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I had $25k saved up debt free by 25 but I got sick at 25 and had to use all that money on doctor visits/tests/medicine. Now I have to start back from 0, it sucks so bad but I’m glad to still be here and I’ll keep grinding to build my wealth back up. It’s gonna take me a while but I’m not giving up.
Insurance maxes out so fast. I have insurance, but one dental emergency set me back $6k. Overnight expenses like that are impossible to overcome with a low income (I’m in graduate school).
Hey, at least u are not in the negatives. If u didnt have that money, you'd be in deep water. At least you didnt take out loans with high apy% eating u away.
I was very lucky that my father-in-law suggested maxing out Roth IRAs in our 20s with extra cashflow; it’s near criminal that this isn’t taught in public school
I'm 27 and I just started a decent paying job last year. So far I have 10k in savings in a high yield account, and I also started my 401k. Being financially responsible really makes a difference.
@@ginaruff2867 Totally agree, Roth IRAs are great for younger people. Try and put as much as you can in, and if you have enough fill it to the yearly contribution cap (6500 this year). But before you do make sure you have enough cash on hand for your emergency fund. Smart keeping it in a High yield account!
@gonzalescarloz A lil late but aside from maxing your Roth IRA dont forget you can also put money into CDs and Bonds if you want to play it safe. Just look under “fixed income” when you invest. Yields are anywhere between 4%-7% compounded interest if you want to earn a little more safely.
I’m 26 (27 in Nov), and had 15k in savings in 5% APY account. That 15k has dropped to 5k due to major car problems, killing ALL consumer debt, and career changing. It’s bittersweet but having that money ready was a great feeling.
I once read that a mans peak earning potential is between 40-60 years,it is not going to be the same for everyone, this is a generalization..by that measure,you are at a perfect age..I am 42 too,I only realized that I should invest my money at the age of 39 years..the last 3 years have been very good for me..all the best..educate yourself financially and take calculated risks..you will succeed
Investing in alternative income streams that are independent of the government should be the top priority for everyone right now. especially given the global economic crisis we are currently experiencing. Stocks, gold, silver, and virtual currencies are still attractive investments at the moment.
@@AstaKristjan I've been able to scale from $50K to $189k in this red season because my Financial Advisor figured out Defensive strategies which help portfolios be less vulnerable to market downturns.
@@simonbad Avery Barnes Whidden, she was in the news when she revived Grumac in 2018. You can look her up online, there isn’t much I can say here so it doesn’t seem as if i am promoting an agenda.
Avery Barnes is wonderful! She told me my financial problems were the result of my ex wife, and offered to make her disappear 👌 I haven't heard from either her or my ex since, but she really helped me out
I’m 29 years old and have been aggressively saving over 50% of my income for the last 5 years. I drive a beat up Honda with over 270,000 miles on it. At the rate I’m going I should be able to retire by the age of 40, just have to keep on track.
Careful with saving too much money unnecessarily, the car could brake at some point and cause death, making your savings meaninglessness. Drive safe out there and invest in yourself properly. I have the same mindset, but after buying a new car, I feel relieved since my 2006 Nissian Altima with 160k felt like driving a bomb.
27 here -£8k emergency - .25 Bitcoin (around £6200) - £4K in vanguard lifestrategy - £6100 in physical gold and silver - £80k left on mortgage All this on a very average UK salary 👍🏽
I’m 36 and wife 37 with current net worth of ~$1.1 mil. 6 years ago, we had 70k student loan, 25k car loans, 15k personal loan, 10k+ credit cards. Road to wealth started by paying all these black holes. We’re fortunate enough to make 6fig incomes but we also live in CA where EVERYTHING is expensive. It’s going to be painful getting started but once you see the debt actually going down, it becomes addicting! Best of luck to everyone with your financial journey!
I started saving and investing in 1989 at the age of 20... my father forced me to start. I love that man today!!! I am 54 today and have 2.2 million in my retirement account, 135k liquid and I trade securities with 50-55k
@Daniel Well 80% while living at home, joined the military and earned my real estate license. All income from real estate went to investments and savings. On average 30-40% over 25+ years. I also have my military retirement, rated 100% VA.
you guys had unfair advantage back in the day. houses were cheaper, education was much less expensive, even if you adjust salaries to back to relative levels.
I'm definitely an outlier, have $600k in CASH, no 401k, etc, no debt. I love when online banks pay 5% interest, the interest pays all my monthly bills.
Good to know at 19 with 10k in savings I’m doing good 😂. Social media can definitely be toxic and make you feel like you’re behind but just keep doing your best and never give up. I hope everyone here succeeds and accomplishes their dreams including my self 🙏
One thing I did that helped me in my 20s to save was think about my future family. I would think to myself “you know one day our family may need this”. I did this before I even had a girlfriend. It helps fuel that drive to do the right thing with money.
I'm 32 and started with Dave Ramsey at first. Paid all debt off by 28, saved our 6 months emergency fund and been investing 20% between our Roth, 401k, and investments. We have a combined net worth of over $200k. The biggest thing that worked was increasing our income and working side jobs that pay my mortgage off quickly. Highly recommend a strong budget and automatic withdraws of the Investments. Plan to retire at 55 and enjoy our older age.
Nobody can become financially successful overnight. They put in background work but we tend to see the finished part. Fear is a dangerous component, hindering us from taking bold steps we need in other to reach our goals. you have to contend with inflation, recession, decisions from the Feds and all. I was able to increase my portfolio by $289k in months. You have to seek for help in the right places.
@Rebecca This is the problem! Most times people with little or no knowledge of the stock market try investing by themselves. It once happened to me, then I learned my lesson and contacted a US-based finance consultant and everything changed. In in the first quarter of this year i made $370k and counting.
@@silkeschulz5754 Benevolence, this reference seems valid.. Just inputted her full name on my browser and found her site without sweat, 20 years of experience is certainly striking! very much appreciate it
It’s very hard to save in your 30s as well. You are now making money, but you have way more bills. Student loans, mortgage, childcare, car. There isn’t much left after that.
I think the real answer is just save as much as possible while still enjoying life to an extent and then when you've got a rock solid foundation and investments generating passive income you can ease off if you want to and splurge on yourself or your family.
Building good spending habits is easily the most important rule here. Take any unnecessary expense you have each month and multiply that by 12x and again by 15x (if you're 40 years from retirement), the first # is how much you don't invest this year and the second # is how much you don't in at least 40 years (assuming a 7% growth rate). Weed, beer, games, sports betting, clothes, shoes, w/e it is it adds up after awhile and sometimes looking at the 40 year cost of somethings makes you stop doing it.
Currently working overseas but will return to my home country in the near future. I'm a landlord. I invested in property at the age of 22. Value has soared and renting out. Will live on the rental income I receive and live with my aging parents for the time being. At 60 I can withdrawal from my superannuation (401(k)). Have savings and eligible for the Australian pension at 63. In the future I may downsize, sell the property and buy cheaper property and add the left over money from the sale to savings. Lots of options for me. The way I see it if you have $1m at some point, that’d be enough to create a portfolio that would pay you between 50k-70k in dividend income.
I've been saying the same thing for years as you age time gains value and money loses value. I retired at 62 and moved to the Philippines after I recovered from a work place injury. No stress, no rent/mortgage/debt, cheap to live here, eating healthier and the wife here treats me like gold. It doesn't just depend on saving, To optimize financial outcomes, individuals can seek guidance from a qualified financial advisor who can provide tailored advice and strategies to minimize expenses and maximize income.
I completely agree; I'm 60 years old, recently retired, and have roughly $1,250,000 in outside retirement funds. I have no debt and very little money in retirement funds compared to the total value of my portfolio over the last three years. To be honest, the Fin-advisor's can only be neglected, not rejected. Simply conduct study to identify a reliable one.
Most Americans have less than 1k in savings and no emergency fund...so if your behind, your not alone...if you are watching this it means you likely are better off than you think already. Sometimes, just starting to make a change is a substantial win, there are no short cuts to getting rich and staying rich, it is an uphill climb, and that is why 90% never start. Don't be the 90%
I'm 39, 401k with over 500k, net worth 660k, no college degree, no student loan debt. Public servant. Not rich, just middle class. Didn't have a car note till I was 34.
So helpful! With so many financial experts throwing around arbitrary numbers, your clear, concise guideposts take all the unneeded stress out of the game.🙂
I know people are gonna say this is a boring video but by all means he is exactly right on how things are. If you force yourself to put aside money then you see less play money on the side and will be less tempted to go over budget. Kudos
34, and sitting above the median net worth. Not by a huge amount, but about double. That's cool. Didn't get my act together until I was 32 and got sober, either. So, this is good news. Hoping to have well over a million by retirement.
No. Better financial literacy educators out there, look at Rob Berger (youtube), The Money Guy Show (youtube), and PlanVision Podcast (on its own website). Most of Brian's financial advice is dangerous advice, don't take it at face value.
I make 120k in Atlanta I’m 26 no debt but I was spending so much money on god knows. I did a budgeting plan and now I have more money saved than ever before. Great video.
If you don’t want to work for anyone it’s simple. Do whatever it takes to own a duplex or two properties. Live in one unit and rent the other. Sell something or grow something for spending money but have your tenant pay your mortgage so by the time you retire your mortgage is zero and you can live off your tenant money throughout your life :)
Are you a landlord? I’m guessing no. After being involved in residential real estate for decades, I’m here to advise you to think this through in more detail than you have. There are so many factors you are not taking into consideration. All those people online telling you it’s easy to make money in real estate - - - they’re lying. If they were right, they wouldn’t be hustling you. They would be quietly raking in their dough and enjoying their luxury lives. Yes, it can be somewhat profitable, but you need diversification.
Hang in there Our parents always taught us to look after our own retirement before your kids needs. Dad had a stroke and we kept him in his home for about 17 years. Worn out, we finally put him in a nursing home. It took 4 firemen and myself to get him loaded up (He was like a caged animal). He starved himself out in 30 days in the nursing home. He was a tough character.
Apply for every form of financial aid you can think of, food stamps, healthcare, tax breaks, get in good with the counsel on aging and other geriatric services. They may qualify for a visiting nurse once or twice per month. Many assume this is a burden they have to take on alone just because no one is informing them of their options.
This is the second time watching your video..good one. Anyway, I’m a dividend investor but it’s a slow and steady growth. I’m 39 with a $300k portfolio and plan to retire at 60. My goal is to reach 2 million by then...I repositioned some of my dividend stocks using my broker James Fletcher Brennan. Now, I’m buying fractional shares of TSLA, AMC ,NIO ,NVR again. Before I was after dividends for passive income but it’s slow growth so i took my chances on high growth stocks and I've gotten a 120% increase this year but hopefully I’ll reach a million sooner
Nobody knows everything, You need to manage risk, and stick to your broker’s plan through thick or thin, While also continuously learning from mistakes and improving. I also hope to trade with the big dogs soon
he really seems to know his stuff. I also found his online page and read through his resume, educational background, qualifications and it was really impressive. he is a fiduciary who will act in my best interest. So, I booked a session with him
Yeah me too. I had credit card debt and it was managable early so went rice and beans mode and paid it all off. And now we don't miss eatin out anymore hahaha.
Me too still haven’t got a break. Lots of education but haven’t had a salary over 50k in my mid thirties and expenses keep rising… 1400 gross pay is pretty tough in todays world. I’m ready to just be poor so I can get assistance smh
@@Vincedaprince1 We also bought a lot of and still buy costco chicken. 4.99 for a whole cooked chicken that lasts for many meals is not only a time saver, but saves money when you crave meat
Its interesting to see where others are at in life. I just turned 23 and moved back in with my parents grateful and will take full advantage to save my income. Still trying to figure out life and tighten up my plan for the future. Good luck to all those watching this video, we’re all here for a common reason
I'm past this point and there are many good tips in this. However many people are living pay check to pay check. If two of those checks don't arrive a person has a real chance of being homeless. So while this is a great post for many it's impossible for a large group of people.
I'm turning 60 this year and expect to have a net worth of $1 million by the end of the year. And I see no hope of retiring. They are dismantling Social Security before our eyes, and have already half-privatized Medicare via so-called Medicare Advantage (AVOID). You work until you die in this country. It's savage.
So thankful that I found out about financial education while still living with my mom at 18 so I have time to save before I fully go Into the real world. I’m saving/ investing about 50-60% of my income right now
They may not be lying. This comment section is likely the very small percentage of individuals who actually care and are responsible with their finances
@@natefreeman1466 Good point but when you go look at their pages it doesn’t reflect that. Only a few were into crypto and watching videos on financial literacy. However they were posting about all of this imaginary money but their history shows they’re watching girls in the gym or cat/dog videos.
This is good. I’m in my 50s. 5 years away from retirement. I started late in saving. One obstacle at a time. Got the kids thru college debt free! I work part time. Hard to save as much as Brian suggested, but I invested in learning. I got my notary license, and am working at creating more income. It’s slow to be honest, but it keeps me busy and not shopping. So that’s a plus!
Woah amazing. I had student loans and it honestly stressed me out. I hope your kids will appreciate your efforts, it will really give them a great boost to their financial stability.
Great video, 27 year old here. Trying to build wealth and diversify assets. I tend to have less than 10% each check available to save because I’m always investing. It’s a dynamic that needs balance but I believe that we should invest more when we are younger
Thank you for this video! Turning 40 this year, and my hubby and I just started preparing for retirement last year. This video is going to all my kids for sure!
39 and just happy to keep my head above water - conventional employment wasn’t something I could handle and when i rely on it something out of my hands would happen. Ive got a lot skills n enjoy a simple life
My biggest financial regret is not starting a Roth when I was 18, 19, only making a few thousand dollars a year. I could have had anything in that account growing completely tax free, as I was in the 0% marginal tax bracket, for a lifetime.
We're in our early 60s getting ready to retire. Although we're doing well, the amount of money we've wasted over the years is downright shameful: The impulse purchases, the useless high-end clothes, being too generous with our friends. We would have retired millionaires if we saved more and spent less.
Definitely agree with working toward promotion goals. I would make sure to overshoot these median numbers to account for inflation. I am constantly working to increase my contribution rates. A few times a year I will make adjustments to my portfolio.
I'm in my mid-thirties, have $250,000 saved and make $140,000 a year. Sounds great, except that I wasn't able to buy a house before this bubble started. So either way, I'm still screwed. Net zero game after all that gruesome work I've put in over the years. This country is a joke now.
Not one person told me about the importance of building wealth at an early age. So much I've learned over the years has been due to trial and error, mostly error. I had a 401K that I depleted due to the hole that I put myself in. At 29 years old at the time. Ughhh. Thank you for the information.
@@ChineseWinnie Back in my time. There was no electronic online forums or anything. It was all done on hard paper application forums. They don't teach you this in school and growing up, my parents did not teach anything about saving money. There to busy working to make end meat for us.
Shocking thing is. I’m a 25 year old in a 35-39 year olds position. 60k in my portfolio. Can’t wait to see where I’m at in 10 years. Saving 60% of my net income per month
@kenneth rashford I started out with 14k in 2020. Investing is definitely the way to go. If you invested in QQQ 13 years ago your 50k portfolio would be 600k.
Was thinking the same thing. As much as people in their 20’s have no savings if their parents could help kickstart that savings to compound would make a massive difference in the future.
Feels good being way ahead of the curve. I can't wait for real estate market to go up in flames. That's my next big investment/diversification strategy.
I started reading Money and Kiplinger's magazine in my 20's and opened an Invesco mutual fund account with $100 with automatic monthly investments. As I started earning more I starting investing more. We both had decent jobs with decent companies and retirement plans. By the time my wife & I retired at 55 we had been saving/investing 50% of our income, owned a vacation/retirement home that we paid cash for, were debt free and had $2 million dollars invested. It's all about investing early, investing often and maximizing how much you invest. THAT needs to be your priority if you want to retire wealthy. It's call DELAYED GRATIFICATION. Oh, and a DINK lifestyle helps A LOT (Dual Income No Kids). Good luck!
Annuities come with high upfront fees. I avoid them at all costs, but you do you. It might be the right thing for you. We pumped a lot into our 401ks in low-cost mutual funds and hit a million in net worth before we were 50 years old. Almost to $2 million just five years later.
Tax deferred annuities are terrible vehicles. Super-high fees and low returns, plus lock your money up so you can’t invest it elsewhere. Are you a teacher? Teachers are often targeted by insurance companies for a hard sell on these products.
@@suzanneemerson9787 it’s fine in a balanced portfolio. I have vast diversification in my portfolio. I got waived fees through my company I worked for. I used to work in the credit markets but now I do small business finance from my home office so I’m not an absent mother. But I have an advantage for retirement. I live on Long Island, NY where million dollar houses are the norm now and I bought mine for $450k; now worth $1.3M. We can easily retire and move to less expensive states. It sucks when you are living here but once the mortgage is paid off, you are set to retire comfortably in another state. I am so happy that I made my last mortgage payment in February 🥳🥳
In my 20’s I had no money and a negative net worth. No parents to help me through college or any other costs. I knew nothing about investing. Now in my early 40’s I only recently finished paying off my student loans and in a much better position financially and career wise. Fortunately I was smart enough to start a 401k contribution when I was younger and it’s grown a lot.
Thank you Brian, I was blessed to realize financial education is crucial in my 20's, then started to learn Robert Kiyosaki on 4 quadrants, 23 yrs forward, we're well ahead than my peers and looking to quit my job soon and move to Bali in 2 yrs, then wait for my 60 for my Roth IRA to be available.
When the Government wants to keep pushing retirement benefits farther out, then I know waiting until 70 is not a good deal. I’m trying to build my private retirement accounts so I don’t really need Social Security and will take the early retirement at 62. I’d rather collect less for longer than gamble I’m going to live to 100. 🤷♂️ Waiting until 70 and then dying at 73 is not a good return for all those years the government took 10’s of thousands from my paycheck for SS. I just look at it as funding my parents SS payments now.
Absolutely great video and one of your best! You covered pretty much the full spectrum in a brief, powerful and concise format. Well done! Now just need you to make the same video in a pre-teen/teenager format :)
Well. I'm 33 and didn't start saving until very recently, but I've had a 401k for about two years and *never logged in* until now. So, I guess thanks for that 😬
29 Here. Got financially educated in my early 20s. Started investing and got my net worth up from 0 to 200k :D. Thanks to youtube channels like this. Hoping I can retire early
Haven't been here since the pandemic when this channel had about 250K subscribers. Glad to see the channel has grown and this guy has gone back to the basics: just him talking.
I’m 34 and my wife is 30. Our net worth is 2.5 million. Our household income has been 300k/yr for the last 8 years both working in the oil field. Now she’s retired with our new baby and I’ll retire at 40. Get your income up folks even if it means working shift work and overtime. Then make sure to invest half!
One tip too Brian would be to move to a city with cheaper living early in life to set more aside. I’m a Canadian Viewer and lived in Ottawa. I was making $18 CAD an hour (age 21) working out to roughly $2800 a month or $2100 after taxes based on full time work. My rent (one bedroom sub basement unit in sub-optimal part of town) was $1,300 a month. If I ate noodles and beans every day I could budget about $350 a month for food. That would leave me a whopping $450 of income a month on $2800 pre-tax or 16%. But as a heads up $350 for food is near unliveable here. Moving is key. Edit: 2021, I’m 23 in 2023 and buying my first new-car cash 😁
28 with a net worth of $130k, mostly in my retirement and crypto. Married, 3 kids, single income household. Started budgeted hard right out of college. Don’t make excuses for yourselves guys!!! He’s absolutely right about budgeting and paying yourself back first, consistently. It pays off!
Thanks again so much for your encouragement! in my early 60s and haven't been so diligent, I've listened and followed your advice for the last 3 years and you have helped alot! I'll be sending this to my children and grandchildren
I just the JAR Money Management system since I was 23. Now 37. Put 25 to 40% away for just in case annual tax. From there break it down like this. 55% in necessities 10% in investment 10% in education 10% in long term saving 10% in play/enjoyment 5% in give Worked well so far for me.
I’m way above my target savings. The older me enjoys a luxury life style in the comfort of my luxury home. The rest is entertaining spending with friends and families. I’ve only just started in a Roth because I am not a fan of the stock market; wish I would have done that earlier. Enjoy this kind of content. Look forward to May 3
I'm 26 with $193K net worth. Sometimes it can feel like I'm so far behind and away from my goals. Videos like these server as a reminder that I've come a long way and am still doing well. Thank you.
Killin it man! Not a lot of guy's our age with that kind of money. I'm also 26 and just broke 600k net worth. I will say I've loosened up a bit and spend more now. This video has given me a lot of perspective.
Love your content. I think you should make some of these videos in Spanish as well. Lots of good info my Spanish speaking friends would benefit from, especially since you speak the language as well
Guys do not despair that you’re starting late because you’re behind according to the traditional model. In today’s world we’re in the computer age, so just keep learning about the many ways to make money. Many on UA-cam have become millionaires since starting a UA-cam channel during the pandemic. Many in the sales profession become multimillionaires in one to three years, so it’s never too late.
Another smart and informative video. I'd like to chime in and emphasize that the divorce circumstance will destroy any financial future and savings you create. There is no preparing for this other than not signing a marriage certificate. Even then they've found way to get to your wealth. Family court attorneys have ensured that if you, or your spouse involve the state court in dissolving your marriage, the court and attorneys will extract as much wealth from you and your children as possible to enrich themselves. ALL finances are out on the table so they can ascertain how much the family has and conspire with each other to cause as much conflict as possible to keep ex spouse/parents going back to court. There is no safe haven for funds. Each time you "need them" they make a lot of money. The laws their state representative friends, who are mostly ex-attorneys themselves, are designed so that attorneys' 1st obligation is to the court, not you. The statistics of a marriage lasting 15 years is 50%. 50 years, 5 %. The family court system is a unique legal system that strips anyone who gets trapped of their rights. Most do not understand this process until it happens to them and they are neck deep in it, broke, indentured, turned into visitors to their children, and ultimately destroyed. I've seen it happen to so many because they think "it could never really happen to me". The states use the saying "best interest of the child" as a shield to steal from already broken families and individuals any accumulated wealth and they prey on the fact that parents will do anything for their children. Until the US model for family court is reformed it'd be wise to never let a state government into your personal relationships and unions with someone you love or may love at the time. Divorce is a predatory 60 billion + per year industry. Marriage is a business contract in which you need no lawyer to get into, but one or more to get out of. Be more than careful.
A lot of my friends have negative networth due to student loans and other loans... And we are in our 40's now. I budgeted every dollar early, and I might not have a 7 figure net worth but with paid off house and cards, and a investment portfolio, at least I am not in the red. Our household also learned how to be entertained for free or close to free. When we do have free time, we learned to appreciate certain free to play games and play with my friends; which is so much cheaper than going to the bar every friday. Or we watch youtube videos like this one to learn new things. We also never eat out since we can make food better and more healthy at home. I don't know if the quality of restaurant food has decreased or I'm spoiled with great home cooking., but every time I have to go out with work events for eating out I'm always disappointed even if it's "fine dining".
Ngl that sounds boring af g, enjoy that meaningless digital number I guess. You don’t have much time left to live life to the max (I’m assuming with age physical things are harder to do right?), maybe I sound acerbic because most of my old friends are like this; I’m in my early 20s. Regardless, I’d rather be broke than live such a dull life 🤷🏻♂️ respectfully.
@@XanVicious that's cuz your 20 .. life's about having fun when you have no responsibilities, how do you expect to support your lifestyle as you get older tho? trust me we all feel/felt the same way
@@XanVicious I found a lot of the hedonistic pursuits tiring and boring quickly in my 20's. For physical activity I do a lot of kendo and iaido (been doing it for 15+ years now) which isn't cheap or free but still a lot cheaper than going out every Friday night to get drunk and wasted.
Thank you Brian! Will be coming into my 30s very soon and out of unexpected life events/poor financial literacy a few years ago, but have been working on discipline to set myself up for the future! Looking forward to educating myself and seeing more of your videos!
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I had $25k saved up debt free by 25 but I got sick at 25 and had to use all that money on doctor visits/tests/medicine. Now I have to start back from 0, it sucks so bad but I’m glad to still be here and I’ll keep grinding to build my wealth back up. It’s gonna take me a while but I’m not giving up.
No insurance?
Insurance maxes out so fast. I have insurance, but one dental emergency set me back $6k. Overnight expenses like that are impossible to overcome with a low income (I’m in graduate school).
Hey, at least u are not in the negatives. If u didnt have that money, you'd be in deep water. At least you didnt take out loans with high apy% eating u away.
I’m also glad you’re still here.
should have just taken it on loans and filed bankruptcy
I was very lucky that my father-in-law suggested maxing out Roth IRAs in our 20s with extra cashflow; it’s near criminal that this isn’t taught in public school
100%
They taught it in my school and everywhere in my area.
I started at 33 so basically I'm going to die poor. It's too late for me
This place wants slaves until you're done
How old are you now?
I'm 27 and I just started a decent paying job last year. So far I have 10k in savings in a high yield account, and I also started my 401k. Being financially responsible really makes a difference.
Make sure to fund a Roth ira as much as you can
@@ginaruff2867 Totally agree, Roth IRAs are great for younger people. Try and put as much as you can in, and if you have enough fill it to the yearly contribution cap (6500 this year). But before you do make sure you have enough cash on hand for your emergency fund. Smart keeping it in a High yield account!
till u get MARRIED and lose half :)
@@ginaruff2867😊😊😊
@gonzalescarloz A lil late but aside from maxing your Roth IRA dont forget you can also put money into CDs and Bonds if you want to play it safe. Just look under “fixed income” when you invest. Yields are anywhere between 4%-7% compounded interest if you want to earn a little more safely.
24 years old, extremely glad I’m getting into this now, from 18-23 I have made some poor financial decisions 😂
😅😂for sure
Same 😅
I'll be 41 on May 23. You're way ahead of me at your age. Right now, my savings is only 20k.
24 years young, glad you've already realized!
There are very few who made good financial decisions between the ages of 18-23. Keep on plan going forward and you'll be fine.
I’m 26 (27 in Nov), and had 15k in savings in 5% APY account. That 15k has dropped to 5k due to major car problems, killing ALL consumer debt, and career changing. It’s bittersweet but having that money ready was a great feeling.
I wish i would have seen this video 20 years ago. I’m 42 now, so I’m having a late start at fixing my finances…but better late than never 😊 Thanks!
Same boat
Same here, I'm 45. We will be fine
I once read that a mans peak earning potential is between 40-60 years,it is not going to be the same for everyone, this is a generalization..by that measure,you are at a perfect age..I am 42 too,I only realized that I should invest my money at the age of 39 years..the last 3 years have been very good for me..all the best..educate yourself financially and take calculated risks..you will succeed
Same… we’re 41 & 43 at it
I’m 47 and completely wasted valuable time. I’ve given up now, I just reflect on how things could’ve been different 🤷🏽♂️
So far so good.
25 with 140K in securities, no debt, paid off car. Once I get my housing figured out, I’m on a great path.
Wait till you have kids😅
@@timchan334 Probably gonna wait till I’m in my 40’s. Will probably move overseas too.
@@nicholasgandhi6504 yikes
@@nicholasgandhi6504you plan on getting a wife a decade younger 😵💫😂 women can’t have kids at 40 bro
@@JustBeelo mid 20’s G 🤣🤣
Investing in alternative income streams that are independent of the government should be the top priority for everyone right now. especially given the global economic crisis we are currently experiencing. Stocks, gold, silver, and virtual currencies are still attractive investments at the moment.
@@AstaKristjan I've been able to scale from $50K to $189k in this red season because my Financial Advisor figured out Defensive strategies which help portfolios be less vulnerable to market downturns.
@@simonbad Avery Barnes Whidden, she was in the news when she revived Grumac in 2018. You can look her up online, there isn’t much I can say here so it doesn’t seem as if i am promoting an agenda.
@@Erinmills98does she require your net worth to be a lot for you to be a client? I'm 25 and just starting out my financial journey
Avery Barnes is wonderful! She told me my financial problems were the result of my ex wife, and offered to make her disappear 👌
I haven't heard from either her or my ex since, but she really helped me out
@@gino14lmaooooooo way to stick it to the bots
I’m 29 years old and have been aggressively saving over 50% of my income for the last 5 years. I drive a beat up Honda with over 270,000 miles on it. At the rate I’m going I should be able to retire by the age of 40, just have to keep on track.
where are you investing the savings?
@@herbankiddIf anything his savings should be in HYSA or a high yield CD.
@@herbankidd Vanguard ETFs
Careful with saving too much money unnecessarily, the car could brake at some point and cause death, making your savings meaninglessness. Drive safe out there and invest in yourself properly. I have the same mindset, but after buying a new car, I feel relieved since my 2006 Nissian Altima with 160k felt like driving a bomb.
If you don't have kids it can certainly be done.
27 here
-£8k emergency
- .25 Bitcoin (around £6200)
- £4K in vanguard lifestrategy
- £6100 in physical gold and silver
- £80k left on mortgage
All this on a very average UK salary 👍🏽
Did you sell your bitcoin yet
I’m 36 and wife 37 with current net worth of ~$1.1 mil. 6 years ago, we had 70k student loan, 25k car loans, 15k personal loan, 10k+ credit cards. Road to wealth started by paying all these black holes. We’re fortunate enough to make 6fig incomes but we also live in CA where EVERYTHING is expensive. It’s going to be painful getting started but once you see the debt actually going down, it becomes addicting! Best of luck to everyone with your financial journey!
im guessing you both had huge income events to get to 1.1M from the negative in 6 years?
I started saving and investing in 1989 at the age of 20... my father forced me to start. I love that man today!!!
I am 54 today and have 2.2 million in my retirement account, 135k liquid and I trade securities with 50-55k
That’s a good dad! 👏🏼👏🏼👏🏼
@@Aurumfae Indeed, thank you. I have done the same to my 27 yr old son.
How much of your income did yoy save per paycheck
@Daniel Well 80% while living at home, joined the military and earned my real estate license. All income from real estate went to investments and savings. On average 30-40% over 25+ years. I also have my military retirement, rated 100% VA.
you guys had unfair advantage back in the day. houses were cheaper, education was much less expensive, even if you adjust salaries to back to relative levels.
I'm definitely an outlier, have $600k in CASH, no 401k, etc, no debt. I love when online banks pay 5% interest, the interest pays all my monthly bills.
I wish I had that right now. It'll change my life. That's great 👍🏾
When inflation is higher than your bank interest rate, you are being tricked. That money is actually becoming less valuable.
Good to know at 19 with 10k in savings I’m doing good 😂. Social media can definitely be toxic and make you feel like you’re behind but just keep doing your best and never give up. I hope everyone here succeeds and accomplishes their dreams including my self 🙏
I was 27 with 10k in savings so you’re doing well! 31, married, and net worth combined $275k net worth. Good thing you’re starting early!
10000% daddies money
One thing I did that helped me in my 20s to save was think about my future family. I would think to myself “you know one day our family may need this”. I did this before I even had a girlfriend. It helps fuel that drive to do the right thing with money.
I'm 32 and started with Dave Ramsey at first. Paid all debt off by 28, saved our 6 months emergency fund and been investing 20% between our Roth, 401k, and investments. We have a combined net worth of over $200k. The biggest thing that worked was increasing our income and working side jobs that pay my mortgage off quickly. Highly recommend a strong budget and automatic withdraws of the Investments. Plan to retire at 55 and enjoy our older age.
Nobody can become financially successful overnight. They put in background work but we tend to see the finished part. Fear is a dangerous component, hindering us from taking bold steps we need in other to reach our goals. you have to contend with inflation, recession, decisions from the Feds and all. I was able to increase my portfolio by $289k in months. You have to seek for help in the right places.
@Rebecca This is the problem! Most times people with little or no knowledge of the stock market try investing by themselves. It once happened to me, then I learned my lesson and contacted a US-based finance consultant and everything changed. In in the first quarter of this year i made $370k and counting.
I've actually been looking into advisors lately, the news I've been seeing in the market hasn't been so encouraging. who's the person guiding you?
Cant reveal much here, [Colleen Rose Mccaffery] oversees my portfolio, and I recommend researching her credentials on the net, she's well established.
@@silkeschulz5754 Benevolence, this reference seems valid.. Just inputted her full name on my browser and found her site without sweat, 20 years of experience is certainly striking! very much appreciate it
It’s very hard to save in your 30s as well. You are now making money, but you have way more bills. Student loans, mortgage, childcare, car. There isn’t much left after that.
The messy middle
I think the real answer is just save as much as possible while still enjoying life to an extent and then when you've got a rock solid foundation and investments generating passive income you can ease off if you want to and splurge on yourself or your family.
Building good spending habits is easily the most important rule here. Take any unnecessary expense you have each month and multiply that by 12x and again by 15x (if you're 40 years from retirement), the first # is how much you don't invest this year and the second # is how much you don't in at least 40 years (assuming a 7% growth rate). Weed, beer, games, sports betting, clothes, shoes, w/e it is it adds up after awhile and sometimes looking at the 40 year cost of somethings makes you stop doing it.
Yeah this is key.
I love that weed was the first item on your list lmao
Doesn’t mean you can’t have fun. Don’t forget to live life.
Currently working overseas but will return to my home country in the near future. I'm a landlord. I invested in property at the age of 22. Value has soared and renting out. Will live on the rental income I receive and live with my aging parents for the time being. At 60 I can withdrawal from my superannuation (401(k)). Have savings and eligible for the Australian pension at 63. In the future I may downsize, sell the property and buy cheaper property and add the left over money from the sale to savings. Lots of options for me. The way I see it if you have $1m at some point, that’d be enough to create a portfolio that would pay you between 50k-70k in dividend income.
I've been saying the same thing for years as you age time gains value and money loses value. I retired at 62 and moved to the Philippines after I recovered from a work place injury. No stress, no rent/mortgage/debt, cheap to live here, eating healthier and the wife here treats me like gold. It doesn't just depend on saving, To optimize financial outcomes, individuals can seek guidance from a qualified financial advisor who can provide tailored advice and strategies to minimize expenses and maximize income.
I completely agree; I'm 60 years old, recently retired, and have roughly $1,250,000 in outside retirement funds. I have no debt and very little money in retirement funds compared to the total value of my portfolio over the last three years. To be honest, the Fin-advisor's can only be neglected, not rejected. Simply conduct study to identify a reliable one.
This is exactly how i wish to get my finances coordinated ahead or retirement. Can I get access to your advisor?
Her name is “CHRISTINE ANN PODGORNY”. I got heard about her from my wife. She was handling her invt effectively, and she's been doing same for me.
Thank you for the lead. I looked her up, and I have sent her an email. I hope she gets back to me soon.
Most Americans have less than 1k in savings and no emergency fund...so if your behind, your not alone...if you are watching this it means you likely are better off than you think already. Sometimes, just starting to make a change is a substantial win, there are no short cuts to getting rich and staying rich, it is an uphill climb, and that is why 90% never start. Don't be the 90%
I'm 39, 401k with over 500k, net worth 660k, no college degree, no student loan debt. Public servant. Not rich, just middle class. Didn't have a car note till I was 34.
married or kids?
@elleranon yes
When did u start your 401k
@@krisevans4379 2007
@@krisevans4379 and I'm at 700k 401k now, the Biden years have been good
Animation with captions and graphics is a great style for communicating with your audience. New and refreshing for such an important topic!
So helpful! With so many financial experts throwing around arbitrary numbers, your clear, concise guideposts take all the unneeded stress out of the game.🙂
These are averages. I would aim to double these numbers to be safe.
This is the video I that I needed as a 24 year old.
This strategy has been around since the beginning of time. Most of us simply didn't listen.
@@joeashbubemmakey word, listen
You would not have listened 😅
I know people are gonna say this is a boring video but by all means he is exactly right on how things are. If you force yourself to put aside money then you see less play money on the side and will be less tempted to go over budget. Kudos
I'll never be able to retire. I'm not even close to those amounts and I'm 60.
It's food costs that is killing me. And I cut back on eating.
34, and sitting above the median net worth. Not by a huge amount, but about double. That's cool. Didn't get my act together until I was 32 and got sober, either. So, this is good news. Hoping to have well over a million by retirement.
That’s the hope we need as ALREADY 30 year olds.
This was soul crushing, but at least I can still try turning thinks around. Thank you; I needed to hear this.
You are the uncle/older brother sharing financial literacy that we all need, thank you!
No. Better financial literacy educators out there, look at Rob Berger (youtube), The Money Guy Show (youtube), and PlanVision Podcast (on its own website).
Most of Brian's financial advice is dangerous advice, don't take it at face value.
The sooner you owe nothing(have no debt), the better off you will be.
First thing you need to do is to develop discipline. !
I wish had done this 25 years ago..
I'm 45 and trying to save 25%.
I make 120k in Atlanta I’m 26 no debt but I was spending so much money on god knows. I did a budgeting plan and now I have more money saved than ever before. Great video.
Real person here. Thank you for being awesome! I really appreciate your channel, insight, and expertise.
Thank you for all the support Mr Hamlet!
If you don’t want to work for anyone it’s simple. Do whatever it takes to own a duplex or two properties. Live in one unit and rent the other. Sell something or grow something for spending money but have your tenant pay your mortgage so by the time you retire your mortgage is zero and you can live off your tenant money throughout your life :)
Literally a friend told me about this exact thing and now I’ve been thinking about doing it
The issue is having the money to cover both mortgages when you don’t have tenants
@@RavensTheNextDynasty that’s the risk of freedom. Better to try it and restart then never attempt iy
@@RavensTheNextDynasty Yeah not to mention many view housing as a basic need so they don't make sure they outpace expenses in order to win over time.
Are you a landlord? I’m guessing no. After being involved in residential real estate for decades, I’m here to advise you to think this through in more detail than you have. There are so many factors you are not taking into consideration.
All those people online telling you it’s easy to make money in real estate - - - they’re lying. If they were right, they wouldn’t be hustling you. They would be quietly raking in their dough and enjoying their luxury lives.
Yes, it can be somewhat profitable, but you need diversification.
Became the Head of household taking care of my aging parents on early 20' and there goes my budget and savings out the window !!!
I'm a believer that you must honor your parents. You will be rewarded
Save your change. It adds up.
That is a very hornarable act. An act like that is imediatly rewarded in your charcter, something that is worth much more than money
Hang in there Our parents always taught us to look after our own retirement before your kids needs. Dad had a stroke and we kept him in his home for about 17 years. Worn out, we finally put him in a nursing home. It took 4 firemen and myself to get him loaded up (He was like a caged animal). He starved himself out in 30 days in the nursing home. He was a tough character.
Apply for every form of financial aid you can think of, food stamps, healthcare, tax breaks, get in good with the counsel on aging and other geriatric services. They may qualify for a visiting nurse once or twice per month. Many assume this is a burden they have to take on alone just because no one is informing them of their options.
I wish everybody the best on the financial journey! Do not let society make you crazy! Focus on yourself!
This is the second time watching your video..good one. Anyway, I’m a dividend investor but it’s a slow and steady growth. I’m 39 with a $300k portfolio and plan to retire at 60. My goal is to reach 2 million by then...I repositioned some of my dividend stocks using my broker James Fletcher Brennan. Now, I’m buying fractional shares of TSLA, AMC ,NIO ,NVR again. Before I was after dividends for passive income but it’s slow growth so i took my chances on high growth stocks and I've gotten a 120% increase this year but hopefully I’ll reach a million sooner
Nobody knows everything, You need to manage risk, and stick to your broker’s plan through thick or thin, While also continuously learning from mistakes and improving. I also hope to trade with the big dogs soon
he really seems to know his stuff. I also found his online page and read through his resume, educational background, qualifications and it was really impressive. he is a fiduciary who will act in my best interest. So, I booked a session with him
I had to Google to be sure, he has a great resume
i'm happy there are lots of people doing so well...Love this channel for the transparency
I made all the mistakes in my 20s. But it drove me to be as financially stable as possible now that I am in my early 30s.
Yeah me too. I had credit card debt and it was managable early so went rice and beans mode and paid it all off. And now we don't miss eatin out anymore hahaha.
Me too still haven’t got a break. Lots of education but haven’t had a salary over 50k in my mid thirties and expenses keep rising… 1400 gross pay is pretty tough in todays world. I’m ready to just be poor so I can get assistance smh
@@AI_EmeraldApple I literally just ate lime rice and black beans. Got to switch it up often it gets old. Cheapest meal 2.50 a meal
@@Vincedaprince1 We also bought a lot of and still buy costco chicken. 4.99 for a whole cooked chicken that lasts for many meals is not only a time saver, but saves money when you crave meat
That's good, you still have three decades to work and get ahead. Keep it up and remember those lessons
I love this video. Some may feel that it's too late but remember that it's never too late. The best way to get going on saving is to start.
Its interesting to see where others are at in life. I just turned 23 and moved back in with my parents grateful and will take full advantage to save my income. Still trying to figure out life and tighten up my plan for the future. Good luck to all those watching this video, we’re all here for a common reason
I'm past this point and there are many good tips in this. However many people are living pay check to pay check. If two of those checks don't arrive a person has a real chance of being homeless. So while this is a great post for many it's impossible for a large group of people.
I'm turning 60 this year and expect to have a net worth of $1 million by the end of the year. And I see no hope of retiring. They are dismantling Social Security before our eyes, and have already half-privatized Medicare via so-called Medicare Advantage (AVOID). You work until you die in this country. It's savage.
True
So thankful that I found out about financial education while still living with my mom at 18 so I have time to save before I fully go Into the real world. I’m saving/ investing about 50-60% of my income right now
Most Americans don’t even have $1,000 in savings but I’m reading all of these posts about people who are acting like they do😂
They may not be lying. This comment section is likely the very small percentage of individuals who actually care and are responsible with their finances
I don’t have $1k in savings b/c of things called brokerage accounts.
@@kevinbiketour1 so you'll be sitting dry when buying opportunities come
@@natefreeman1466 o😅😅
@@natefreeman1466 Good point but when you go look at their pages it doesn’t reflect that. Only a few were into crypto and watching videos on financial literacy. However they were posting about all of this imaginary money but their history shows they’re watching girls in the gym or cat/dog videos.
This is good. I’m in my 50s. 5 years away from retirement. I started late in saving. One obstacle at a time. Got the kids thru college debt free! I work part time. Hard to save as much as Brian suggested, but I invested in learning. I got my notary license, and am working at creating more income. It’s slow to be honest, but it keeps me busy and not shopping. So that’s a plus!
I hope your kids will be around to help you out for the sacrifice you made for their education.
Woah amazing. I had student loans and it honestly stressed me out. I hope your kids will appreciate your efforts, it will really give them a great boost to their financial stability.
Why are you just working part time?
Great video, 27 year old here. Trying to build wealth and diversify assets. I tend to have less than 10% each check available to save because I’m always investing. It’s a dynamic that needs balance but I believe that we should invest more when we are younger
Thank you for this video! Turning 40 this year, and my hubby and I just started preparing for retirement last year.
This video is going to all my kids for sure!
39 and just happy to keep my head above water - conventional employment wasn’t something I could handle and when i rely on it something out of my hands would happen. Ive got a lot skills n enjoy a simple life
My biggest financial regret is not starting a Roth when I was 18, 19, only making a few thousand dollars a year. I could have had anything in that account growing completely tax free, as I was in the 0% marginal tax bracket, for a lifetime.
Use that regret to push yourself to make more than the Roth IRA limit +$150k.. At that point you'll look and say, great that wasn't even for me
Same! But glad I started in late 20s instead of never.
We're in our early 60s getting ready to retire. Although we're doing well, the amount of money we've wasted over the years is downright shameful: The impulse purchases, the useless high-end clothes, being too generous with our friends. We would have retired millionaires if we saved more and spent less.
Definitely agree with working toward promotion goals. I would make sure to overshoot these median numbers to account for inflation. I am constantly working to increase my contribution rates. A few times a year I will make adjustments to my portfolio.
I'm in my mid-thirties, have $250,000 saved and make $140,000 a year. Sounds great, except that I wasn't able to buy a house before this bubble started. So either way, I'm still screwed. Net zero game after all that gruesome work I've put in over the years. This country is a joke now.
Where do u live?
Viewership must be generating some good income, video quality is stepping up!
Im glad to see Brian is getting the exposure he deserves!
He’s definitely making a lot of money here on YT. I’d venture to say though he’ll never show any income statements from it.
Thank you so much! I sent this to my daughters hoping they don’t procrastinate as I have done.
I feel depressed after watching this video because I’m 42 and no where near the numbers you listed😂😂😂
I like that you specified its for households since many sources always miss-quote the statistic and people think it is individual numbers
Not one person told me about the importance of building wealth at an early age. So much I've learned over the years has been due to trial and error, mostly error.
I had a 401K that I depleted due to the hole that I put myself in. At 29 years old at the time. Ughhh.
Thank you for the information.
you weren't able to think that saving money is good?
@@ChineseWinnie that wasn't it...
How old are you now? 29 is still young, definitely young enough to turn it all around and still end up a millionaire in the future 💕
@@ChineseWinnie Back in my time. There was no electronic online forums or anything. It was all done on hard paper application forums. They don't teach you this in school and growing up, my parents did not teach anything about saving money. There to busy working to make end meat for us.
Shocking thing is. I’m a 25 year old in a 35-39 year olds position. 60k in my portfolio. Can’t wait to see where I’m at in 10 years. Saving 60% of my net income per month
@kenneth rashford I started out with 14k in 2020. Investing is definitely the way to go. If you invested in QQQ 13 years ago your 50k portfolio would be 600k.
Great video! One thing I wish you mentioned is how much of a difference compound interest can add up from investing in your 20s vs 30s
Was thinking the same thing. As much as people in their 20’s have no savings if their parents could help kickstart that savings to compound would make a massive difference in the future.
@@sharinglungs3226 people in their 20s don’t have saving because they are spending it…. That is why it should be emphasized
Feels good being way ahead of the curve. I can't wait for real estate market to go up in flames. That's my next big investment/diversification strategy.
I know they are “average”, but the numbers seem very low
if i don't have $1M in the bank by 29 i quit
28 yr old. Got about 35k in savings. Live in my parents house. No debt except for monthly credit card.
Me too & I think I’m not doing well, I don’t know why? I think that’s a decent amount for our age in savings.
I started reading Money and Kiplinger's magazine in my 20's and opened an Invesco mutual fund account with $100 with automatic monthly investments. As I started earning more I starting investing more. We both had decent jobs with decent companies and retirement plans. By the time my wife & I retired at 55 we had been saving/investing 50% of our income, owned a vacation/retirement home that we paid cash for, were debt free and had $2 million dollars invested. It's all about investing early, investing often and maximizing how much you invest. THAT needs to be your priority if you want to retire wealthy. It's call DELAYED GRATIFICATION. Oh, and a DINK lifestyle helps A LOT (Dual Income No Kids). Good luck!
No Kids is key!
🤣🤣
This is incredibly helpful. I'm 25 and trying to become financial literate. Although I know I'm young, I feel like I started focusing on money late
Just turned 29, 1.08 million net worth. I’ve sacrificed 7 years for this, future looks good
This is wisdom that I was fortunate that my father taught it to me. I ❤️ tax deferred annuities. Thank you for this Brian!! I feel better
Annuities come with high upfront fees. I avoid them at all costs, but you do you. It might be the right thing for you. We pumped a lot into our 401ks in low-cost mutual funds and hit a million in net worth before we were 50 years old. Almost to $2 million just five years later.
I agree with truthslayer. Hard to beat either a total market index fund or s and p index fund.
Tax deferred annuities are terrible vehicles. Super-high fees and low returns, plus lock your money up so you can’t invest it elsewhere. Are you a teacher? Teachers are often targeted by insurance companies for a hard sell on these products.
@@suzanneemerson9787 it’s fine in a balanced portfolio. I have vast diversification in my portfolio. I got waived fees through my company I worked for. I used to work in the credit markets but now I do small business finance from my home office so I’m not an absent mother. But I have an advantage for retirement. I live on Long Island, NY where million dollar houses are the norm now and I bought mine for $450k; now worth $1.3M. We can easily retire and move to less expensive states. It sucks when you are living here but once the mortgage is paid off, you are set to retire comfortably in another state. I am so happy that I made my last mortgage payment in February 🥳🥳
In my 20’s I had no money and a negative net worth. No parents to help me through college or any other costs. I knew nothing about investing. Now in my early 40’s I only recently finished paying off my student loans and in a much better position financially and career wise. Fortunately I was smart enough to start a 401k contribution when I was younger and it’s grown a lot.
Thank you Brian, I was blessed to realize financial education is crucial in my 20's, then started to learn Robert Kiyosaki on 4 quadrants, 23 yrs forward, we're well ahead than my peers and looking to quit my job soon and move to Bali in 2 yrs, then wait for my 60 for my Roth IRA to be available.
When the Government wants to keep pushing retirement benefits farther out, then I know waiting until 70 is not a good deal. I’m trying to build my private retirement accounts so I don’t really need Social Security and will take the early retirement at 62. I’d rather collect less for longer than gamble I’m going to live to 100. 🤷♂️ Waiting until 70 and then dying at 73 is not a good return for all those years the government took 10’s of thousands from my paycheck for SS. I just look at it as funding my parents SS payments now.
Absolutely great video and one of your best! You covered pretty much the full spectrum in a brief, powerful and concise format. Well done! Now just need you to make the same video in a pre-teen/teenager format :)
Save as much as possible and put all that saved money into something. all ages. Keep enough for like 3-6 months if things go wrong
Well. I'm 33 and didn't start saving until very recently, but I've had a 401k for about two years and *never logged in* until now. So, I guess thanks for that 😬
Don't worry You're not the only one. I'm 38 no retirement. I had kids young & I was paying for them and not building a retirement.
29 Here. Got financially educated in my early 20s. Started investing and got my net worth up from 0 to 200k :D. Thanks to youtube channels like this. Hoping I can retire early
This is a video for all young ages💯💯🤧 thx Brian
Haven't been here since the pandemic when this channel had about 250K subscribers. Glad to see the channel has grown and this guy has gone back to the basics: just him talking.
I’m 34 and my wife is 30. Our net worth is 2.5 million. Our household income has been 300k/yr for the last 8 years both working in the oil field. Now she’s retired with our new baby and I’ll retire at 40. Get your income up folks even if it means working shift work and overtime. Then make sure to invest half!
I've told people this when I was younger. I'll be the first millionaire in my family.
One tip too Brian would be to move to a city with cheaper living early in life to set more aside.
I’m a Canadian Viewer and lived in Ottawa.
I was making $18 CAD an hour (age 21) working out to roughly $2800 a month or $2100 after taxes based on full time work.
My rent (one bedroom sub basement unit in sub-optimal part of town) was $1,300 a month. If I ate noodles and beans every day I could budget about $350 a month for food.
That would leave me a whopping $450 of income a month on $2800 pre-tax or 16%. But as a heads up $350 for food is near unliveable here.
Moving is key.
Edit: 2021, I’m 23 in 2023 and buying my first new-car cash 😁
This made an enormous difference in our savings/retirement.
@@airybrookgood stuff! And moving for work I actually got paid more too!
underrated tip.
28 with a net worth of $130k, mostly in my retirement and crypto. Married, 3 kids, single income household. Started budgeted hard right out of college. Don’t make excuses for yourselves guys!!! He’s absolutely right about budgeting and paying yourself back first, consistently. It pays off!
Thanks again so much for your encouragement! in my early 60s and haven't been so diligent, I've listened and followed your advice for the last 3 years and you have helped alot! I'll be sending this to my children and grandchildren
I just the JAR Money Management system since I was 23. Now 37.
Put 25 to 40% away for just in case annual tax.
From there break it down like this.
55% in necessities
10% in investment
10% in education
10% in long term saving
10% in play/enjoyment
5% in give
Worked well so far for me.
I’m way above my target savings. The older me enjoys a luxury life style in the comfort of my luxury home. The rest is entertaining spending with friends and families. I’ve only just started in a Roth because I am not a fan of the stock market; wish I would have done that earlier. Enjoy this kind of content. Look forward to May 3
Wow... bragging 😂
ROTH is mostly stock market
Many wealth building steps.
Don’t forget the foundation:proper protection (health, wealth and self)
I'm 26 with $193K net worth. Sometimes it can feel like I'm so far behind and away from my goals. Videos like these server as a reminder that I've come a long way and am still doing well. Thank you.
Killin it man! Not a lot of guy's our age with that kind of money. I'm also 26 and just broke 600k net worth. I will say I've loosened up a bit and spend more now. This video has given me a lot of perspective.
Degens forsure
How much do you have saved up ?
Great tips for the individual who had no set backs in life with building family’s and purchasing a home at an affordable price.
Love your content. I think you should make some of these videos in Spanish as well. Lots of good info my Spanish speaking friends would benefit from, especially since you speak the language as well
32 with 300k net worth, $0 debt, no house yet, still feel behind. Hopefully reach 1 million around 36
Guys do not despair that you’re starting late because you’re behind according to the traditional model. In today’s world we’re in the computer age, so just keep learning about the many ways to make money. Many on UA-cam have become millionaires since starting a UA-cam channel during the pandemic. Many in the sales profession become multimillionaires in one to three years, so it’s never too late.
Do you have a budget format sheet you care to share?
That's a great video that I should make Jason. Thank you for that tip!
Love saving tips that would only work if you come from money but not if you work
As someone in their 20’s this info is useful
I am so happy to hear that LF_98! Thank you for all the support!
Another smart and informative video. I'd like to chime in and emphasize that the divorce circumstance will destroy any financial future and savings you create. There is no preparing for this other than not signing a marriage certificate. Even then they've found way to get to your wealth. Family court attorneys have ensured that if you, or your spouse involve the state court in dissolving your marriage, the court and attorneys will extract as much wealth from you and your children as possible to enrich themselves. ALL finances are out on the table so they can ascertain how much the family has and conspire with each other to cause as much conflict as possible to keep ex spouse/parents going back to court. There is no safe haven for funds. Each time you "need them" they make a lot of money.
The laws their state representative friends, who are mostly ex-attorneys themselves, are designed so that attorneys' 1st obligation is to the court, not you. The statistics of a marriage lasting 15 years is 50%. 50 years, 5 %. The family court system is a unique legal system that strips anyone who gets trapped of their rights. Most do not understand this process until it happens to them and they are neck deep in it, broke, indentured, turned into visitors to their children, and ultimately destroyed. I've seen it happen to so many because they think "it could never really happen to me". The states use the saying "best interest of the child" as a shield to steal from already broken families and individuals any accumulated wealth and they prey on the fact that parents will do anything for their children. Until the US model for family court is reformed it'd be wise to never let a state government into your personal relationships and unions with someone you love or may love at the time. Divorce is a predatory 60 billion + per year industry. Marriage is a business contract in which you need no lawyer to get into, but one or more to get out of. Be more than careful.
A lot of my friends have negative networth due to student loans and other loans... And we are in our 40's now.
I budgeted every dollar early, and I might not have a 7 figure net worth but with paid off house and cards, and a investment portfolio, at least I am not in the red.
Our household also learned how to be entertained for free or close to free. When we do have free time, we learned to appreciate certain free to play games and play with my friends; which is so much cheaper than going to the bar every friday. Or we watch youtube videos like this one to learn new things. We also never eat out since we can make food better and more healthy at home. I don't know if the quality of restaurant food has decreased or I'm spoiled with great home cooking., but every time I have to go out with work events for eating out I'm always disappointed even if it's "fine dining".
how do you not have a 7 figure net worth with out any debt and investment portfolio in your 40s... something clearly went wrong lol
@@herbankidd I am pretty close actually :P
Ngl that sounds boring af g, enjoy that meaningless digital number I guess. You don’t have much time left to live life to the max (I’m assuming with age physical things are harder to do right?), maybe I sound acerbic because most of my old friends are like this; I’m in my early 20s. Regardless, I’d rather be broke than live such a dull life 🤷🏻♂️ respectfully.
@@XanVicious that's cuz your 20 .. life's about having fun when you have no responsibilities, how do you expect to support your lifestyle as you get older tho? trust me we all feel/felt the same way
@@XanVicious I found a lot of the hedonistic pursuits tiring and boring quickly in my 20's. For physical activity I do a lot of kendo and iaido (been doing it for 15+ years now) which isn't cheap or free but still a lot cheaper than going out every Friday night to get drunk and wasted.
I was buck wild in my 20s. Now in my 30s I’m tryna start a budget and focus on goals in life
Thank you Brian! Will be coming into my 30s very soon and out of unexpected life events/poor financial literacy a few years ago, but have been working on discipline to set myself up for the future! Looking forward to educating myself and seeing more of your videos!
Awesome! Good luck!