Savings rate — the percentage of income you set aside rather than spend — has no single right answer, but there are well-established benchmarks that serve as starting points.
For retirement savings specifically, Fidelity recommends saving at least 15% of pre-tax income each year, including any employer match (fidelity.com/viewpoints/retirement/how-much-money-should-I-save). That 15% figure assumes a full career of consistent contributions and retiring around age 67.
The US personal savings rate tracked by the Bureau of Economic Analysis was 3.6% in December 2025 (bea.gov/news/2026/personal-income-and-outlays-december-2025) — a measure of after-tax income that isn’t spent on consumption. That’s far below 15%, which is why most Americans arrive at retirement with less than they intended to save.
Why “savings rate” means different things
The number changes depending on whose definition you use:
| Definition | Typical rate | Who uses it |
|---|---|---|
| BEA personal savings rate | ~3–5% | Government economists; broad measure of consumption vs. income |
| Financial planner target | 15% of gross | Fidelity, Vanguard, most retirement planners |
| FIRE movement target | 25–75%+ of take-home | Early retirement community |
The BEA definition counts any income not spent on consumption — it’s a macroeconomic measure that doesn’t map neatly to what you’d consider “savings” in a personal finance context. It excludes pension contributions made by employers and captures some things (like paying down mortgage principal) differently than individual budgeting does.
When financial planners say “save 15%,” they mean: employee 401(k)/403(b) contributions + employer match + any IRA contributions, divided by gross income. HSAs can reasonably be added to this figure given their triple tax advantage and retirement utility.
The 50/30/20 rule
The 50/30/20 framework originates from Elizabeth Warren and Amelia Warren Tyagi’s 2005 book “All Your Worth: The Ultimate Lifetime Money Plan” (Free Press). Warren was a Harvard Law professor researching household bankruptcy at the time. Their “Balanced Money Formula” divides after-tax income:
- 50% — needs (housing, food, transportation, utilities, minimum debt payments)
- 30% — wants (dining, entertainment, subscriptions, travel)
- 20% — savings and debt repayment above minimums
The 20% savings bucket in their framework includes both saving and accelerated debt repayment. At a median US income, 20% of take-home pay is meaningfully higher than the BEA’s average savings rate, but lower than Fidelity’s 15% of gross (which can translate to higher percentages of take-home depending on your tax bracket).
What a 15% savings rate looks like
| Gross income | 15% target | If employer matches 4% | You contribute |
|---|---|---|---|
| $40,000 | $6,000/year | $1,600 match | $4,400/year |
| $60,000 | $9,000/year | $2,400 match | $6,600/year |
| $80,000 | $12,000/year | $3,200 match | $8,800/year |
| $100,000 | $15,000/year | $4,000 match | $11,000/year |
These are illustrative. Check your employer’s specific match formula to calculate your number accurately.
When 15% isn’t enough
Starting late compounds the shortfall. If you start saving at 35 instead of 25, you’ve lost a decade of compounding growth. Someone who starts at 35 may need to save 20–25% of income to reach similar retirement outcomes, depending on return assumptions. Fidelity’s savings benchmarks (1x salary by 30, 3x by 40, 6x by 50, 8x by 60, 10x by 67; fidelity.com/viewpoints/retirement/how-much-do-i-need-to-retire) are calibrated for someone starting at 25; starting later shifts the required rate up.
The FIRE savings rate
The financial independence / early retirement (FIRE) movement uses higher savings rates to target earlier retirement. The math from Mr. Money Mustache’s foundational post “The Shockingly Simple Math Behind Early Retirement” (mrmoneymustache.com, 2012):
| Savings rate (% of take-home) | Years to retirement |
|---|---|
| 10% | ~43 years |
| 25% | ~32 years |
| 50% | ~16 years |
| 75% | ~7 years |
These calculations assume a 4% safe withdrawal rate and that you can maintain current spending in retirement. A 50% savings rate is not realistic for most people at median income — it’s more relevant for high earners who can maintain low spending even with a high income.
What’s realistic at different income levels
At lower incomes, saving 15% is harder because fixed costs (housing, food, transportation) consume a higher percentage of income. This isn’t a personal failure — it’s a structural reality. At those income levels:
- Capturing any employer match is the highest-priority action
- Building even a small emergency fund prevents debt from wiping out progress
- Increasing the savings rate by 1% per year as income grows can close the gap over time
At higher incomes, saving 15% is more achievable, but lifestyle inflation is the main risk: spending rises to match income, leaving the savings rate unchanged despite higher earnings.
Starting point
If you don’t know your current savings rate: divide annual retirement contributions (employee only) by gross annual income. Add the employer match percentage to get your total rate. Compare to 15%. Adjust from there.