Survey America s Best Savers Are Not The Wealthy

Survey America s Best Savers Are Not The Wealthy

Survey: America's Best Savers Are Not The Wealthy Caret RightMain Menu Mortgage Mortgages Financing a home purchase Refinancing your existing loan Finding the right lender Additional Resources Elevate your Bankrate experience Get insider access to our best financial tools and content Caret RightMain Menu Bank Banking Compare Accounts Use calculators Get advice Bank reviews Elevate your Bankrate experience Get insider access to our best financial tools and content Caret RightMain Menu Credit Card Credit cards Compare by category Compare by credit needed Compare by issuer Get advice Looking for the perfect credit card? Narrow your search with CardMatch Caret RightMain Menu Loan Loans Personal Loans Student Loans Auto Loans Loan calculators Elevate your Bankrate experience Get insider access to our best financial tools and content Caret RightMain Menu Invest Investing Best of Brokerages and robo-advisors Learn the basics Additional resources Elevate your Bankrate experience Get insider access to our best financial tools and content Caret RightMain Menu Home Equity Home equity Get the best rates Lender reviews Use calculators Knowledge base Elevate your Bankrate experience Get insider access to our best financial tools and content Caret RightMain Menu Loan Home Improvement Real estate Selling a home Buying a home Finding the right agent Additional resources Elevate your Bankrate experience Get insider access to our best financial tools and content Caret RightMain Menu Insurance Insurance Car insurance Homeowners insurance Other insurance Company reviews Elevate your Bankrate experience Get insider access to our best financial tools and content Caret RightMain Menu Retirement Retirement Retirement plans & accounts Learn the basics Retirement calculators Additional resources Elevate your Bankrate experience Get insider access to our best financial tools and content Advertiser Disclosure

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You have money questions. Bankrate has answers. Our experts have been helping you master your money for over four decades. We continually strive to provide consumers with the expert advice and tools needed to succeed throughout life’s financial journey. Bankrate follows a strict , so you can trust that our content is honest and accurate. Our award-winning editors and reporters create honest and accurate content to help you make the right financial decisions. The content created by our editorial staff is objective, factual, and not influenced by our advertisers. We’re transparent about how we are able to bring quality content, competitive rates, and useful tools to you by explaining how we make money. Bankrate.com is an independent, advertising-supported publisher and comparison service. We are compensated in exchange for placement of sponsored products and, services, or by you clicking on certain links posted on our site. Therefore, this compensation may impact how, where and in what order products appear within listing categories. Other factors, such as our own proprietary website rules and whether a product is offered in your area or at your self-selected credit score range can also impact how and where products appear on this site. While we strive to provide a wide range offers, Bankrate does not include information about every financial or credit product or service. Middle-class Americans may not earn the biggest paychecks, but they put more of their money in savings than any other group. A quarter of middle-class households (those earning between $50,000 and $75,000 annually) set aside more than 15 percent of their income, according to a survey that accompanied Bankrate’s March Financial Security Index. That money is rerouted from their daily expenses to fund long-term goals such as a retirement investment plan or an emergency savings account. Comparatively, 8 percent of lower wage earners contributed this much. And only 17 percent of the highest earners in the survey (households making $75,000 and above) elected to put the same amount of their salaries away for a rainy day. “Middle-class Americans (have) to do the saving, because nobody is going to do it for them,” says Greg McBride, CFA, Bankrate’s chief financial analyst. “They don’t have the six-figure income to fall back on” for expenses, including household emergencies, long-term health care, children’s education or their own retirement. In contrast, people between 18 and 29 years old — the youngest group in the survey — were the most likely to save relatively little: 37 percent said they save 5 percent or less. Another 18 percent said they save nothing at all. “They don’t see a correlation between where they are now and where they will be,” independent budgeting expert Tiffany Aliche says. They also might not trust the system, after watching their parents’ retirement plans drop in value during and following the Great Recession, says Kate Holmes, a CFP professional and founder of Belmore Financial. “Seeing that loyalty doesn’t work … that that kind of job security doesn’t work” has led many young people to question whether they should invest heavily in a traditional retirement account, like a 401(k), and instead, redirect funds toward a “side hustle” that bolsters their short-term and long-term coffers, she says. For example, “you can invest in real estate, so that provides you the cash flow and more income later,” Holmes says.

The big picture

Bankrate’s latest survey was conducted March 5-8 by Princeton Survey Research Associates International and included answers from 1,000 adults in the continental U.S. The survey also found: Low-income consumers are, perhaps unsurprisingly, the worst at putting money away. Thirty-one percent of households making under $30,000 annually are saving none of the money they bring in, the highest percentage, by far, among income brackets. Retirees (ages 65 and over) are all over the map when it comes to saving. They’re the demographic most likely to save none of their annual income, while also being most apt to put away more than 15 percent of it. Thirty percent of college graduates are saving 6 to 10 percent of their annual income, compared with 16 percent of those who never attended college. Overall, the results represent a bit of a mixed bag regarding the Americans’ overall financial preparedness. “Some people are doing a really great job at saving,” McBride says. “A lot of people are not.” But other research indicates that many Americans under-save. Last month’s Financial Security Index, for instance, found that nearly one-quarter of consumers (24 percent) owe more money on their credit cards than they have in emergency savings. And , Bankrate found that more than a third of adults have not started saving for retirement. “There are a lot of people now reaching their early 60s realizing they don’t have near enough money to get them through the next decades,” Holmes says.

Looking ahead

To avoid suffering a similar fate, it helps to start saving early, though there’s no hard and fast rule as to when you should open a retirement account. “It’s not about the age,” says Kristen Robinson, senior vice president at Fidelity Investments. “It’s about where you are” in life. For instance, a recent graduate carrying a lot of student loan debt may not be able to redirect as much of their paycheck into an employer-funded 401(k) account as someone who went to school on a full scholarship. How much you should contribute to a retirement fund varies. As a general rule of thumb, Fidelity suggests banking at least eight times your ending salary before you retire. At the very least, “you need to meet your employer match,” Robinson says. “You are leaving money on the table if you don’t.” Remember to slowly increase your contributions — even only by 1 percent — as you pay down existing debts and earn more income. This strategy is also useful when it comes to building emergency savings. Bump up what you are automatically transferring into a savings account “every six months,” Holmes says. “Over time, those small increases are going to make a huge difference, and you’re not really going to notice them.” Other ways to include tracking spending for a month to see what items you can cut out of your budget, creating a weekly dinner menu and renegotiating household bills, like insurance payments and utilities. Related Links: Savings challenge: Make your own shaving oil Related Articles: 4 saving, investing tips for 20-somethings More On Financial Security: SHARE: Jeanine Skowronski is a credit card expert, analyst, and multimedia journalist with over 10 years of experience covering business and personal finance.

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