Here are just the number for all of you degenerates who just want some milestones for your spreadsheets.
Average total retirement savings by age:
- <35 - $49,130
- 35-44 - $141,520
- 45-54 - $313,220
- 55-64 - $537,560
- 65-74 - $609,230
-
=75 - $462,410
Average 401k balance by age:
- <25 - $5,236
- 25-34 - $30,017
- 35-44 - $76,354
- 45-54 - $142,069
- 55-64 - $207,874
- 65 and older - $232,710
And retirement savings targets from various advisors:
Fidelity:
- 1x by 30
- 3x by 40
- 6x by 50
- 8x by 60
- 10x by 67
Rowley:
- 1x by 35
- 5x by 50
- 7x by 70
Anyway, do you like metrics like these?
Well, that’s depressing. Both because the average retirement savings rate is so low overall and because my savings total is more appropriate for someone a decade younger.
That said, I’ve been hoarding cash and stocks to pay off my house, and the goal is within sight in less than 18 months. I feel like having no house payment (and no debt otherwise) will have a much greater effect on both my ability to save as well as my sense of security.
When my only regular non-discretionary expenses are food, utilities, insurance, and property taxes, I’d be able to live off of a minimum wage job indefinitely if I needed to. Not that I will, but it’s nice to know a corporation no longer owns me.
Yeah, owning your house certainly has value, regardless of the financial impact. Life is all about trade-offs, and it’s why I have an e-fund despite investing probably having the better expected outcome.
And the average savings rate is also depressingly low. I’m actually closer to an average retiree than a young hire in terms of total savings, yet I don’t feel anywhere close to retirement (and I’m retiring fairly lean @ ~$50k expenses). I just don’t see how it works for the average person, and maybe it doesn’t, and people just have to drastically adjust expectations in retirement.