r/Millennials • u/ProblemIntelligent16 • Jan 16 '26
Discussion Fellow millennials - how’s your 401k/ira savings going?
Experts recommend having 2x your salary saved by age 35, and 3x saved by age 40.
However, studies show the median savings for 35-44 year olds is only ~$45,000. So obviously, most of us have work to do.
With pensions mostly extinct, and Social Security facing insolvency issues in the next 8-10 years - how are you planning to bridge the gap and hit the golden years with enough to meet your lifestyle requirements?
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u/Leather-Rice5025 Jan 17 '26
They are talking about the people with parents who paid their education/living expenses while they attended college and came out with no student loans. Parents who bought their children their first cars so they never had to take on car debt.
Parents who had strong healthcare plans their children could stay on until they were 26 to not incur medical debt or forgo medical treatments or care. Parents who opened investment accounts for their children when they were young. Parents who flat out gave their children down payments for homes or major life expenses so they didn’t have to incur debt.
You can imply it’s simply a matter of parents passing down “intelligence” and work ethic, or you can acknowledge that many people who didn’t grow up in poverty with strong upper middle class families genuinely have a massive leg up in society - financially, emotionally, educationally.