You’re 40 — or close to it — and your retirement savings balance is somewhere between embarrassingly small and zero. Every article you read makes you feel worse. “Start at 22.” “Compound interest.” “You should have $X by now.” None of it tells you what to actually do from where you actually are.

This guide is different. It starts from $0 at 40, uses real numbers, and gives you a plan that is genuinely achievable — not a fantasy designed to sell financial products.


The Honest Assessment: How Bad Is It?

According to the Federal Reserve’s Survey of Consumer Finances, the median retirement savings for Americans aged 35–44 is approximately $45,000. The mean (average) is higher because a small number of very wealthy households skew the number. The point is: if you have very little saved at 40, you are in the majority, not the minority.

Standard financial planning guidelines suggest having 3x your salary saved by 40. If you’re earning $60,000, that’s $180,000. Most people aren’t there. That doesn’t mean retirement is impossible — it means you need a realistic catch-up plan, not a guilt trip.


What You Actually Need to Retire

The classic guideline is to save 25x your annual expenses — this is based on the “4% rule,” which says you can withdraw 4% of your retirement portfolio per year without depleting it over a 30-year retirement. It’s an imperfect rule, but it’s a useful starting point.

Annual Expenses in RetirementTarget Savings (25x)Monthly Withdrawal (4%)
$40,000$1,000,000$3,333
$50,000$1,250,000$4,167
$60,000$1,500,000$5,000

Those numbers look terrifying when you’re starting from zero at 40. But here’s what changes the math: time, compounding, catch-up contributions, and Social Security. You don’t need to save the full $1M+ yourself — your contributions grow, and Social Security replaces a meaningful portion of your pre-retirement income.


The Catch-Up Contribution Strategy

The IRS allows people aged 50 and over to contribute extra money to retirement accounts beyond the standard limits. These are called catch-up contributions, and they’re specifically designed for people in your situation.

You’re not 50 yet, but these numbers apply once you get there — and knowing them now changes how you plan the next decade:

Account2024 Standard Limit2024 Catch-Up (50+)Total at 50+
401(k) / 403(b)$23,000+$7,500$30,500
Traditional or Roth IRA$7,000+$1,000$8,000
SIMPLE IRA$16,000+$3,500$19,500

If you max both a 401(k) and an IRA at 50, you can contribute $38,500 per year toward retirement. Over 15 years at a 7% average annual return, that’s approximately $980,000 — from contributions alone, starting at zero at 50.

Starting at 40, you have 10 years before catch-up contributions kick in to build as much foundation as possible. Even $500–$1,000 per month invested consistently from 40 to 67 at historical market returns builds substantial wealth.


Which Accounts to Use (and in What Order)

Not all retirement accounts are equal. Use them in this priority order:

  1. 401(k) up to the employer match — if your employer matches contributions, always contribute enough to get the full match first. This is a 50–100% guaranteed return on that portion of your money. There is no investment that beats it.
  2. Roth IRA (if eligible) — contribute up to $7,000/year. Roth accounts grow tax-free, and withdrawals in retirement are not taxed. This is especially valuable if you expect to be in a higher tax bracket later. See IRS eligibility limits here.
  3. Back to the 401(k) — after maxing the Roth IRA, return to your 401(k) and contribute as much as you can up to the annual limit.
  4. Taxable brokerage account — once you’ve maxed tax-advantaged accounts, a regular brokerage account offers no tax benefits but total flexibility.

What to Invest In When Starting Late

The single biggest mistake late starters make is being too conservative. At 40, with 25+ years until traditional retirement age, you have time to ride out market volatility. Being too conservative (putting everything in bonds or savings accounts) guarantees you won’t reach your goals.

The simplest, most evidence-backed approach:

  • Target-date funds — pick a fund with a date near your planned retirement year (e.g., “Target Date 2045 Fund”). It automatically adjusts from aggressive to conservative as you approach retirement. One decision. Done.
  • Low-cost index funds — a simple three-fund portfolio (US total market, international total market, bonds) is what most professional investors recommend for individual investors. Vanguard, Fidelity, and Schwab all offer these with expense ratios under 0.05%.
  • Avoid actively managed funds — they charge higher fees and the majority underperform their index benchmarks over 10+ year periods, according to S&P Global’s annual SPIVA report.

How to Free Up Money to Save

The math only works if you actually contribute. Here’s where most people find the money:

  • Eliminate high-interest debt first — credit card debt at 22% APR is a guaranteed -22% return on every dollar you carry. Paying it off before investing (aside from the employer match) is almost always the right call. Read our debt payoff guides for a step-by-step plan.
  • Audit recurring expenses — the average American household has 3–4 subscriptions they’ve forgotten about. A monthly spending review finds these fast.
  • Automate contributions — set a fixed amount to transfer to your retirement account on payday. What you never see, you never spend.
  • Increase contributions with every raise — commit to putting 50% of every salary increase into retirement. Your lifestyle doesn’t expand, your savings do.
  • Generate additional income — even $300–$500/month from a side hustle, invested consistently, makes a significant difference over 20+ years.

Don’t Forget Social Security

Social Security is not going away — it’s funded by payroll taxes from current workers and is politically protected. For most people, it replaces 30–50% of pre-retirement income. At 40, you’ve likely been paying into the system for 15–20 years already.

You can check your projected Social Security benefit for free at ssa.gov/myaccount. If you’re earning $60,000/year, your projected benefit at full retirement age (67) is roughly $1,800–$2,200/month. That’s $21,600–$26,400/year you don’t need to save for yourself — and it significantly changes the math on how much your portfolio needs to generate.


What to Do This Week

  1. Check your Social Security estimate at ssa.gov/myaccount. This takes 10 minutes and gives you a real number to plan around.
  2. Check your employer’s 401(k) match — call HR or log into your benefits portal. If you’re not getting the full match, you’re leaving free money on the table starting today.
  3. Open a Roth IRA if you don’t have one — Fidelity and Vanguard both have zero minimum to open. Contribute whatever you can, even $50.
  4. Set up automatic contributions — even $100/paycheck is a start. The habit matters more than the amount in the beginning.
  5. Calculate your net worth — get a clear picture of where you stand using the free PaycheckGuide Budget Tracker. The Dashboard tab shows your total assets vs. debts and updates automatically.

The bottom line: starting at 40 with nothing is not ideal. It’s also not fatal. You have 25+ years of investing ahead, catch-up contributions starting at 50, and Social Security income that reduces how much your portfolio needs to generate. The people who end up with nothing at retirement aren’t the ones who started late — they’re the ones who never started at all. You’re reading this. Start this week.

Need to free up money to invest? Start with: Zero-Based Budgeting: Give Every Dollar a Job.

Disclaimer: The content on PaycheckGuide.com is for educational purposes only and does not constitute financial, legal, or tax advice. Every financial situation is different — consult a licensed professional for advice specific to your circumstances. Read our full disclaimer.