How Much Should I Save by Age 30?
Common savings benchmarks by age 30, how to catch up if you're behind, and a step-by-step plan to hit your target.
Set a target, choose a time frame, and see exactly how much you need to save each month — including the boost from compound growth.
Tell us your target — we'll work out the monthly savings.
The total amount you'd like to have saved by the end.
What you've already put aside toward this goal.
The number of years you have to reach your goal.
The average yearly growth you expect on your savings.
How often interest is added back to your balance.
Shows what your goal is worth in today's money.
To reach $10,000 in 1 years at 4.5% annual return (worth $9,756 in today's money).
Dashed line = balance without investment growth (cash savings only).
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This means you'll earn $459 in compound growth over 1 years — turning $10,000 of contributions into $10,459.
Tailored to your savings goal.
Want to compare? Try a second savings plan side-by-side — change the rate, term, or extra payment to see exactly how much you'd save.
💡 Try lowering your monthly amount and increasing the time horizon — long-term compounding is the cheapest way to reach big goals.
Each card loads the calculator above with the exact inputs — adjust and recalculate in one click.
12 months • 4.5% HYSA • $0 starting
A fast, realistic stretch goal — most people fund this from a side income or aggressive 6-month plan.
5 years • 4.5% HYSA • $5,000 starting
A standard first-home goal. Push the timeline to 6 years and the monthly drops to ~$520.
3 years • 4.5% HYSA • $2,000 starting
Roughly 6 months of expenses for a $50K spender. The fastest way to never need a credit card again.
2 years • 4.5% HYSA • $3,000 starting
Short timelines need cash, not stocks. If $1K+ per month is too much, scale the wedding budget — not the savings rate.
15 years • 6% diversified • $5,000 starting
Long timelines + diversified returns do most of the heavy lifting — $295/month grows to ~$100K.
25 years • 7% diversified • $20,000 starting
Roughly 16% of a $80K income. Add an employer 401(k) match and the personal target drops to ~$700/mo.
Need a different number? Adjust the calculator above — or read how long it takes to save $10,000, the best way to save for a house, or the right savings rate for your income.
Enter your target amount, your current savings, the number of years you have, and an expected annual return. Optionally add an inflation rate to see your goal in today's dollars.
The calculator works backwards from your target and tells you exactly how much you need to save each month to get there — including the boost from compound growth on your contributions and existing balance.
You want $50,000 for a house deposit in 5 years, starting from $5,000, in a 4.5% high-yield savings account:
The monthly number is the single most important figure — it tells you whether your goal is realistic with your current income, or whether you need a longer timeline, a smaller target, or a higher-yield account. Even small interest rates make a real difference once you're saving meaningful amounts.
Around 4–5% for cash/HYSA, 5–7% for a long-term diversified portfolio. Be conservative for short timelines.
Try lengthening your timeline, lowering the target, or splitting the goal into stages. Small monthly amounts still beat waiting.
Yes. Set the target to roughly 25× your annual expenses (the 4% rule) and your timeline to years until retirement.
Optionally — enter an inflation rate to see your target's purchasing power in today's dollars.
Helpful guides and calculators to take this further:
A simple 4-step framework.
Benchmarks and rules of thumb.
Timeline tables at any monthly amount.
Full deposit-saving strategy.
Forward-project a single deposit.
How much to save at $50K–$150K.
Hit your goal faster with these step-by-step guides.
Common savings benchmarks by age 30, how to catch up if you're behind, and a step-by-step plan to hit your target.
How much should you have saved by age 40? Net worth benchmarks, retirement targets, and how to accelerate if you're behind.
How big should your emergency fund be? Clear targets by life stage, where to keep it, and how to build it fast.
Benchmark how much you should have saved by age 30, 40, 50, and 60 — with practical guidance if you're behind.
Calculating a savings goal works backwards from a future target. Given a target amount, time horizon, and expected return, you can solve for the monthly contribution needed:
FV = P × (1 + r)^n + PMT × ((1 + r)^n − 1) / rExample: To reach $1,000,000 in 25 years starting from $10,000 at a 7% annual return, you'd need to save about $1,070/month. Of that final balance, more than half comes from investment growth — not contributions.
There's no single right number — it depends on income, goals, and time. Common benchmarks:
Use the calculator above to translate any target into a precise monthly number.
Compound interest means your returns earn returns. Over decades, this snowball effect often contributes more to your final balance than your actual contributions.
Example: Save $500/month for 30 years at 7%. You contribute $180,000 but end with about $610,000 — over $430,000 of pure growth. The dashed line on the chart above shows what you'd have without growth — the gap is compounding.
Want a deeper dive? See our guide to how compound interest works or the formula explained.
Five practical levers, in rough order of impact:
This savings calculator works backwards from a financial target. You tell it the amount you want to save, your time horizon, your current savings, and an expected annual return. It then solves the future-value-of-an-annuity formula for the missing piece — the monthly contribution you need to hit that goal.
It also projects year-by-year growth, separates contributions from interest earned, and optionally adjusts your target for inflation so you can see your goal in today's dollars. Use it for any savings goal: a house deposit, an emergency fund, a wedding, a new car, college tuition, early retirement, or financial independence.
If the monthly number above looks too high, you don't always have to earn more — small shifts in habits often free up hundreds per month. Here are practical ways to save more money each month:
The same calculator works for every common savings goal — just change the target and time frame:
Try a few different targets and time horizons above to compare what each goal would cost you per month.
It depends on your target, timeline, and expected return. A common starting point is 20% of income, but the calculator above gives you the exact monthly number for your specific goal.
Save more, start earlier, invest in higher-return assets, automate contributions, and reinvest gains. Time is the most powerful lever.
Historical averages: stocks ~7%, bonds ~3%, cash ~0–2%. A balanced portfolio often uses 5–7%. Be conservative for short horizons.
Yes — $1M in 30 years won't have today's purchasing power. Use the inflation field above to see your target in today's dollars.
Yes — it uses the standard future-value-of-an-annuity formula. Actual returns vary, so treat results as a long-term projection.
Yes. Set the target to your retirement nest egg (e.g. 25× annual expenses) and the time period to years until retirement.
Automate even small amounts ($25–$50/month), use a high-yield savings account, cancel unused subscriptions, and apply every windfall (tax refund, bonus) directly to savings. Consistency beats amount over time.
For goals under 2–3 years, keep it in cash or a HYSA — the stock market is too volatile. For longer goals (5+ years), a diversified portfolio usually outperforms cash thanks to compounding.
Disclaimer: Estimates only — not financial advice. See how our calculators work for the formulas and assumptions used. Investment returns vary and are not guaranteed — consult a qualified financial advisor for personal guidance.