The 'correct' amount to save each month varies dramatically depending on your income, expenses, debts, goals, and stage of life. The popular 20% rule is a useful starting point, but for many UK households it's simply not achievable — at least not yet. This guide gives you realistic, income-adjusted targets and a priority framework to ensure you're saving the right things in the right order.
The 20% Rule: Starting Point, Not Gospel
- •20% of take-home pay: the ideal target
- •Average UK take-home (£35k salary): ~£2,400/month → £480/month savings
- •Include pension contributions in your 20%
- •If 20% isn't possible yet, start with 5% and increase by 1–2% each year
- •Even £25/month is far better than £0
Savings Targets by Income Level
- •Under £20k salary: aim for 3–5% (£30–£50/month) — any saving is progress
- •£20k–£30k salary: aim for 5–10% (£65–£150/month)
- •£30k–£50k salary: aim for 10–20% (£200–£450/month)
- •£50k+ salary: aim for 20%+ (£500+/month)
- •Remember: employer pension contribution counts towards your savings rate
Savings Priority Order
- •1. Employer pension match (free money — always do this first)
- •2. £1,000 emergency buffer
- •3. Clear high-interest debt
- •4. Full emergency fund (3–6 months expenses)
- •5. ISA contributions
- •6. Additional pension contributions
- •7. Other investments
How to Find More Money to Save
- •Track spending for one month — most people find £100–£300 in savings
- •Automate savings on payday — you spend what's left, not what you save
- •Salary sacrifice pension: reduces NI too (more efficient than saving from take-home)
- •Side hustle income: even £200/month extra can transform savings rate
- •Annual pay rise: commit to saving at least 50% of every increase
Should I count pension contributions towards my savings rate?+
Yes. Your total workplace pension contribution (your contribution plus employer match) counts towards your savings rate. Many people are already saving 10–15% when pension is included.
Is it better to save a small amount consistently or wait until I can save more?+
Always start now, even with a tiny amount. The habit of saving, the compound interest even on small amounts, and the psychological foundation all matter. Waiting until you can save 'properly' often means never starting.
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