I’m almost 40 and according to the wisdom found everywhere on the internet, I don’t have enough saved for retirement. Which worries me because I’ve been saving for as long as I’ve had a proper job with access to a retirement vehicle. But also because the internet wisdom doesn’t make sense or sound feasible.

According to what I’ve read, you’re supposed to have:

  • 1x your income when you’re 30
  • 3x your income when you’re 40
  • 6x at 50
  • 8x at 60
  • 10x when you retire

I’m almost 40 and I have just barely over 1x saved. So it feels like I’m 10 years behind. However, my income has grown substantially over the course of my 30s, more than doubling. So accounting for growth in income, I do have almost 3x my salary in my late 20s. But similarly, the above advice could be interpreted as needing 6x the income you had when you were 30 by they time you’re 40. And by that metric, I’m doing even worse!

  • OpenPassageways@lemmy.zip
    link
    fedilink
    English
    arrow-up
    5
    ·
    1 year ago

    I think this depends on your lifestyle. These calculations contain an assumption that your lifestyle lines up with your income and that you will want to continue spending at the same rates when you retire.

    Many people (especially in the US) will get a raise and buy bigger houses, cars, etc. If you’re disciplined about living beneath your means then a raise just means you can save more.

    I bought a house at 23 and paid it off in 10years. (Maybe not the best financial decision given what happened in the stock market over that same period). When I retire I plan to have another paid off property and rental income from the first. I won’t have a mortgage, and should have rental income instead. Things like that change the picture in ways that these targets likely don’t account for.