investing by myself, I think I am going to get more anxious the closer it gets to retirement because I might be missing important rules. What do you suggest?
Hi Brandon,
Since you’re doing well so far for so long, you can probably continue to be a DIY investor and planner.
However, it’s always nice to get a second opinion. Empower is doing a promo where you can get a free financial checkup with one of their professionals. They’ll even send you a free $100 Visa gift card via e-mail if you do your two calls with them before November 30, 2024. You just need over $250,000 in investable assets, which you do. You can schedule your call here.
Here’s my experience speaking to an Empower professional back in 2013, which helped me elucidate a blind spot and boost my net worth by an extra $1 million since then.
Finally, here is my consulting page, which I do not highlight anywhere at all due to the demand and my limited time.
Cheers
I am on the low end of your chart, but feel I am on the right track. I am 49 with 500K in my 401k. I also have about 100K in other stock and pensions. I have my primary home paid off and own a vacation/retirement home. I have more equity in my primary home than I owe on my second home. I plan to work as long as I can. I am active am healthy. To me retirement is getting all my children through college, having no mortgage, and working a less stressful job. What advice do you have for me as I get older to maximize retirement while still working?
I would actually take advantage of the Empower promo and schedule a free consultation with one of their professionals. They will go through your goals and existing portfolios in the first session and make suggestions in the second session. After the second session, they’ll even send you a $100 Visa gift card via e-mail if you finish both sessions before November 30, 2024. I’m not sure when their next promo is. You can schedule your call here.
Here’s my experiencing speaking to a financial professional. Ultimately, he made me realize I was overly conservative and encouraged me to put my cash to work. The actions back then have turned out very well today.
Having the goal to get your kids through college and pay off your mortgage are great goals.
Theses numbers are manageable, especially when I reflect on my own personal journey. The key is time in the market, not timing the market. Now that I’m 40 and look back, I’m so glad I started at 22 and prioritized maxing out at a young age. My retirement savings are on the upper end of the FS target range (>$750K), so again, very manageable with time and discipline.
Could not agree more with what you said, Steve. Time in the market is the most important aspect by far, and prioritizing saving aggressively when you are young.
The only word of caution I would throw out there is that there has been a huge tailwind from increasing valuations since you started investing at age 22 (presumably 2006). At that time the 2008 crash had not yet happened, and yet valuations now are more than double where they were in 2006. All this means is that we should count ourselves fortunate for the returns over the past 18 years, while also realizing that a large portion of it came from multiple expansion, which by definition is a non-reproducible factor.
First off, I see the 36 year old median age. Yes the median age is 36, but 2 year old kids do not invest. You need to use the median “working age”, not median age. Even then, most 18 year old’s and/or up to mid 20 something year old’s do not even make enough to start investing yet, so you are looking at more of a late 40 something “investing age” median. Maybe then some of these numbers would start lining up a “little” better. Then go further in where he says max out your 401 k and then put another at least 20% toward non 401k retirement investments, at a 100,000 income. So, 22,500 401k + 25,000+ aprox taxes + another 10,000+ non 401k retirement investment, brings this family down to 40,000ish to live on yearly, talk about investment poor. you are investing so much that you cant even live comfortably in the mean time. Then they go and say 50,000 incomers should try to do the same as best as they can, but will only see about a 30% gain in retirement as apposed to the 100,000 earners. Of course they would see less, as they make less, but that still begs the numbers, 50,000 – 22,500 401k – 10,000ish taxes – 3,500ish non 401k retirement “20%” investment =14,000 left to live on. Come on now. How the heck is someone supporting there family on 14,000. Like anyone making 50,000 can even start investing, more or less investing that much like they are suggesting. Even if you could live off these minuscule amounts after investing, what do you need this 5,000,000 retirement fund for to have a 250,000+ per year retirement, if you lived off 14,000 to 40,000 your whole life to get to that point. If you can live off that little your whole life, it looks like that’s all you would need in retirement. Just total ridiculousness with these figures. Just figure out your must have “needs”, then your must have “wants”, then you would like “wants” and figure what each one of those would come to on a certain basis (monthly of yearly), and do your best to set aside enough to cover those for as long as you think necessary. Anything more is extra and nice, but not a game changer for a happy retirement. As none of these articles ever tell you, nearly 60% of the people who retire, do so on SS benefits and what little savings they have in the bank (less than 20,000), and most of them live just fine off that. No they cant travel the world, but do you have to to be happy? Any retirement investments at all puts you in the top 40ish %, and more that 100,000 puts you in the top 30% of most. Why on earth do you need 5,000,000+.
Live long, Live well, Be happy,
Some people retire in a VHCOL city (NYC, LA, SF) where they will need 5 million or more.
There is always one glaring issue with these 401k balance by age reports. There are very misleading and don’t paint the whole picture. Many people have several 401K accounts or rolled over 401ks to IRA accounts from a previous employer. During my career I have worked for several companies in which I have three 401k accounts, a Roth IRA that was a rollover from a Roth 401k account, and a traditional IRA that was also a 401k rollover. Some of these accounts fall right in line to what the median 401k balance is. If you cherry picked the one 401k with my current employer you would say I was way behind the curve. There is no way Fidelity or Vanguard can truly measure an individual’s retirement savings because they don’t have access to all of a person’s Roth/Traditional 401ks, IRAs, 403b, pensions, ESOPs, or anything else I forgot to mention. Because of this, it is safe to say the median savings for most people’s retirement is much higher than these Fidelity and Vanguard average/median 401k reports are. In which we all would agree it what all of your retirement accounts combined is what matters.
Completely agree, Ike.
This annual report by Fidelity is one of the most annoying things ever. Grr. They don’t disclose their methodology at all. I have 5 Fidelity 401k accounts and an IRA, and I’m betting that Fidelity only looks at _one_ of them. And no, Fidelity – I am _not_ going to roll over anything – I like it just like that :-)
Furthermore, they completely miss spousal account totals as well. To make this “Report” useful, Fidelity should have an opt-in annual survey page where clients can describe their entire retirement portfolios, even those outside of Fidelity (e.g., Vanguard).
I feel like Fidelity _wants_ the figure to be low to drum up business with click-bait headlines and get more clients investing with them. Why wouldn’t they want to show much higher balances that reflect reality?
True. But you can take the data for what it is and compare your combined 401(k)s (rollover IRAs) to the average 401k balance by age figures, or take the average of your 401ks and compare to make the comparison consistent.
The other good thing is that due to rollovers, American workers are in better shape with their retirement savings than the numbers indicate.
On my planet, there are only 2 workers.
They each change jobs every year. Worker 1 always maxes out their new 401k contributing $20K per year, and Worker 2 never contributes anything. 10 years in, Worker 1 has 10 old 401k accounts, Worker 2 has nothing
Fidelity publishes a report saying the average balance 401k balance is only $10,000 (they average Worker 1’s active $20K account and Worker 2’s zero balance account), completely ignoring the fact that Worker 1 has $200,000 in prior 401k accounts.
This annoys me on my planet, as well :-)
So… would part of the solution be to also disclose how many accounts exist? If you learn Planet X has two beings, and 10 accounts with only a mean of $10k, would this not enlighten us to a closer idea of the scope of overall savings?
All accurate observations. Even if they could collect and condense based on SSN, the various brokerages and investement firms have no transparency into each others’ holdings. Nor should they — what an invasion of privacy for us account holders.
However, if their reported numbers are any motivation at all for a culture that is spoon-fed from before birth into mindless consumerism and wastefulness on just about every level — motivated to have some kind of positive personal behavioral adaptation to save/invest more for themselves, that remains a ‘good thing’.
This particular site is geared toward the affluent. The fact of the matter is — to make a profound difference in the US (my myopic universe as I have no knowledge of how the other 7.4Billion of us live), the bottom half of earners would so benefit from not only the balance-by-age reporting, but how to get out of the paycheck-paycheck treadmill and see their own balance sheet improve. These reports could be broken down by salary/gross income. And educational sites like Sam’s, geared toward the earners under the median income level, would make a profound difference. They likely don’t have multiple 401ks, rolled over IRAs, perhaps have never heard of a Roth, and a single account measured against Sam’s posted number means something very much more real.
I just talked to a 40 something hedge fund guy with a wife and 3 kids.
He was saying how even with over 1 million in pre-tax income, he struggles to make ends meet.
A huge house, and a large second home. Private school and extravagant activities for the kids. 3 high end destination vacations a year. Spending a lot on experiences.
Now granted this guy is living rich, very rich, but is in fact poor.
But that still got me thinking, how much do we really need to retire “early” or “early-ish”
I0 million? 15 million? Now after talking to him, 10 is starting to sound a bit dicey/lean.
You know the math, you know how you live, so why does it matter what this 40 something does with his money. He might need $15M to live how he does if he wants to retire in his 40’s and maintain his lavish lifestyle.
You need to ask yourself what your expenses are likely to be and what kind of buffer you want. Apply the 4% rule as a starting point and see how it plays out. Personally I feel I need $5M in investible assets but we live pretty sensibly, have no debt and our joint incomes are less than half of what your friend brings in.
That’s just it, 15 million isn’t enough for the guy. The guy is SPENDING all of their 1 million + income a year. If he were to retire, he would need easily 40 million, minimum
But that got me thinking, if i were to retire, I would have a lot more free time on my hands. And I might need a lot more money that i currently assuming.
right now i am like making money full time. I barely have enough time to spend. but if spending money became a full time job (in retirement), it would be hard to know how much i will need.
Well I’m retired (49) and my income has dropped about 50%. My wife works and I have youngish kids so I’m busy with family stuff, but honestly at 49 I have everything I want. I’ve always felt guilty spending money frivolously and was able to retire because I’ve always thought carefully about what I spend and saved a good percentage of my income. Just because I’ve retired doesn’t change that, and because I don’t have the cash flow, I might be a little more careful. Also consider that once you’re retired you technically don’t need to save so you don’t need the level of income you have while you’re saving for retirement.
I understand what you are saying. And I suspect i will behave more like you than that family i am telling you about. However, I have ALWAYS worked my entire life. I have never tried retirement. If i retire today, i would definitely be retiring EARLY. So i just don’t know if i would just sit home. Maybe I would acquire a taste for family vacations.. Maybe I would want a second home, a RV, or a yacht. In any case, thanks for sharing your experience, this is some thought provoking stuff.
This is such a fairy tale, annual compounding of 8% every single year, that is not reality, and you know it. People don’t believe 8%, yeah it’s in all MBA text books, opportunity cost of funds blah blah.
The key number these days is $300K, once you’ve accumulated that quantity, that is an inflection point for a reasonable compounding effect and it should take you a minimum of 10 years to accumulate that figure if you live in the US, that is 100% doable.
Now what about having a family? no kids, is fine no future for America, you know you need kids for our country to survive–for our economy to thrive–for all of us to get those nice returns, did you frigging forget that detail. Make sure you put in two kids minimum in your little write ups from now on; don’t encourage people to stop having families for our Nation’s sake , look at the big picture, bro.
Something else to consider: the best move I made with the 401K is to take out a loan against the 401k to buy Real Estate, I was patient and spotted the opportunity; you can too; I did not get lucky it was hard work and worked the right relations. You don’t have to invest in Real Estate today, invest on a business, etc, get those funds out the 401K in the form of a loan if the option is available to you and deploy the capital to work into other investment assets, the 401k is a low-low performer.
I’m not sure why you think 8% as a fairytale when the historical return for stocks is 10% and I’m not even including company matching and profit-sharing.
People mostly let their 401(k) investments ride and don’t touch them until after 59 1/2.
I do agree with you on the $300,000 assertion where you start feeling financially independent. https://www.financialsamurai.com/minimum-investment-portfolio-balance-to-start-feeling-free/
I wouldn’t borrow from my 401(k) to invest in real estate. Instead, I would invest in real estate using my savings beyond 401(k) contributions. I think it’s important to compartmentalize.
Why do you diminish Social Security so much? The vast majority of American’s are living and will live entirely off her Social Security income. That’s not going to change or everyone would revolt and burn down the White House. They almost did it just because Trump wasn’t re-elected… so imagine what they’d do if they stopped sending out the Social Security checks. My MIL gets about $3000 a month in social security, her income and some of her deceased husbands benefits. Home is owned outright with low tax basis. For someone that hangs out around the house, watching the news, and feeding her dogs… she doesn’t really need much else.
I feel like once you are in your 60s… You kinda can revert back to living like you did in your early 20s cost wise… just with higher medical expenses. But if you don’t have much besides Social Security in terms of income…. Your medical costs are gonna be heavily subsidized for the rest of your life. Needing long term nursing home care is really the only financial wild card…. But even if you had a lot of money.. luxury nursery home care would eat at your wealth rather quickly. Also who really wants to keep living if you are literally in need of 24/7 long term care.
I’m 46 years old and have heard for over 25 years that Social Security is underfunded. Therefore, I have just learned to expect less or expect nothing actually. As a result, this has motivated me to earn as much money as possible and build more wealth for passive income because I feel like an only depend on myself.
I also interviewed many retirees who do collect Social Security. I asked them if they bothered saving and investing in a taxable portfolio or building a rental property portfolio. They said no because they had a pension or Social Security.
That’s fine, but they had to work until past 60 years old and their retirement spending is capped as a result.
If Social Security is there for me in 20 years, I will treat it as a bonus and spend it or give it away every month. And if it’s not there, then, no problem because I never counted on it in the first place.
This is the way.
I agree, this is a good way to look at it… unless you are saving so much in excess of what you will really need and not enjoying life becasue of it while you are young and able.
The top SS payout, which most of your readers will be receiving after 30 years of work or around age 50ish. That top line amount is almost $5000 and increasing with inflation every year…. That’s nearly $60K in income JUST from Social Security. If they cut that 25%… (which is the MOST it would need to be cut to keep in solvent for decades)… You are talking $45K a year. At the very least that would cover a ton of living expenses for your average Senior Citizen before touching any other savings. And as much as fear mongering there is.. It’s not going away. Every paycheck cut in the US… 14% is going into the pot. The only way it goes away is if Republicans privatize it and invest it all in Bitcoin and we lose it all. haaha.
Sam, in your “Financial Samurai 401(k) Savings By Age Guide” chart. Are these goals by age for a single person or are they for a household? For example, at age 45, does the mid-end of $750K mean that 1 person should have saved that or does this suggest that a married couple combined should be at the $750K mark?
It can be either. I say it’s a recommended household target. A household of income earners can consist of one or two people. It’s generally easier to build more wealth with two people that one.
Hey FS. I’m new here and looking at your projections do motivate me but also concern me. I need feedback. I’m currently 33 with about 27k in my 401k. I recently changed my contribution to 15% and the employer contributes 5 percent, so total contribution is 20%. My question is, do I need to contribute more to have a safe retirement because I only make 70k a year. Or, do I need to move up in my company because maxing out my 401k at 70k is somewhat challenging?
Are you in the US? Assuming so: When do you want to ‘retire’? Are you also maxing out a Roth? Are you using a HSA as part of a retirement toolset? Is there a spouse/family? Is spouse employed – or maxing out a Roth or both. What is your cost of living? Do you expect raises in the future (and you’ll shunt them into investments)? Do you have debts, an emergency fund, living as frugal as you desire? If 15% gets you to retirement at 65, would 30% get you to retirement at an earlier age? Is moving up in your company desirable (is a raise worth added stress)? Any additional contributions now will compound deliciously over 30 years – but at what cost to your current life/happiness?
I think you should try to do both. If the amount of money you’re saving each month doesn’t hurt, I don’t think you’re saving enough.
The max 401(k) contribution in 2024 is $23,000. Have you tried to save that much before? If not, it will hurt, but you will adjust. Once you’ve got your savings down automated, you’ve got to focus on boosting income as much as possible.
Here’s are relevant posts you might like:
Achieving Financial Freedom On A Modest Income
Contributing To Your 401(k) Is A Choice
At 33, you are still very young and have a lot of time left to save and invest. GO FOR IT! Your older self won’t regret it.
Your numbers are too high if for those of us who have a USG pension, like your parents did. The Foreign Service pension is 1.7% of the average of the top 3 salaries per year of service, up to 20 years, then 1% for every year after 20 years of service. The CS pension is 1.1%. Plus, lifetime health insurance. I have just under what you estimate, but I also have a lifetime annuity of several thousand dollars a month. My spouse, on the other hand, has half of what he should have according to your chart, but he immigrated to the US in his 30s and didn’t work for several years as a dependent overseas. We’re not worried because he will get his own pension when he retires — less than mine, but still plenty between us. I know you’ve written articles on the value of pension and I try to tell everyone, especially my kids, that pensions are the gold standard.
Thanks and congrats. See: How To Calculate The Value Of A Pension.
Hi Financial Samurai- I am 30 years old and have $300K in my Roth 401k, 0 in 401k. I have payed taxes on 100% of the 401k (Employer match and after tax contributions). How should i benchmark vs. the charts. Should i assume if it was a pre-tax 401k I would pay a blended tax rate of 20% in retirement so i would have a pre-tax $375K 401k?
I think taxes will go up long term but want to make sure I comparing same numbers.
How accurate can this be? I’ve had multiple jobs over the years and each time roll the 401k into my personal IRA then start a new 401k at my new employer. So I might show up as having a small amount saved in my 401k, meanwhile in reality I’ve saved hundreds of thousands but it’s been rolled into my IRA.
Agreed, and the average 401k calculation seems to be a nearly useless statistic since I also have 5 IRA accounts (one from prior employers and a Roth) plus a 401k and if you take the average of my 401k+IRA accounts, it is only 1/6th of what I have in total. They need to track the total of all retirement accounts associated with a person not individual accounts.
So it means the average total 401(k) balance is probably higher, and Americans are saving more for retirement than this data shows. All the more reason to follow my 401(k) by age guide.
Many advisors says to save for 80% income replacement in retirement. I just don’t see myself needing that kind of nest egg. I’m currently tracking at 62% income replacement on earnings of $180k/year.
When I look at my monthly expenses & debits, 70% of those I would not have in retirement; including 401k contributions, Mortgage P&I, 529 college savings, daycare & school expenses, life insurance (?), plus excess cash for savings. Assuming my retirement savings at least keeps up with inflation, why would I need 80% income replacement at retirement?
Greetings, would you please add the years as a column in the table titled “what you could have [had if you’d maxed out your 401K]”. Next time you refresh this table, it gives us a sense of baseline and what we should be aspiring to if we “max” against that time frame.
I use the chart as a baseline to see how we’re personally doing – are we above or below the max trend. Granted where you work and employer match makes an impact, but it would be nice to know how things could have worked in the theoretical max — by year.
Thank you!
It’s actually flexible for any year based on the number of years you’ve worked or your age.
It’s odd to have a savings chart that doesn’t take into account average working income. Isn’t it impossible to know how much one needs to retire on, without calculating what the retiree was living on while working?
My parents retired early and are doing well. Living in their paid off house, gardening, walks around the neighborhood twice a day, free weekend outdoor concerts at the park, senior golf discounts ect.
My wife and I have a little more expensive tastes and plan to travel more in retirement… so we are being more aggressive. We also want the freedom to follow our only daughter wherever life takes her. So obviously we’ll need more income and are saving accordingly.
So I always wonder about these avg/median 401k balance surveys. Like how are people gonna retire off of that, they’re always soooo low! Like maybe people just have a lot of 401ks with different financial institutions or something? My 401k balance is pretty low, but that’s because I move companies quite a bit and rollover everything into an IRA. So my IRAs make up the bulk of my net worth.
Simple answer? They won’t. Until this country gets their collective heads out of their a**es, proceeding generations are going to continue to “have it worse” than the generations that came before them. If you think most millennials or Gen-Z’ers are going to be able to retire, without companies offering pensions, or with their pathetic 401K’s, you got jokes.
The collective 1%’ers who find this blog are completely out-of-touch with the struggles of most average Americans.
You hit it on the head. The 401k was meant to supplement the Pension for higher paid workers, not replace it entirely. Anyone that can hit these numbers without living out of a van eating top ramen is completely out of touch with 90% of the workforce. If you aren’t a highly successful entrepreneur, STEM worker, or Finance bro, these numbers are literally impossible to meet. I can max out my 401k and roth ira while not being completely broke, but I know that i’m a rare case. Like you said, when you have been given the knowledge and tools/upbringing to work hard and succeed, its hard to relate to many people. It isn’t just knowledge and work ethic, there’s a systemic issue in the USA.
It takes discipline to invest for life sustaining income starting in one’s 60’, but it is possible. If you don’t believe so you haven’t read much into financial literacy. One can make minimum wage for 40 years and simply save 10% of their income and retire a millionaire. That’s a fact.
I am 53 and started saving late in life. I didn’t start making decent income until my 40s. I only have about $150-175k saved in retirement and other liquid accounts. I want to invest in real estate. My parents dabbled a little in it and made out very well. I have about $30k – 50k to invest and wondered what you might suggest if you were in my shoes?
John, truly this is a ‘better late than never’ scenario. I would suggest joining your local REIA groups and partner with someone looking for an underling to mentor. You can bring cash to the table, or energy to do the grunt work, or both. You can join BiggerPockets.com and contribute/learn in the forums as well. Real Estate is get-rich-slow for the most part, a lot like paper investments. But if you still have a W2/1099 job, you can parlay that money into inexpensive buy/hold investments using the BRRRR methods (before the term was popularized, it was simply buy what you can afford to remodel/upgrade, rent it out and refi to release the money for leveraging another property). Yes, the housing market is bloated in pricing now so deals are harder to come by. Yes, it will correct as all things do but will it be this year or 2027? And yes, you can make money if you do your homework.
I used this chart as motivation for the last 8 years and just hit $250K today! That was after paying off 80K in student loans. I continuted to live like a student (monk) with roommates and biking to work everyday for almost 4 years to get those knocked out. I kept living like that for another 4 years and today i finally hit the 250K mark at 31. I still have some work to do to get caught up to the high end of the chart, but very excited to try and hit $500k in the next 4 years.
Well done Eric! Keep on saving and maxing out. As the capital amount grows, the absolutely dollar amounts tend to snowball more quickly in a upward growing market.
Thank you! I’ll keep at it.
First of let me thank you on all the content you provide for the readers. I find it hard sometimes for the generalization you make even with average numbers and such not considering personal circumstances such as family, student loans etc.
Like for example what sense does it make to have a table for doing max contribution to 401k since day one in the workforce. I mean who can do that in real life unless they are well-put in every aspect such as loaded parents, inheritance, rich(which technically means they won’t need 401k). Do you think such numbers help to motivate or de-motivate folks trying to get ahead?
Thanks and best regards
Hi there,
My goal is to show people what is possible if they max out their 401(k) over time. For me, if I’m behind, I’m always motivated to try harder and do more. I get pumped when I see what’s possible.
But I can definitely see how some people might get them motivated if they are very far behind the chart. It depends on one’s personality and outlook on what’s possible.
At the end of the day, we can only count on ourselves to build wealth and achieve financial freedom. So we all have to ask ourselves, how badly do we want it, and what are we willing to do to get it? Everything is long-term rational.
I suggest people buy my Wall Street Journal, best selling book, Buy This,Not That and sign up for Empower to track their net worth and optimize their investments.
But the fact of the matter is, most people won’t read my book and get hands-on with their finances. And that’s OK if they are also OK with not having as much wealth compared to those who do.
All is good whichever path!
Sam
I have done max contributions and I did not have “loaded parents”, nor an inheritance, and was not rich. My father was a blue collar worker and my mother had a sixth grade education, was a housewife and worked as a security guard at the mall. I started working in a call center and worked my way up in my career. I max out my 401k and always have since my first job at 22, my on the job trainer told our class to max out our 401k and we’ll be glad when we’re 40. I had three roommates in an apartment at the time I started working, I am now well within the maximum for my age according to Sam’s chart. My spouse has a high school diploma and also worked at the same job I did when we met, call center. The point Sam is making is, slow and steady wins the race. We own a $800k home fully paid for and carry zero debt. We own our cars outright and take an international vacation once a year with our family. It is possible for two average “joes” to make it in life.
M Joe, yours is a very inspiring story! Thank you for sharing it.
I’m 51 married with 4 kids. Only 1 of them is young and at school still. Neither of us have ever been high earners, always just scratching out a living. All our money went into paying for the house, vehicles and kids hobbies etc. Always living in the overdraft but just about keeping head above water. I started late but better late than never. Now 51, house is currently worth about £600k (had my entire finances restructured & scrutinised and I made better investment decisions courtesy of ferrochrome securities”) and only £12k left on the mortgage which should be cleared in the next 2 years, my dividend and earnings from annuities have made me pretty comfortable. I’m still going and the future never seemed brighter.
Was feeling good about my retirement savings when comparing to others, to only be a bit disappointed at your targets. Mid 30’s with 2 small kids and my wife and I trying to spend as much time with them until they get older and aren’t as interested in us any longer. Will pick it back up in a few years I suppose… won’t ever catch up!
Sorry about that. I guess it all depends on who you are comparing yourself to? On Financial Samurai, we are very aggressive in terms of saving and investing try to achieve financial freedom ASAP.
But I’m sure you are doing great! So, please don’t let my charts get you down. Everybody has their own path to take.
So for those people in their sixties with limited 401K funds. This has been the story for some time. So where are these people now? Broke, eating Alpo from the store, living in a tent?
I read about all the coming financial Armageddon but seems to not yet have appeared.
I’ve been reading about financial armageddons since I woke up to personal finance in the 70s. We’ve had a few bubbles pop, some resets, and continued budgetary foolery for all these decades. And yet, by most sane math models, if one doesn’t succumb to consumerism debt lifestyles even a modest but consistent rate of saving, investing and working can support their lifestyle.
Thanks for the proposed guidance on how much to save in my 401(k) by age. It gets me motivated to save more because I now see what’s possible.
To the people who are angry at the guidance, I encourage you to ask yourself how much do you really want to achieve financial independence. Just because the 401(k) amount is higher than what you currently have doesn’t mean you’re right and this guidance is wrong.
This type of insular, fixed-mindset thinking is what will keep you middle-class or poor. You can shout at the internet for disagreeing with you. Or you can take action to improve your financial situation.
A bear market obviously makes growing your 401(k) balance more difficult. But all the more reason to buy more shares now.
No problem Andy.
Yeah, it’s human nature to get angry and blame other people for our problems. But blaming other people for our problems won’t solve anything.
Hopefully, this post acts as a guide to encourage people to save more, invest more, and pay closer attention to their finances. This is especially true now as another recession is coming due to aggressive Fed rate hikes.
Let’s get in the mindset that nobody will save us. Therefore, we’ve got to save ourselves.