Time & compounding
Invested money earns returns, and those returns earn more. Decades of compounding can outweigh the size of contributions.
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Foundation 05
Turn vague retirement hopes into concrete numbers, the right accounts, and a few simple next steps you can start now.
Retirement can feel too far away to plan for — which is exactly why so many families arrive unprepared. The good news: time is the most powerful tool you have, and starting early beats starting big.
Overview
Most people do not avoid retirement planning because they do not care. They avoid it because it feels abstract and overwhelming. The fix is to make it concrete: a rough number, the right account, and an automatic contribution.
Thanks to compounding, money invested earlier can grow dramatically more than money invested later. That is why the single most valuable retirement move is usually to start — even small — as soon as possible.
The essentials
Invested money earns returns, and those returns earn more. Decades of compounding can outweigh the size of contributions.
Retirement accounts offer tax benefits designed to reward long-term saving. Using them is often the most efficient path.
When an employer matches contributions, that is added money for your future. Leaving it unclaimed is leaving pay behind.
A rough estimate of what you will need turns a vague worry into a target you can plan toward.
Put it into practice
Make a rough estimate of the annual income you will want in retirement, then work backward from there.
If your employer offers a match, contribute at least enough to receive all of it. It is the easiest return available.
Set retirement saving to happen automatically each paycheck so it never depends on willpower.
Understand the difference between pre-tax and after-tax retirement saving and pick what fits your situation.
Raise your contribution by a small amount annually — often you will not feel it, but the long-term effect is large.
Watch out for
Questions
Yes. While time helps most, contributing consistently and capturing any employer match still makes a meaningful difference. The best time to start is now.
Start with at least enough to get any employer match, then work toward saving a growing share of income over time. Increasing gradually is easier than it sounds.
It depends on your current and expected future tax situation. A workshop explains the trade-offs so you can choose with confidence.
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