How Much Should I Save?

What The Research Says

  • Savings at a rate of 12% gives you about a 90% probability of being able to retire in 40 years with about 40% of your income. Saving at a 18% rate gives a very similar probability of being able to retire with about 60% of your income.
  • To determine your ideal savings rate multiple percentage of your income you want to retire with by 30% and give yourself a 40 year time horizon.
  • There is a complex relationship between savings, wealth and happiness. Happiness seems to drive savings behavior and additional wealth (up to a level) seems to drive additional happiness (especially if that wealth is spent altruistically or own experience-based goods). Ultimately higher savings rates and their associated wealth will have a positive benefit on happiness.
  • While it is hard to draw direct causal relationships, there is evidence that having higher income at retirement leads to better health outcomes and ultimately longer life.

References

The Choices

Limited (<12% of Income) – What with the kids ballet lessons, private school tuition, and your out of control personal and household expenses you find it difficult to set aside anything on a consistent basis.

Score: +1 Risk

Retirement Focused (Between 12% and 18% of Income) – A penny saved is a penny earned, as long as you save those pennies for 40 years at a market rate of return with limited tax exposure.

Score: -1 Risk, +1 Health

Rapid (>18% of Income) – You might be living on lentils, and sleeping inside a closet that your buddy loans out to you for $15 a month, but you will retire at 40 damn it.

Score: -1 Risk, +1 Health, +1 Wealth, +1 Happiness

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