Money & Budgeting

Money at 30: Financial Guide for Your Thirties UK

Complete financial guide for 30-year-olds in the UK. Salary benchmarks, savings targets, property decisions, and investment strategies for your thirties.

At 30, financial pressures intensify: you might be considering buying property, building a family, advancing your career, or all three. This guide covers what you should earn, save, and invest at 30 in the UK, plus the key financial decisions you’ll face in your thirties.

Where You Should Be Financially at 30

Key Benchmarks

Category Target Notes
Pension savings 1x annual salary £30,000 pension if earning £30,000
Emergency fund 6 months expenses ~£10,000-15,000
General savings 3-6 months salary Flexibility fund
Credit score 850+ (Experian) Ready for mortgage applications
High-interest debt £0 Essential before mortgage

Reality check: These are targets, not requirements. Many 30-year-olds have less saved, especially those who started careers later, lived through high-rent areas, or had career changes. The key is your trajectory, not your current position.

Average Salary at 30 in the UK

Income Benchmarks

Percentile Annual Salary
Bottom 25% Under £26,000
Median (50%) £32,000-36,000
Top 25% Over £45,000
Top 10% Over £55,000
Top 5% Over £70,000

Salary by Sector at 30

Sector Typical Range
Tech/Software £45,000-70,000
Finance/Banking £45,000-85,000
Law (5+ PQE) £60,000-100,000+
Medicine (Registrar) £50,000-65,000
Engineering £38,000-55,000
NHS (Band 6-7) £35,000-50,000
Teaching (5+ years) £35,000-45,000
Marketing (Senior) £38,000-55,000
Public Sector (Grade 7) £40,000-55,000

London premium: Add 20-40% for equivalent roles in London.

Use our take-home pay calculator to see your actual pay.

Key Financial Decisions at 30

1. To Buy or Not to Buy Property

The biggest financial decision most 30-year-olds face:

When Buying Makes Sense

Factor Buy if…
Stability Planning to stay 5+ years
Affordability Mortgage similar to rent
Deposit Have 10-20% saved
Career Job security established
Priorities Value ownership and building equity

When Renting Makes Sense

Factor Rent if…
Flexibility Career might require moves
Investment Want to invest more in markets instead
Lifestyle Not ready to settle in one area
Affordability Buying would stretch finances dangerously

First-Time Buyer Costs

Cost Amount Notes
Deposit 10-20% of property £25,000-50,000 for £250,000 home
Stamp Duty £0 (first-timers up to £425k) Then 5% above threshold
Legal fees £1,000-2,000 Conveyancing
Survey £400-700 Homebuyer report
Moving costs £500-2,000 Depending on distance
Total cash needed ~£30,000-55,000 For £250,000 property

See our first-time buyer guide and renting vs buying comparison.

2. Supercharge Your Pension

At 30, you still have 35+ years of growth. This is prime compounding time.

Monthly Contribution By Age 65 (7% growth)
£300 ~£430,000
£500 ~£720,000
£700 ~£1,000,000

Key pension moves at 30:

Action Benefit
Increase contributions to 12-15% Faster growth, tax relief
Use salary sacrifice Save NI as well as income tax
Consolidate old pensions Easier to manage, often lower fees
Review fund allocation Consider higher growth options

See our pension consolidation guide and workplace pension guide.

3. Maximise Tax-Efficient Savings

You now have 10+ years of potential ISA contributions under your belt:

Account Annual Limit Best For
Stocks and Shares ISA £20,000 Long-term growth (5+ years)
Cash ISA £20,000 Emergency fund/short-term
Lifetime ISA £4,000 (ends at 50) First home/retirement

At 30: If you haven’t maxed your LISA contributions, you still have 20 years — potentially £80,000 + £20,000 bonus for retirement or your first home.

See our ISA guide for full details.

Sample Budget at 30

On £40,000 Salary (Take-home ~£2,650/month)

Category Living Alone With Partner
Housing (rent/mortgage) £900-1,200 £550-700 (shared)
Bills & utilities £180-250 £100-150 (shared)
Council Tax £130-180 £65-90 (shared)
Groceries £250-300 £180-230
Transport £100-200 £100-200
Subscriptions £50-80 £40-60
Social/entertainment £150-250 £150-250
Personal/clothes £80-120 £80-120
Available for savings £350-600 £700-1,000

Living with a partner provides significant financial advantages through expense sharing — often allowing double the savings rate.

See our budget planner guide.

Building Wealth in Your Thirties

Investment Strategy at 30

At 30, you can still afford significant risk for growth:

Asset Allocation Risk Level Who It’s For
100% equities Aggressive No major purchases planned for 10+ years
80% equities / 20% bonds Moderate-aggressive Balanced growth
60% equities / 40% bonds Moderate More cautious or nearer-term goals

Typical portfolio for a 30-year-old:

  • Global index funds (80-100%)
  • Small allocation to bonds (0-20%)
  • Keep it simple with low fees

Our how to start investing guide covers the basics.

Net Worth Targets

A useful way to track overall progress:

Age Net Worth Target (Multiple of Salary)
30 1x annual salary
35 2x annual salary
40 3x annual salary

Example (earning £40,000):

  • Target net worth at 30: £40,000
  • Target net worth at 35: £80,000
  • Target net worth at 40: £120,000

Net worth = Assets (savings, investments, pension, property equity) minus Liabilities (debt, mortgage)

Common Financial Situations at 30

If You’re Starting From Zero

Don’t panic — focus on:

  1. Build £1,000 emergency fund first
  2. Get full employer pension match (free money)
  3. Pay off high-interest debt aggressively
  4. Then split savings between emergency fund and investments

You can catch up. £500/month invested from 30 could reach £720,000 by 65.

If You’re Behind on Pension

Current Pension Monthly Increase Needed
£5,000 at 30 Add 2-3% contributions
£10,000 at 30 On track for moderate target
£15,000+ at 30 Ahead of average

Catch-up strategies:

  • Use salary sacrifice for tax + NI savings
  • Make additional voluntary contributions (AVCs)
  • Consider SIPP for additional flexibility

If You’re Single vs Coupled

Financial Factor Single Partnered
Housing costs 100% 50% (shared)
Emergency fund needed Larger (no fallback) Can be smaller
Life insurance Optional Important (especially with mortgage)
Savings rate potential Lower Higher (economies of scale)

Single at 30: Focus on building a larger emergency fund (6+ months) and flexible career/income growth.

If You’re Thinking About Children

Consideration Financial Impact
Childcare costs £800-2,000/month per child
Career breaks Lost earnings + pension contributions
Larger home needed Higher mortgage/rent
Life insurance Becomes essential
Benefits Child Benefit, Tax-Free Childcare available

Before children: Consider increasing life insurance, building larger cash reserves, and discussing finances openly with your partner.

Mistakes to Avoid at 30

1. Buying More House Than You Can Afford

Maximum Mortgage Keep Housing Costs To Why
4.5x salary typically available 30-35% of take-home Leaves room for savings, life changes

Just because a bank will lend it doesn’t mean you should take it.

2. Neglecting Career Growth

Your career is your biggest asset at 30.

Action Potential Impact
Negotiate salary £5,000-10,000 increase possible
Change companies Often 10-20% salary bump
Upskill/certifications Opens promotion paths
Build network Future opportunities

3. Not Protecting Your Income

At 30, you likely have more financial commitments:

Protection Type Cost Purpose
Income protection 2-4% of covered income Replaces salary if unable to work
Life insurance £10-30/month Covers mortgage/family if you die
Critical illness £20-50/month Lump sum if seriously ill

At minimum: Get life insurance if you have a mortgage or dependents.

4. Ignoring Pension until “Later”

Start Age Monthly Contribution Balance at 65 (7%)
25 £200 ~£480,000
30 £200 ~£340,000
35 £200 ~£235,000

Every 5 years you delay roughly halves your final pot at the same contribution level.

Your Financial Checklist at 30

Essential Now

  • Emergency fund of 6 months expenses
  • Pension contributions of 12-15% (including employer)
  • No high-interest debt
  • Adequate credit score for future mortgage
  • Budget tracked monthly

By 35

  • Pension pot of 2x annual salary (cumulative target)
  • First property purchased OR significant investment portfolio
  • Life insurance if mortgage/dependents
  • Written will (especially if partner/children)
  • Consolidated old pensions

Longer Term

  • Clear retirement target calculated
  • Career progression plan
  • Investment strategy documented
  • Estate planning if assets significant

Where You Should Be by 35

Following good financial practices from 30-35:

Category Target by 35
Pension pot 2x annual salary
Emergency fund 6+ months
Overall net worth 2x annual salary
Property Own (or significant investment portfolio)
Career Senior/management level in track
Debt Only mortgage

Summary

Your early thirties are when financial decisions have the biggest long-term impact. The choices you make about homeownership, pension contributions, and career progression will shape your finances for decades. Focus on:

  1. Build stability — emergency fund and income protection
  2. Maximise compound growth — pension and ISA contributions
  3. Make intentional property decisions — buy or rent based on your situation
  4. Invest in your career — it’s your biggest wealth generator

The single most impactful thing at 30: Increase your pension contributions. The tax relief is generous, and the compound growth is powerful.

For more guidance:

Sources

  1. ONS — Annual Survey of Hours and Earnings
  2. MoneyHelper — Pension guidance
  3. Bank of England — Mortgage statistics