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Here's The Difference Between Someone Who Starts Saving At 25 Vs. Someone Who Starts At 35

If you want to have a comfortable retirement, it is very important to begin saving early. It's a point that can't be reiterated enough.

Here is another example why.

Consider two hypothetical savers, Emily and Dave. Emily puts $200 per month into a retirement account with an estimated 6% rate of return starting at 25. Dave starts saving $200 per month at 35, just 10 years after Emily.

Both continue to add $200 each month until they retire at 65.

By the time they are 65, Emily has contributed $96,000, while Dave has contributed $72,000.

Here's the trajectory of both of those accounts:

saving at 25 vs saving at 35 continued saving prettier
saving at 25 vs saving at 35 continued saving prettier

Business Insider/Andy Kiersz

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Emily started saving just 10 years earlier and put in only about 33% more money into her account than Dave put in his.

But by the time they are both ready to retire, Emily has almost twice as much as Dave — Emily has $402,492, and Dave has $203,118.

That extra 10 years of compounding returns has made Emily's situation far better than Dave's when they are 65.



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