BiggerPockets Money Podcast - Average Net Worth by Age (How Do You Compare?)
Episode Date: December 3, 2024Are you beating the average American in personal finances? Today, we’re sharing the average net worth by age to see where exactly you stack up. Whether you’re in your twenties, thirties, forties, ...or fifties, we have the data showing whether you’re behind (or ahead of) the norm. What do you do if you feel like you’re falling behind? Don’t worry; we’re also giving tips on how every age bracket can improve its net worth. Don’t know how to calculate your net worth? It’s easy, and you can do it in minutes after (or even during) this episode. Once you know your net worth, it’s time to decide your next move. Do you need to make more money so you can invest faster? Are you close enough to FIRE that you can let your foot off the gas a bit? Should you buy that new boat? No! Don’t ever buy a boat. We’re also sharing our own net worth journeys and the money moves we made that skyrocketed our wealth to millionaire status. You can’t go back in time and copy everything we did, but you CAN copy some of our same strategies to boost your net worth! In This Episode We Cover The average net worth for Americans in their twenties, thirties, forties, and fifties How the rich invest differently than most of us (and what they’re buying) How to calculate your net worth and whether primary residence equity is included or not What everyone in their twenties should be doing with their money to secure a comfortable retirement Why you DON’T need to be a mega-high income earner to become a millionaire The reason Scott thinks YOU should be starting a business to FIRE faster And So Much More! Links BiggerPockets Money 35 - Hacking Your Life to Live for (Almost) Free with Craig Curelop BiggerPockets Money 416 - Codie Sanchez: These “Boring Businesses” Will Make You Rich BiggerPockets Money 491 - Why You DON’T Need a College Degree to Reach Financial Freedom w/Adrian Zapata and Javier Leyva Visual Capitalist Composition of Wealth Check out more resources from this show on BiggerPockets.com and https://www.biggerpockets.com/blog/money-586 Interested in learning more about today’s sponsors or becoming a BiggerPockets partner yourself? Email advertise@biggerpockets.com Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Have you ever thought about how your household wealth or annual income stacks up to others your age?
Or even how others made their first million dollars?
Today we're talking about net worth, what it is, how to calculate it, and what a healthy net worth looks like in your 20s, 30s, 40s, and beyond.
Hello, hello, hello, and welcome to the Bigger Pockets Money podcast.
My name is Mindy Jensen.
And with me, as always, is my plaid fanatic co-host, Scott Trench.
Thanks, Minnie.
It's great to see this wonderful pattern.
we've established with our Bigger Pockets money.
Bigger Pockets has a goal of creating one million millionaires.
You are in the right place if you want to get your financial house in order because
we truly believe financial freedom is attainable for everyone, no matter when or where
you're starting.
Excited to get into the show today.
We're going to talk data.
We're going to look at the average median and top 1% wealth by age bracket.
What's the top 1% wealth in your 20s, 30s, 40s, 50s, and 60s and get into it.
And we'll have some discussion about how people get there.
into these upper echelons and accelerate the wealth-building journey.
Funny you should say that, Scott.
I just asked, do you ever wonder how others made their first million?
So I'm going to put you on the spot.
How did you make your first million?
Yeah, mine was a, look, there's a couple of things that accelerated my journey.
So I started my journey in 2014, and I started out by making $50,000 a year.
And over the next five years, I was able to increase that income to close to $200,000 per year.
I kept my expenses low the whole time. And I serial house hacked. I invested into the stock market. And that compounding over about five, six years enabled me to cross the million dollar mark shortly before 30, probably 28, 29.
So I had a bit of a different journey. You had the benefit of Mr. Money Mustache when you were starting your journey. I did not. I will say that our journey probably started in 2002 when we got,
married and we got to our first million just before Carl turned 40 and I don't even know what
year that was.
It's been a minute.
Ten years ago, 11 years ago.
So it took us a little bit longer, but we also weren't really focused on it either.
We were saving for the future, but we didn't really know what we were saving for.
So we weren't saving as aggressively as we could be.
We were investing rather aggressive.
but in not the same type of aggressive investing as a typical fire adherent would.
We got there through a combination of spending significantly less than we earned.
Carl was a high-income earner being a computer programmer.
I was not a high-income earner.
Let's just say that.
I funded our 401ks.
But we spent approximately my salary and saved approximately his salary.
And we did it through a combination of live in flipping and taking the proceeds from that,
rolling them over to a 20% down payment on our next house and putting the rest in the stock
market.
And we just kept compounding that.
And our first million came 11 years ago.
And it has doubled and doubled again since then.
You know, I like your journey a lot better than mine in a lot of ways because it's, you know,
like think about the luck that was in my journey, right?
I joined a startup as the then third employee and took over as CEO, which allowed me to drastically skyrocket my income.
I bought a bunch of rental properties starting in 2014, leading up through 2020, 2021, 2022 around that, and a ride of appreciation.
And even the stock market was a big tail over that same time period for all the index funds that I was putting in.
Like everything that could have gone right for me at the highest level, the most meaningful things, went right.
And so there's a good bit of like, okay, how do, you know, I want to be cautious about those things.
There are some good plays in there, but there's also a tremendous amount of luck on that front.
And there's always different ways to think about how that career could have gone in some of those.
So I don't know, like your journey is much more repeatable, I think, than the one I've been on.
Maybe I'd actually like to kick off something here that wasn't even on our little agenda here with a quick, with a quick preview.
This is a site I like a lot is called a visual capitalist.com.
It's just got some fun stuff to show there.
And this is a chart that I think really made a difference to me.
This is an outdated chart now.
It's a couple years old.
It was 2017.
But I remember looking at this as I was doing my portfolio planning and thinking like, huh,
this is really interesting.
And for those listening on the podcast, don't worry, I will just stare at a chart and tell
you this is interesting and leave you to wonder.
Look, this is a composition of wealth diagram.
And it shows how the middle class invest their assets and how the ultra-rich
invest their assets and then it throws in this upper income group in the middle.
And, you know, the middle class is defined as zero to 500K and the ultra rich is defined as 10 million
plus in net worth.
And the most striking difference here is that the middle class, most of their net worth,
62% is in their primary residence.
And for the ultra rich, the vast majority of their wealth or about half of their wealth is
in businesses, business equity and real estate.
state that is not their primary residence, and then stock, securities, mutual funds, and trusts.
And guess what? The people between $500,000 and $10 million are right in the middle.
They have about a quarter of their wealth in their primary residence and a quarter in businesses
or other real estate. But this is what this is this really struck a chord with me, you know,
years and years ago when I saw this and really kind of put me in this high conviction place.
Like if you want to get into these upper echelons of wealth, you can't hold all your wealth back
in your primary residence. You have to be developing a business or real estate equity over time.
It compounds and compounds and compounds. And this is going to be the big difference. Like if there's
one chart that shows how your capital should be deployed, that's going to give you a chance
at least to get into these upper echelons, it's this one and showing that wealth is built,
or the wealthy, at least, have built their wealth in businesses, private businesses,
real estate and stocks, all the things that we talk about all day.
along here on bigger pockets money. And this is not a guess, right? This is based on data.
This is based on data. Now, it's a little dated. I haven't found an updated one that really does
this good a job at diving into the wealth of Americans on this. So this is from 2017.
Possible, the mix has shifted, but come on, it hasn't shifted much. This story is still the
same in 2024. Another issue with the data that we're going to discuss even today is that
the Federal Reserve comes up with studies for American wealth every couple of years.
So the last major study on this was done in 2022 and 2023.
And the next one won't be done until 2026.
So that's a constant problem unless you're finding somebody who's doing original research,
very expensive, very large scale polling of Americans.
You're going to find wild variations.
If you get looked for like the updated net worth numbers in 2024, 2025.
So we're going to be taking a little bit of a look back.
So there's always a little bit of a lag on these things.
But I still think this story is the one that really should strike a chord with folks
who are watching this on YouTube,
be listening on the podcast. Wealth is built by an ultra-rich in real estate, private businesses,
and stocks. That is fascinating. I've never seen that before, and I'm glad you shared that with us,
Scott. All right, let's start off and define what we're talking about. What does net worth mean?
Simply put, your net worth is the difference between what you owe and what you own. So the formula
is really straightforward. Your net worth equals your total assets minus your total liability.
So your house is worth a million dollars, but you have a $500,000 mortgage on it.
That's $500,000 in net worth, not a million dollars in net worth.
And speaking of house, Scott, does my house count in my net worth?
Some people say yes and some people say no.
I want to know what you think.
I think this is an age-old argument.
And the answer is, of course, yes, home equity counts technically towards net worth.
But in many cases in bigger pockets money, we talk about how the primary residence
leads to this middle-class trap.
If most of your wealth is in your primary residence,
you probably aren't going to join the upper echelons
of wealth creation in America,
unless you've got something else going on like a business cooking,
because that primary residence is not really an asset
that is going to be inflating your wealth over the long term.
It's more, I believe a primary resident should be thought of as an expense.
And when you're thinking about retiring and how your portfolio
can lead to early financial,
independence, I think you should generally default to excluding your primary residence from your
net worth equation. And a lot of research agrees with that. That's why the research that we're
going to look at today has two snapshots of your net worth, one with your primary residence
and one without a primary residence. And it presents both datasets because of that dynamic.
We need to take a quick break. But while we're away, we want to hear from you. Do you know
what your net worth is? Answer on the Spotify app or below on YouTube.
We'll be right back.
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I get what you're saying.
but in a pinch, if I needed to access funds, I could sell my house.
Yeah, I'd have to find someplace else to live.
I would probably go rent or buy another house.
That also presents an interesting problem, though.
My house right now is probably worth $750,000, and I paid $365 for it.
There's a significant delta.
I value it lower, like on the conservative.
side when I am calculating my net worth and I only calculate the home equity in the property,
not the entire 750, but I care.
I don't do that meth quickly, but whatever the difference is.
That is my, I add that to my net worth.
But yeah, that does create a middle class trap if I didn't have other investments because,
oh, look, I've got $400,000 in net worth, but it's all tied up in my house, especially now
where we're in this higher interest rate environment.
My mortgage payment is $1,300 a month.
So if I were to sell this house and go find another house, if I took on a mortgage,
I'm going to be taking on a significantly higher monthly expense every month, which I think
this is a different kind of trap.
The home equity trap or the home, the primary home trap where you've got the interest
rate trap.
We need to come up with some clever name for this.
The lock in effect.
The lock in effect.
Oh, well, that's, I guess there's a name for it then.
The lock in effect.
I am a little bit beholden to the lock-in effect, not because I couldn't afford the other
more expensive property.
I just don't want to pay more.
I like my house.
Yeah.
I mean, this is a problem that millions of Americans are grappling with.
And, you know, if the way I like to frame the debate about whether you should include
or not include your home equity in the net worth calculation as it relates to financial
freedom is what your intent is with the house.
Like, if that's your forever home and you don't plan on selling it,
And your clan is to retire in your home, don't count your home equity towards your net worth.
It's not going to produce any cash flow there.
You can use a paid off home or whatever to defray the expense.
Like if you have no mortgage payment, you don't have to build a portfolio capable of generating cash to cover the mortgage payment.
There are advantages to having home equity.
You're paying off a house.
But I just wouldn't include it.
You need to build up an asset base outside of it.
And if you look at your net worth strictly that way, I think you're going to make a lot better decisions.
that give you better financial flexibility than if you overweight the value of your home
relative to your freedom, your ability to stop working for a paycheck.
That's an interesting take. I like the way that you are framing that.
So, Scott, I know that you have rental properties and a primary residence.
Do you include your rental property equity in your net worth but not your primary residence
equity?
I do now because I never had a primary residence until now, right?
because this is the first year I've had what. I've always had house hack investment properties.
I think the word intent is really important. I bought a duplex as a house hack intending to keep it as a
rental property. I'd absolutely include a rental property at my P&L and I would sell the rental
property if I thought there was a better investment alternative. The purpose of the house hack was
to create an investment property that was part of my long term, my investment pool. It was never
intended to be my long term house. And so I do think it's fair to include a house hack or if you're in the
process of a live-in flip, the equity in those because the intent is different than to reside in the
house for the long term. Just be realistic with yourself. Is your house an asset? Is it part of your
investment portfolio and you intend to generate income from it? Or is it not? And treat it accordingly.
But it's an art, right? It's technically part of your net worth. So that's the debate I have.
You know what? This is a great question to ask our audience. So do you think your net worth should
include your home equity or not? Please leave an answer below on our
YouTube channel if you're watching this on YouTube. So, Scott, do you think people are getting anything
else wrong when they're calculating their net worth? You know, I think, you know, I don't include any
personal effects, for example, my net worth. Some people do around that. I think that if you're
listening to Bigger Pockets Money and you use an app like Monarch or something like that, you're probably
going to get pretty close to computing your net worth. Vehicles, you know, you can, you know, I wouldn't
necessarily include, you can, but I think it's kind of the same dilemma as the house.
It's a depreciating asset. It's not really part of the investment portfolio. And the vehicle,
unless you're putting on Turo or doing something crazy like that, delivering for Uber,
is not really going to put cash in your pocket. So I think I would exclude those as well on there.
So, you know, I wouldn't include a boat, you know, or certain other things, like things that
are not going to put money in your pocket that are toys, you know, or vehicles. I wouldn't include
the net worth statement. I'd really be strict when I'm thinking about my real net worth, the
net worth that's going to help me move toward financial freedom and only including assets that
expected to appreciate and value and or produce cash flow. And I think you're going to, again,
make much better financial decisions if you treat your net worth that way and treat the
the boat or the cars as the, you know, the depreciating assets or the toys that they probably are.
I asked in our Facebook group, what do you include in your net worth? And I see people, a lot of people
saying cars. I saw
a woman named
Melanie said everything except cars.
Everything except
cars, jewelry, and household goods.
So
somebody else says just equity
positions. There's all sorts of different
answers and I think it's really interesting how
people answered
when smart Alex said,
Beity Babies, Pokemon's.
One thing that I do think is going to be interesting outside of these
categories, though, is business assets.
A lot of the ultra-wealthy,
the top 1% by net worth are going to have private business interests. And I bet you that the numbers
we're going to look at today for the top 1% are way understated. Because if you have a private
business, you're probably not valuing it on your personal balance sheet at a super high or
inflated level. When would you suggest somebody start tracking their net worth? Immediately.
You should have just started talking it yesterday. The best time is 20 years ago. The next best time is
today. If you're listening to Bigger Pockets money and you don't track your net worth,
you know, this is not the episode for you. You should go and start doing that. You go back.
We have several episodes on how to do this. That should be your immediate practice right now because
there's no point in trying to play the games you can't even keep score. Oh, wow. Okay. Well,
you can email him, Scott at BiggerPockets.com. Okay. Scott, what do you think is the minimum
net worth to be considered rich? Oh, one million dollars. I think FIRE is the number. And I'm
to put that number between 1.5 for a low cost living area and 2.5 to a medium to high-ish
cost of living area. For ultra-high-cost living areas, a number goes up from there. But I think
it's 1.5 to 2.5 million is the baseline number to be rich. At that point, you can fire
modestly or earning a middle, upper middle class job plus the asset base, you can have, you can do
anything you want, but you can't do everything you want. What's your answer to that, Mindy?
I was joking and quoting Austin Powers when I said $1 million, but that's where I am at right now is,
if you have a million dollars, you're a millionaire and millionaires are rich.
And just because you have a million dollars doesn't mean that you're going to be able to retire.
But I, you know, I'm a little older than you and I'm kind of stuck in the past where going from
9, 9, 9, 9, 9, 9 to a million is a big deal.
So I consider a million dollars to be rich.
I think a million dollars is a great answer to it.
I bet you I wonder what the audience feels like is rich to them.
Yeah.
As we're going through this episode, I would love to hear your thoughts to all of these questions.
So hit me below email Mindy at BiggerPockets.com.
Email Scott at BiggerPockets.com or hop over to our Facebook group, Facebook.com
slash groups slash BP money.
Let's talk about benchmarks here, Mindy.
what are the well there's like no real rules to this we are going to show data sets that have these
these numbers on there how do you feel about us even talking about benchmarks for wealth creation
i love benchmarks i love having a goal to work towards because when you don't it's really easy
for dollars to slip out of your pocket here and there oh i whatever i don't have to worry about
you know buying that coffee or going out to dinner buying beer for everybody at the bar or you know
whatever you're spending your money on.
What do you think about benchmarks?
I think that they're really good ideas for what's attainable,
what's possible in various brackets.
And some folks, I think, like me, need to have a little bit of competition in there,
see how we're doing against that kind of stuff.
That's why, like, you know, it's hard for me to just, like, run on my own,
but I love Pelotin, for example, because I can see, oh, I'm gone,
I'm out of shape.
I'm only in this percentile.
and I want to get into that percentile when I'm kicking butt.
I think that helps motivate certain types of folks.
I think this is a good data set for some folks.
And I think it can also be problematic for folks who that is demotivating to.
So it just depends on your personality when the tool is useful or not.
Yeah, that's true.
Although I think I'm a little more competitive than average.
And I would want to, like I would want to gamify it.
Oh, I'm supposed to have 3784.
I'm going to win.
I'm going to get 38.
I'm going to get 39.
I'm getting a 40.
$4,000. So a couple of things that that I think stick out about this, this data set here are,
and let's start with folks in their 20s. This is, this should be and is the most extreme
differences, right? Like a 20 year old in college probably doesn't have a lot of net worth and won't.
Maybe they worked in high school and saved up some cash or whatever, but you're looking at a
median of $31,000 in net worth. And a 29-year-old who has spent their 20s building a business
or going into some field like investment banking and is starting to begin approaching those higher
income levels, you know, that's where you can possibly get to this kind of $2 million net worth
by that point, probably through some sort of business or elite income generating activity like
a sports profession, big scale entertainment, or some of these highly lucrative
private equity or investment banking checks on there. So, you know, I don't know. What do you,
what do you observe about the 20, the distribution of wealth for 20-year-olds? People are in their 20s.
The 20-year-olds, more than any other one of these decades, in your 20s, you are starting off
either just having graduated high school or you're in college still versus by the end of your 20s,
10 whole years in your 20s is a very different time period than 10 whole year.
in your 30s or 40s or 50s, just because of the life changes that are happening in that decade.
So having a $2 million net worth as the top 1% versus the bottom 25% has $3,000 in net worth.
I can see, I would encourage anybody looking at these charts to keep your eyes on the bottom 25 and the bottom 75% because those are going to be,
Like between 3,000 and 130,000, I think is a more realistic ideal.
Not everybody is going to be an elite athlete.
In fact, very few people make it to the elite athlete tier.
And even fewer are Mark Zuckerberg starting Facebook in his 20s.
So, you know, I think that those, and he's not even 2 million.
He's like, what, 2 billion?
But between 3,000 and 130,000, that's a great benchmark.
That's a great goal.
I'm 21 years old.
I have a negative net worth. Okay, well, the bottom 25% actually has an average $3,000 net worth. So I would
like to do what I can to get myself out of debt as soon as possible so I can start building my
positive net worth. If you find yourself in debt and there are other options you can choose from
besides just taking your W2 money and throwing it at your debt, I would encourage you to do that.
start a business in your 20s because typically in your 20s, especially your early 20s,
you're not married, you don't have kids, you have a lot more flexibility in your time to put
into starting a business. If you need an idea of a business to start, go on YouTube and
look at literally every person there because there is something that you can do online or even
in person that is reflected on YouTube that will generate income.
All right. Stay tuned for more.
after our final break.
Tax season is one of the only times all year when most people actually look at their full
financial picture, including income, spending, savings, investments, the whole thing.
And if you're like most folks, it can be a little eye-opening.
That's why I like Monarch.
It helps you see exactly where your money is going, and more importantly, where your taxed
refund can make the biggest impact.
Because the goal isn't just to look backward, it's to actually make progress.
Simplify your finances with Monarch.
Monarch is the all-in-one personal finance tool designed to make your life easier.
It brings your entire financial life, including budgeting, accounts and investments,
net worth, and future planning together in one dashboard on your phone or your laptop.
Feel aware and in control of your finances this tax season and get 50% off your Monarch's
subscription with the code Pockets.
What I personally like is that Monarch keeps you focused on achieving, not just tracking.
You can see your budgets, debt payoff, savings goals, and net worth all in one place.
So every decision actually moves the needle.
Achieve your financial goals for good with Monarch, the all in one tool that makes money
management simple.
Use the code Pock at Monarch.com for half off your first year.
That's 50% off at Monarch.com.
code pockets.
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Let's jump back in.
I think that's the right answer here, right? Like, you're listening to bigger pockets money right now.
You're not listening to the chain smokers or whatever the kids listen to these days if you're in your 20s on that.
And so, you know, like, what's the goal? The goal is surely to be in the upper echelons of the wealth distribution scale by the time you're done your 20s or heading into your 30s here.
And I think that's right. I think I think that the lesson learned here if you're just getting started is take that shot in business.
you might lose. It might not go well, but you can't. It's almost impossible to get into the top 1% without doing something like that. And that cash, that's why I've talked about this in the past, but I believe that the 22-year-old just graduated in college and starting out in the workforce should focus on just saving up cash and using it on a business opportunity, house hack or some project like that super aggressively and forego that 401k or the Roth IRA for the first year or three while that's going on there and sees opportunities.
opportunity because that opportunity is just not going to be there in the same sense if in your 30s and
40s you decide to have a family, have kids, and life starts to catch up a little bit. It's just,
that's the unfair head start that you can get in those early days. And that's why you're going to see
this, the most extreme distribution or scale distribution of wealth in this bracket in someone's
20s. Your dream job, your business that you start doesn't have to be this sexy, amazing,
new thing. You can just go do these boring businesses. Cody Sanchez talks about boring businesses
and how those are the bread and butter of her net worth. And just buying these boring
businesses and doing this boring work, this, this, you know, solid work can generate a lot of
income. In your 20s, absolutely focus on increasing your income, paying down your debts,
and starting a side business, starting a whole, like the best time to start a side business
when you're already employed because then you can take some risks. And if it pans out, awesome.
And if it doesn't, start again. Scott, what is your quote if nine out of ten small businesses
failed, start 10 businesses? You do that starting at age 22. Every two and a half years,
you're going through two 10 bets. You can have two very successful outcomes by the time you're 30
if you try 20 bets over the course of your 20s, which is a very realistic goal. Something's going to
work at that point in time. Your hit rate if you try 20 is going to start getting better than
1 in 10, right? Like a lot of people with no business acumen, no reps behind them are starting a
business and they fail and they give up. But when you start 10 businesses, probably going to start
hitting on business 7, 9, and 12, you know, on those fronts. And that's a really powerful
dynamic. And that's why you're seeing this distribution curve going up here. One thing that did take
me by surprise of this data set is that the bottom quartile of wealth in someone's 20s is still
positive. I would have guessed that that would be negative. Oh, that's interesting. Now, that's with the
primary residence. Without a primary residence, it's much closer to zero. Yep. Something interesting there.
Yeah, that is very interesting. I think it's an average. One thing I would encourage anybody in their
20s to do is max out your Roth IRA every year that you possibly can because that's when your compound
interest is going to really have that start taking that hockey stick effect or start the lay the
foundation for the hockey stick effect down in your 40s and 50s.
But your Roth IRA is you're paying taxes now.
Traditionally, or typically you're going to be spending paying a lot less in taxes in your 20s
than you will in your 30s and 40s.
So you're paying taxes on a lower amount going in.
It grows tax free and you withdraw it tax free.
get as many dollars as you possibly can into your Roth IRA in your 20s.
Yeah, I think that's right.
I think after you've gotten enough cash to be able to take advantage of a real estate
and or business opportunity, like what I did is I spent the first two or three years
not doing that, even that part, but just stockpiling cash to do a house hack and try some
business ideas.
And then after my income started growing, I've done that.
I've maxed out my Roth 401K.
every year since. And you had a plan. I think a lot of people aren't contributing to their
retirement accounts in their 20s, but also don't have another plan for that money.
Okay, Scott, let's move on to our 30s. In your 30s, you are ideally building upon the foundation
that you set in your 20s. I'm hoping that you are now debt-free or very close to it. But if you're
not debt-free, that you have been investing while you are going through your debt payoff,
what advice do you have for someone in their 30s who is coming in closer to the bottom 25%,
the $8,000 net worth if they don't have a primary residence or the $16,000 net worth if they do?
There's no reason that if you're starting in a median or bottom quartile, you can't expect to move up a quartile or two quartiles from the 25th to the 75th to 75th percentile, right?
For the summer of the 30s, that would be starting your 30s with $8,000 and ending with close to $200,000.
It's a lot more of a stretch to think you're going to go from $8,000 to $645,000 by your 30s.
But you can move to that echelon.
And then you have a great crack at getting to close to a million dollars, the 90th percentile by your 40s and moving up those chains.
So I think that's how I would be thinking about this.
And it goes back to the basics, right?
I mean, you know, I think that a lot of, I would imagine, look, there's the economic starting gate here,
which is, I think, a median U.S. income.
So if you're not earning a median U.S. income, there needs to be the workload put in for probably two to four years to develop a skill set that can get you to that point.
Once you earn a median income, it's about the frugality and allowing that to expand slightly to move up these buckets and those basics and blocking and tackling.
But that begins to compound as you can move into the 65th, 75th percentile from an income standpoint, which should be achievable over the course of a decade or so.
And that will set you up to really move again into that millionaire status by the middle to end of your 40s.
That's how I'd probably be thinking about it in my 30s if I was sitting there at the bottom core tile on that front.
Yeah, I think now is when it's really important to keep track of these benchmarks.
And just because you're not in the same level as these benchmarks, it doesn't make you a bad person.
I'm not trying to sit here and say, oh, if you're in the bottom 25% in your 30s, then you're a terrible person.
But if you're in the bottom 25% and you're in your 30s, your chances of retiring early are very slim.
So let's start looking at these benchmarks.
If you're not quite at 8,000 in net worth in your 30s, what are the circumstances that have surrounded you not being there?
Did you, are you a physician and you just, like you specialize and super specialized and hyper-specialized and you're just getting out of school?
I'm not talking to you.
Are you a teacher?
I really, really wish we paid teachers more.
What other things can you do to add to your income, to increase your income so you can
start saving more aggressively?
But also look at the circumstances surrounding your spending.
I don't see very many people who don't have something to cut from their expenses that
would not affect their life a lot.
I think there's just so much mindless spending because I deserve it or I thought it was cute or
everybody else is doing it.
And I think in your 30s, if you're not in the 50 to 75 percent net worth bracket, you should
be doing everything you can to tighten up your expenses and increase your income.
I agree.
And I think, you know, we're bigger pockets.
So I'll throw in a real estate player too.
A live-in flip or a house hack can make a big difference.
If you do two of them over the course of a decade, I mean, that's going to be,
that could add hundreds of thousands of dollars to the net worth number and bump you pretty
material pretty close to, you could probably get on the other side of a million, even if you're
starting from scratch.
If you can spend the first couple of years of your 30s amassing even 50 or 100K in liquidity
to be as a down payment on the first or second house hack.
Mindy, if you don't mind me asking, where did, we're in your 30s, when you're starting
your 30s, where would you have been on this net worth scale?
Way to put me on the spot, Scott. I would probably be in the top 75% in my 30s.
I did have a primary residence. I would say three to four to $500,000 to net worth.
Okay, great. And would it be fair to say that you're now in the 95th plus percentile of
net worth your age group? I am in the 95th percentile.
What do you think, and that journey was conducted over your 30s and 40s, right?
Yes, and into my 50s.
What do you think you did to move from one, like that kind of 75th percentile or the 95th percentile?
We invested in the stock market.
We got intentional about our investing.
We got intentional about our spending.
We got intentional about our house flipping.
And we started paying attention when we were in.
in the 75th percentile, we were saving for retirement but had made a couple of really great
bets. One of the early bets that we made was Google. My husband was a computer programmer,
and he asked somebody in his cubicle, do you know how to do this problem in computer programming?
And the guy's like, no. And Carl was like, oh, okay. And he reaches up to get this giant,
thick computer programming book. And the guy's like, well, just Google it. And he's, like, well, just Google it.
He said, what?
Because this was not when Google was a verb.
He said, just Google it.
And Carl's like, I don't know what those words mean.
He said, go to Google.com and type in your question.
And like, the guy had to show him how to use Google the first time.
And it came back with the answer like that.
And he's, Carl's like, this is the greatest website in the history of the world.
And he started following it.
He started doing research on it.
He started looking into it a lot more.
and became a little bit obsessed with it.
And when they announced that they were doing an IPO via a Dutch auction instead of you have to know a investment banker in order to get in, he bought shares in Google.
And that has exponentially increased in value.
That has been a really great bet.
And I don't want to give stock tips or hot stock advice, but Carl did the research.
He had used the product.
It was unlike anything else that he had ever seen before.
And he believed in that product.
But he also didn't put our entire net worth in that one stock.
So there were several key stock purchases because we didn't know what index funds were.
There were several key stock purchases that happened in our 30s that propelled us into the 95th percentile in our 40s and 50s.
Got it.
Okay.
So the answer to how to go from the 75th to the 95th percent.
is to invest in Google.
Investing Google when you're 30, when it's IPOing.
And then as a byproduct of that, the shape of your net worth, I bet you change to be much more reflective of the wealth that we showed at the earlier part of this of the super rich, right?
Where much more the wealth was in equities in real estate than in the primary residence over that course of that journey, right?
I would say we are 50-50 stocks and real estate. And then of that 50% in stocks, it's probably 50% in individual stocks and 50% in index funds.
Awesome.
And we are slowly extricating ourselves from the stock portfolio and putting it into index funds.
But then you hit on capital gains and all sorts of fun, nice problems to have taxes and things like that.
but we really like the stability of an index fund?
Yeah.
One question I have here as well is how many years in the journey to your financial independence journey were you earning in the top 1% of all Americans?
What is the top 1%?
I think it's over $650,000.
But that would have regressed, that would have progressed over the last 10 years, right?
It would have adjusted with inflation.
So that's, you know, so were there any years where you came close to being a top 1%?
center on that journey.
No.
I love how you're just laughing at that, right?
And I think that that's like a misnomer here is, is sure, yes, income is important in driving
towards these net worth journeys.
But I read a stat that 11% of America, that basically no one stays, very few people stay in the
top 1% of income earners on a consistent basis.
Top 1% is very dynamic.
and people go into and out of it.
I think there's a statum reading here from an article is that 11% of Americans will join the top 1%
for at least one year during their prime working years, age 25 to 60, but only 5.8% will be in it for
two years or more.
So most of the people that are even in that probably top 1% net worth by age aren't sitting
in there making a huge income.
Of course, there will be people that are doing that.
famous athletes, rock stars, Taylor Swift, whatever around there. But that is not, that is not by and
large, not the byproduct of what is getting people to the net worth is is a sustained elite level
of income. They're probably all earning a high level of income, but it's more to do with, I think,
the expense profile and how you invest that puts you in the top 1% of wealth holders in this country.
What do you think about that? I think you're spot on. And I'm trying to think of all the people that I know
who are in the 90, 95% income, I'm sorry, wealth brackets.
And they, none of them were in that six.
I don't know anybody that makes $600,000 a year.
Here's another one.
This is a Quora quote, so you know how accurate that is.
Some 94% of Americans who reach the top 1% will enjoy it only for a single year.
99% will lose the top 1% status within a decade.
Wow.
Now, is that net worth or is that income?
income.
Income.
Yeah.
I don't want to work hard enough to make $600,000 a year.
That's like I don't need $600.
I can't even spend the money I have.
I don't need to make more.
I'll put this out there.
I have made a top 1% income in two years out of the last 10.
And I had to work very, very hard in those particular years and give up quite a lot in
order for that to be realized.
Scott, let's move into the 40s.
Yeah.
So I think what's interesting here is at the extreme end,
in the top 1%, we're really starting to see separation from an income perspective.
So I'm looking at a different data set here to pull that in.
But in under 35, the 99th percentile, the top 1%, you have to earn $465,000 per year.
When you get into the 35 to 44-year-old bracket, you have to earn over a million dollars a year,
$1,66,000 per year to be in the top 1%.
So the income realized, the spread,
from an income distribution is even more extreme in the 40s and 50s. And it stays about the same.
You know, 50, 40, 45 to 54 is 1.3, 55 to 64 is 1.4. 65 to 74 is 1.5 to be in the top 1%
million. So there's a much, that's when really people really come into their own in terms of
their maximum income generation potential, especially at the top of the food chain.
But what's surprising is how the spread between the top 1% net worth is not as high on
these. And so that needs me to believe that even as people really come into their own from an earnings
perspective at the upper echelons of this, the expenses must go up as well. That's probably when
we're buying the really nice house, the really nice car, the private school tuition, or those other
types of things. You'd expect there to be a larger spread based on that income distribution that I just
chimed off. So that was the most interesting takeaway for me looking at the data set in the 40s.
Yeah, that is really interesting. And I would, you know, I just think of the 40s as kind of an extension
of your 30s. You're continuing to build. You're continuing to save and invest and, you know,
keep an eye on your expenses in your 40s because that's when it really can be easy to creep out
into those expenses. Oh, well, all of my neighbors got a new car. I should get a new car too.
My neighbor's got a boat. That looks like fun. I want to go skiing all the time. And the guys at
work are always going on these lavish vacations. If it's not something that you value, then don't
buy it just because everybody else is buying it. I think the 40s is when you can really start to
see some lifestyle creep. So just keep that in mind. Scott, I'm going to talk about your 50s since
you're not actually 50 yet. In your 50s, retirement is getting closer. Looking at these net worth
numbers, in your 50s, the bottom 25% is less than $100,000.
That makes me a little sad for people to get to their 50s and not even have six figures in net worth yet.
That doesn't mean that retirement is never going to happen.
We've talked to plenty of people who have been able to retire in about 10 years, starting from approximately a $0 net worth.
So even if you're listening to this in your 50s and your net worth is on the lower end, there's still hope for a traditional retirement.
there's still hope even for a slightly early retirement.
Your 75th percentile here is already $1.1 million.
90th percentile is 2.6.
95th percentile is 5 million.
I'm kind of surprised that that's the 95th percentile.
I would think that the 95th percentile would be a little bit lower than that.
More like three or four.
So 5 percent of Americans.
Oh, I'm reading this wrong.
5% of Americans have a $5 million net worth or higher.
The $15 million net worth, I'd like to know who those people are.
But again, your 50s is a whole 10 years, so a whole 10 decades.
Sometimes it feels like 10 decades, especially when you're teaching your daughter how to drive.
One interesting hypothesis I have about this age bracket too is that's prime years, the type years.
Sorry, let me take a sick.
One thing that's interesting about the first.
50s is that that is, I believe, the typical age that and into the 160s when folks retire or
retire when they inherit wealth from parents, for example, on there. So I think that that's probably
playing a factor in why we're seeing such a big jump, a more than doubling or almost doubling
of the wealth from 8.7 to 15. And we see less of a jump in the next decade. Combined with high
income earning potential, I bet you that that's causing a chunk of this.
Yeah, you know what, Scott, that's a really great point.
And looking at these numbers between the 50s and the 60s, that is, unless you're in the top
1%, there's almost no growth.
There's almost no movement.
In fact, in your 60s, the bottom part 25% is actually dropping.
It's not hard to imagine, for example, someone building up to that 90th percentile by the time
and they're in their early 50s, $2.6 million after a career hard work and frugality and a
couple of good investments. And then inheriting another $2 million from family members who
behave very similarly to them over their working lifetimes and that bumping it up to the $5 million
mark. You got to imagine that that's beginning to be a much more impactful part of the puzzle
here. Contrary to most belief, most millionaires are self-made in America, but I bet you that a good
chunk of them after they become self-made, then supplement that with several million more from
millionaire parents on that front. So I think that there's a dynamic that's going on underneath the
scenes here that someone should study and we'll have them on the podcast when they complete that study.
Yeah, reach out to us if you've made that study. We would love to dive into that. One thing I want
to note is that if you are in your 50s and you are considering retiring well before age 59 and a half,
which is when you can start withdrawing your retirement funds without penalties,
make sure you have some sort of bridge to fund those.
This is where you want to start thinking about, and even into your 40s,
you want to start thinking about avoiding the middle class trap,
avoiding all of my net worth is locked up in my home equity and my retirement accounts.
You want to start thinking about how you're going to fund your lifestyle from the time
you retire until the time you hit 59 and a half. Scott, I think this is a really interesting
set of numbers here. I love looking at this kind of data because, you know, the benchmarks that
somebody can compare themselves to or set goals for based on these numbers in their 20s, 30s, 40s,
even into their 50s is really going to help keep them on track. Just knowing what other people have,
knowing what other people are making, seeing what other people are doing, and seeing how they are
investing and how they are growing their net worth can help give you some ideas how you can
grow your net worth too. I love the stock market. I love real estate in the right circumstances
when you have purchased intelligently, when you have purchased intentionally. And I just,
I think having these numbers is really helpful to people who are competitive or people who are
just curious, how much net worth should I have?
I think another takeaway I'll have here from this is, is the benchmarks are really helpful
and understanding what's realistic here.
Like, if you're in your 20s and you want to fire in your 20s, you got to be in the top 1%.
You want to be in your, you want to fire in your 30s, you got to be in the top 5% at least,
probably closer to the top 2 or 3%.
You want to fire in your 40s, 50s or 60s, you got to be in the top 10% to the top 25%.
So it gets a lot more realistic, the longer that time horizon is.
And I think that's one way to kind of benchmark or think about this on there is,
are you willing to do what it takes to be in the top 1% to get there in your 20s?
Or it's probably much more realistic and reasonable to try to get there in your 40s, 50s or 60s,
which seems attainable for many millions of Americans who do put the work in for several
decades.
Yeah, Scott, the bottom line is if you want to retire early, you are going to have to do work.
It's not going to fall into your lap.
You're going to have to do something, give something up, make different choices than your average American to be able to do something.
What does Dave Ramsey say live like no one else now so you can live like no one else later?
If you are spending every penny that comes in, living beyond your means, not paying down your debt in your 20s and 30s, your opportunities to retire early in your 30s, 40s and 50s are going to be significantly less.
So, you know, you're listening to Bigger Pockets money.
you are probably already thinking about this. But we would love to hear from you. Where do you fall in this
net worth brackets? You can email me, Mindy at BiggerPockets.com. You can email Scott, Scott at Biggerpockets.com.
We won't use your name on the air. But I think it would be really fascinating to see, you know,
25 percent of people sent in and said that they're in the top 1 percent or they're in the top 75
percent or they're in the bottom 25 percent. I mean, you heard me say I was in the bottom 25 percent
in my 20s. So there's no shame wherever you are in this in this net worth graph. I would love to hear
from you. All right, Scott, this was super fun. Should we get out of here? Let's do it. That wraps up
this episode of the Bigger Pockets Money podcast. He of course is the Scott Trench and I am Indy Jensen saying
bye bye, Apple Pie.
