At 35, the key numbers are time, not a magic balance. You have roughly 30 years until age 65, about 40 years until Required Minimum Distributions begin at age 75, and a Social Security full retirement age of 67. Rather than chase a one-size benchmark, project your own numbers below.
Project your retirement at 35
Sustainable income at 4%: —/yr (—/mo) over — years of growth.
Educational estimate; assumes level annual contributions and a constant return. Real markets vary — model the full range with Monte Carlo below.
What 30 years of compounding does
The most valuable thing a 35-year-old has is time. At an illustrative 7% annual return, $50,000 invested today would grow to about $380,613 by age 65 on its own, before any new contributions. The cost of waiting is real:
| If you start... | Years to 65 | $10,000 becomes |
|---|---|---|
| Start at age 35 | 30 yrs | $76,123 |
| Start at age 40 | 25 yrs | $54,274 |
| Start at age 45 | 20 yrs | $38,697 |
Time is your biggest asset
At 35, decades of compounding do most of the heavy lifting — every dollar invested now has the longest possible runway. A higher stock allocation is usually appropriate because you have time to ride out market downturns, and contributions made today matter far more than the same dollars added later. Prioritising tax-advantaged accounts (and Roth contributions while you may be in a lower bracket) compounds the advantage.
- Maximise the long runway: a dollar invested now compounds for roughly 30 years before a traditional retirement age.
- A growth-tilted allocation has time to recover from downturns.
- Roth contributions now lock in today’s tax rate on decades of future growth.
See the full range, not one average
This page uses a single average return. Real retirements depend on the order of returns. Run 10,000 Monte Carlo paths free — no signup.
Run your full retirement plan →Retirement planning at other ages
Related: asset allocation by age · safe withdrawal rate · when your RMDs start.
FAQ
How much should I have saved for retirement at 35?
There is no single right number, because it depends on your target retirement age, spending, and other income like Social Security or a pension. A more useful approach than a one-size benchmark is to project forward: at 35 you have about 30 years until a traditional retirement age of 65, so even moderate contributions have meaningful time to compound. Use the calculator on this page to turn your actual balance and savings rate into a projected nest egg and a sustainable income estimate.
How many years until I can retire if I'm 35?
If you aim to retire at 65, you have roughly 30 years left to save and invest. Retiring earlier shortens the compounding window and lengthens the drawdown, so it requires a larger balance; retiring later does the opposite. The projection tool above lets you change the retirement age and see the effect immediately.
When will I have to take Required Minimum Distributions?
Under SECURE 2.0, someone born in 1991 has an RMD start age of 75, which is about 40 years away from age 35. RMDs force taxable withdrawals from traditional accounts, so the years between retirement and your RMD start age are often the best window for Roth conversions.
What is my Social Security full retirement age?
For someone born in 1991, Social Security's full retirement age is 67. Claiming earlier permanently reduces your monthly benefit; delaying past full retirement age increases it until age 70. Your full retirement age is separate from when you choose to stop working.
Does starting to save at 35 make a difference?
Yes — because of compounding, the number of years invested matters as much as the amount. At a 7% illustrative return, a dollar invested at 35 grows by a factor of about 7.6x by age 65. Waiting even five years measurably shrinks the result, which is why starting now generally beats waiting for a "better" time.
Figures are illustrative projections at a 7% assumed return and pure age arithmetic (years to retirement, RMD start age under SECURE 2.0, and Social Security full retirement age). Your real outcome depends on markets, contributions, and taxes. Educational only, not financial advice.