How To Invest at Every Age (2024)

Most retirement experts and financial planners recommend you save at least 10% of your annual income for retirement. But how you save and invest in the decades before you leave your nine-to-five job impacts how you’ll spend your post-work years. It’s important to know that the asset allocation strategy you use in your 20s and 30s won’t work when you’re close to (or in) retirement. Here’s how to invest at every age to reach your retirement goals.

Key Takeaways

  • Investing for retirement is important at any age, but the same strategy should not be used for every stage of your life.
  • Those who are younger can tolerate more risk, but they often have less income to invest.
  • Those who near retirement may have more money to invest, but less time to recover from any losses.
  • Asset allocation by age plays an important role in building a sound retirement investing strategy.

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Asset Allocation

Before considering how to invest during the different stages of your life, it's helpful to understand the concept of asset allocation. When it comes to investing, there are numerous asset classes—or, to put it simply, investment "categories." The three main asset classes are:

  • Stocks (equities)
  • Bonds (fixed-income securities)
  • Cash and cash equivalents

Other asset classes include:

  • Commodities
  • Real estate
  • Futures and other derivatives

Each asset class has a different level of risk and reward—returns, as they're usually called. As such, each class behaves differently over time, depending on what's happening in the overall economy and other factors.

For example, when the economy is booming, investors are confident. They take money out of the bond market and move it into stocks, where the earnings potential is much higher.

Similarly, when the economy cools, investors are less confident. They take money out of stocks—which now seem too risky—and seek the safe haven of the bond market. Generally speaking, stocks and bonds are negatively correlated but during the financial crisis, that wasn't the case. Still, for the most part, bonds help level out stock market volatility.

Here's why that's important. If you put all your money into one asset class (i.e., all your eggs in one basket), and that class tanks, you have no hedge to protect your capital. Investing in a variety of asset classes provides diversification in your portfolio. That diversification keeps you from losing all your money if one asset class goes south. How you arrange the assets in your portfolio is called asset allocation. Depending on your age and the number of years you have until you retire, the recommended asset allocation looks very different.

Asset Allocation by Age

Here's a look at asset allocation through life's various stages. Of course, these are general recommendations that can't take into consideration your specific circ*mstances or risk profile. Some investors are comfortable with a more aggressive investment approach, while others value stability above all else—or have life situations that call for extra caution, such as a child with disabilities.

A trusted financial advisor can help you figure out your risk profile. Alternatively, many online brokers have risk profile "calculators" and questionnaires that can determine if your investing style is conservative or aggressive—or somewhere in between.

At any age, you should first gather at least six to 12 months' worth of living expenses in a readily accessible place, such as a savings account, money market account, or liquid CD.

Beginning Retirement Planning: Your 20s

Sample Asset Allocation:

  • Stocks: 80% to 90%
  • Bonds: 10% to 20%

Even though you may have recently graduated from collegeand are likely still paying off student loans, use this time to start investing. Whether it’s in a company 401(k) or an individual retirement account (IRA) you set up yourself, invest what you can as a 20-something,even if you can’t contribute the 10% recommended amount.

The Internal Revenue Service (IRS) has established an annual contribution limit for both traditional IRAs and Roth IRAs, which is $6,500 in total per year for 2023 and $7,000 for 2024.For 401(k)s, the maximum amount that you can contribute each year is $22,500 in 2023 and $23,000 in 2024. Some 401(k) plans offermatching contributionsfrom the employer, which means they'll contribute up to a certain percentage of your salary to your 401(k).

You have the biggest advantage over everyone by investing right now: time. Because of compound interest, what you invest during this decade has the greatest possible growth. Since you have more time to absorb changes in the market, you can focus on more aggressive growth stocks and avoid slow-growing assets like bonds.

Career-Focused: Your 30s

Sample Asset Allocation:

  • Stocks: 70% to 80%
  • Bonds: 20% to 30%

If you put off investing in your 20s due to paying off student loans or the fits and starts of establishing your career, your30s arewhen you need to start putting money away. You’re still young enough to reap the rewards of compound interest, but old enough to be investing 10% to 15% of your income.

Even if you’re now paying for a mortgage or starting a family, contributing to your retirement should be a top priority. You still have 30 to 40 active working years left, so this is when you need to maximize that contribution. Make sure to put in enough to get the company match in your 401(k) and consider maxing it out if you can. And max out your IRAs, too, while you're at it.

You can still afford some risk, but it may be time to start adding bonds to the mix to have some safety.

Retirement-Minded: Your40s

Sample Asset Allocation:

  • Stocks: 60% to 70%
  • Bonds: 30% to 40%

If you’ve procrastinated saving for retirement until your 40s—or if you were in a low-paying career and switched to something more lucrative—now is the time to buckle down and get serious. If you're already on track, use this time to do serious portfolio building. You’re at the midpoint of your career, and you're probably approaching your peak earning potential.

Even if you’re saving for your kids’ college funds or continuing to pay your mortgage, retirement savings should be at the forefront of every financial decision. You have enough time to play catch up if you’re careful, but not enough time to mess around. Meet with a financial advisor if you’re not sure about which funds to choose. You’ll need to save in aggressive assets like stocks to give your funds the best chance to beat inflation, which is the pace of rising prices in the economy.

However, "aggressive" doesn't mean "careless." Stick with investments that have a track record of producing returns and avoid deals that are "too good to be true." And continue to max out contributions to your 401(k) and IRAs.

Order your copy of the print edition of Investopedia's Retirement Guide for more assistance in building the best plan for your retirement.

Almost Retirement: Your 50s and 60s

Sample Asset Allocation:

  • Stocks: 50% to 60%
  • Bonds: 40% to 50%

Since you’re getting closer to retirement age, now is not the time to lose focus. If you spent your younger years putting money in the latest hot stocks, you need to be more conservative the closer you get to actually needing your retirement savings.

Switching some of your investments to more stable, low-earning funds like bonds and money markets can be a good choice if you don’t want to risk having all your money on the table. Now is also the time to take note of what you have and start thinking about when might be a good time for you to actually retire. Getting professional advice can be a good step to feeling secure in choosing the right time to walk away.

Another approach is to play catch-up by socking more money away. The IRS allows people approaching retirement to put more of their income into investment accounts. Workers who are 50 and older can contribute an additional $7,500 per year to a 401(k)—called a catch-up contribution—for 2023 and $7,500 for 2024. In other words, those aged 50 and over can add a total of $30,000 to their 401(k) or ($22,500 + $7,500) in 2023 and $30,500 or ($23,000 + $7,500) in 2024. If you have a traditional or Roth IRA and you're aged 50 or older, the contribution limit is $7,500 for 2023 and $8,000 for 2024.

Retirement: 70s and 80s

Sample Asset Allocation:

  • Stocks: 30% to 50%
  • Bonds: 50% to 70%

You're likely retired by now—or will be very soon—so it's time to shift your focus from growth to income. Still, that doesn't mean you want to cash out all your stocks. Focus on stocks that provide dividend income and add to your bond holdings.

At this stage, you'll probably collect Social Security retirement benefits, a company pension (if you have one), and in the year you turn 73 (for those born between 1951 and 1959) or 75 (for those born in 1960 or later), you'll probably start taking required minimum distributions (RMD) from your retirement accounts.

Make sure you take those RMDs on time—there's a 25% penalty on any amount that you should have withdrawn but didn't. If you have a Roth IRA, you don't have to take RMDs, so you can leave the account to grow for your heirs if you don't need the money.

Should you still be working, by the way, you won't owe RMDs on the 401(k) you have at the company where you're employed. And you can still contribute to an IRA (even if it's a traditional one, thanks to the SECURE Act that was passed in late 2019) if you have eligible earned income that doesn't exceed the IRS income thresholds.

The Bottom Line

A Chinese proverb says: “The best time to plant a tree was 20 years ago. The second-best time is now.”

That attitude is at the heart of investing. No matter how old you are, the best time to start investing was a while ago. But it's never too late to do something.

Just make sure the decisions you make are the right ones for your age—your investment approach should age with you.It's also a good idea to meet with a qualified financial professional who can tell you where you stand and where you need to go.

How To Invest at Every Age (2024)
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