Anonymous wrote:I was 22 when I got my first full time job (ie with a 401k), 6 months out of college. I started contributing right away. It was 3% of 25,000. 12 years later I now have $150k saved, and I only make $60k even now.
Start today. Even if it's small, you have to start. Better to be young and broke than old and broke.
Pretty much the same here. Started with first job out of college on the Hill, in 2002, making less than 20K, when I was 22. Continued to always put in whatever I could to at least get the match (which at the beginning was maybe $150-200) and took two years off of any contributions during grad school. Kept rolling everything into an IRA as I changed jobs. Now have $160K in both that IRA and the current 401K, and that is even with the 2 sh**show years of the recession when my balance dropped to virtually nil! Your instinct is right; especially for women - save early, at least to get the match (also takes advantage of dollar-cost averaging over time and reduces your taxable income.)