Retirement savings works differently at each stage of the savings journey. Here is how to approach it throughout.
Retirement Savings as a Journey Component
Retirement savings is not separate from the savings roadmap — it is one of its most important components. The timing of when retirement savings begins, the consistency with which it continues, and the choices made at each stage collectively determine a financial outcome that will be lived for 20 to 30 years. Understanding the retirement savings journey at each stage is essential for the roadmap to include this destination.
The First Job Rule
The most important retirement savings rule is simple: start at your first real job. Enroll in the 401(k) or equivalent immediately. Contribute at least enough to capture the full employer match. Do not wait until you feel financially stable — that stability often comes later than expected, and the cost of waiting (in compound growth missed) is very high. The contribution can be small; what matters is starting.
The Roth vs. Traditional Decision
Both Roth and traditional retirement accounts are better than no retirement account. The choice between them depends primarily on your current tax rate versus your expected retirement tax rate. If you expect to be in a lower tax bracket in retirement (common for high earners), traditional (pre-tax) contributions are advantageous. If you expect to be in a similar or higher bracket (common for younger workers early in career), Roth contributions are advantageous. When uncertain, splitting contributions between both is a reasonable approach.
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