How to Save for Retirement in Your 30s: 2026 Action Plan

Your 30s are the decade when retirement savings start to matter most. You’ve (hopefully) paid down some early debt, income is growing, and you have 25-35 years of compounding ahead of you. The decisions you make in this decade have more impact than nearly any other — because time in the market is the variable that’s hardest to get back.

Where You Should Be at 30

Financial planners typically use a multiplier rule as a benchmark: by age 30, you should have the equivalent of your annual salary saved for retirement. If you earn $70,000, the target is $70,000 in retirement accounts. If you’re behind, don’t panic — but do start treating this as urgent.

The key insight: every year you delay saving in your 30s costs significantly more than a year delayed in your 40s or 50s, because of how compound growth works. A dollar invested at 30 at 8% average annual return is worth about $10 by age 65. The same dollar invested at 40 is worth about $4.66.

Step 1: Get the Full 401(k) Employer Match

If your employer offers a 401(k) match, capturing it is the highest-return financial move available to you — it’s an instant 50-100% return on your contribution. If your employer matches 50% of contributions up to 6% of salary, contribute at least 6%. Not doing so is leaving compensation on the table.

Step 2: Pay Off High-Interest Debt First

Debt with interest rates above 7-8% should generally be prioritized over additional retirement saving beyond the employer match. A credit card at 22% APR is a guaranteed 22% return when you pay it off — no investment reliably beats that. Once high-rate debt is gone, redirect those payments to retirement accounts.

Step 3: Maximize Your IRA

After capturing the employer match, max out a Roth IRA if your income qualifies (phase-out begins at $150,000 for single filers in 2026). The Roth’s tax-free growth is exceptionally valuable in your 30s because you have decades of compounding ahead, and future tax rates are uncertain. Contribute $7,000 per year ($583/month).

Step 4: Increase Your 401(k) Contribution Rate Each Year

Many 401(k) plans let you auto-escalate contributions by 1% per year. Enable this feature. Going from 6% to 15% over nine years is painless when it happens in 1% increments — especially when it coincides with salary increases. The goal is 15% of gross income saved for retirement (including any employer match).

How to Invest Your Retirement Savings in Your 30s

With 30+ years to retirement, you can tolerate significant short-term volatility in exchange for long-term growth. The standard approach for this decade:

  • Target-date funds: A “2055 Fund” or “2060 Fund” automatically allocates you heavily toward stocks and gradually shifts to bonds as you approach retirement. Lowest-effort, set-it-and-forget-it option.
  • Three-fund portfolio: US total market index fund + international index fund + bond index fund. Slightly more hands-on but gives you full control over allocation.
  • Stock allocation: A common rule of thumb is 110 minus your age in stocks. At 35, that suggests 75% stocks. Many financial planners suggest going more aggressive (80-90% stocks) in your 30s given the long time horizon.

The Accounts to Prioritize, in Order

  1. 401(k) up to employer match
  2. HSA (if you have a high-deductible health plan) — triple tax advantage
  3. Roth IRA up to the annual limit
  4. 401(k) up to the annual limit ($23,000 in 2026)
  5. Taxable brokerage account for additional savings

What If You’re Starting From Zero in Your 30s?

Starting late is not the same as starting never. If you’re 35 with nothing saved, a consistent 20% savings rate from now through age 65 can still build a meaningful retirement. The math works — it just requires more urgency and less lifestyle inflation. Focus on income growth and keep expenses flat as your salary rises.

Related: What Is a SIMPLE IRA? 2026 Guide for Small Business Employees

Related: How to Calculate Your Net Worth in 2026

Related: How to Open a Roth IRA: Step-by-Step Guide