Type 'how much should I have saved by 30' into Google and you'll find articles telling you to have six months' salary banked, a full emergency fund, and a growing pension pot. Then you check your account and feel terrible. The reality is that most people in the UK don't have huge savings — and comparing yourself to idealised targets can be paralysing. This guide gives you honest benchmarks based on actual UK data, realistic targets to aim for, and practical steps if you're behind. Track your progress towards your savings goals with the SYM app.
The Reality of UK Savings
Let's start with the truth: around a third of UK adults have less than £1,000 in savings, and 1 in 5 have no savings at all. The median savings for a UK household is around £12,500 — but that's skewed heavily by age, location, and income. If you're in your 20s or 30s and don't have thousands saved, you're in the majority, not the minority. The cost of living crisis, student loans, high rents, and stagnant wages have made saving genuinely difficult for younger generations. So stop beating yourself up and focus on what you can do from here.
Savings Benchmarks by Age
These are realistic targets based on UK income data and living costs — not fantasy numbers. They represent comfortable goals to work towards, not minimum requirements.
- •Age 20-25: £500-£1,000 emergency buffer. If you're a student or just starting work, even this is an achievement. Focus on building the habit.
- •Age 25-30: £2,000-£5,000 in savings plus an active workplace pension. Your emergency fund should cover 1-2 months of essential expenses.
- •Age 30-35: £5,000-£15,000 in savings. 3 months' expenses in your emergency fund. Pension growing through employer contributions.
- •Age 35-40: £15,000-£30,000 total savings. Consider ISAs for tax efficiency. Pension should be roughly 1x your annual salary.
- •Age 40-50: £30,000-£75,000 in savings and investments. Pension at 2-3x annual salary. Diversified between cash and investments.
- •Age 50-60: £75,000-£150,000+. Pension at 4-6x annual salary. Clear plan for retirement income.
Why These Numbers Vary Massively
A 30-year-old software engineer in Manchester with no kids is in a completely different position to a 30-year-old single parent in London. Your savings capacity depends on your income, where you live (London rents alone can eat 50% of take-home pay), whether you have dependents, any debts you're carrying, and whether you had financial support growing up. Anyone who gives you a single number without acknowledging these factors is oversimplifying. Use the benchmarks as direction, not judgement.
If You're Behind: The Catch-Up Plan
Behind on savings? You're not alone, and it's never too late to start. The first step is always the same: build a £1,000 emergency buffer. This single milestone transforms your financial resilience. After that, automate a regular savings amount — even £50 a month is £600 a year. Increase it by £10-20 every time you get a pay rise. Use a savings challenge through the SYM app to build momentum. The compound effect of consistent saving is powerful: £100/month at 5% interest becomes £15,500 in 10 years. Starting late beats never starting.
- •Week 1: Open a separate savings account (not linked to your debit card)
- •Week 2: Set up a standing order for payday — even £25/month
- •Month 1: Build towards a £1,000 emergency buffer
- •Month 3: Review your spending for easy cuts (subscriptions, insurance renewals)
- •Month 6: Increase your monthly savings by £10-25
- •Year 1: Reassess and set your next milestone
Don't Forget Your Pension
When people think about savings, they often forget their pension — but it's likely to become your single biggest financial asset. If you're auto-enrolled, your employer is adding money on top of your contributions, and the government adds tax relief too. A basic-rate taxpayer saving £80 actually gets £100 in their pension. Check your pension balance and projected retirement income on your provider's website or app. If you're over 30 and have changed jobs several times, you might have multiple small pension pots worth consolidating. The government's Pension Tracing Service can help you find lost pensions.
Progress Over Perfection
The worst thing these 'savings by age' articles do is make people feel so far behind that they give up. Don't fall into that trap. If you saved £1 more this month than last month, you're moving in the right direction. If you opened a savings account for the first time, that's a win. Financial security is built one decision at a time — not by hitting an arbitrary benchmark someone posted on Instagram. Use the SYM app to set your own personal milestones, celebrate each one, and keep building. Where you start matters far less than the fact that you started.
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