Money & Budgeting

Money at 35: Financial Guide for Your Mid-Thirties UK

Complete financial guide for 35-year-olds in the UK. Salary expectations, pension targets, family finances, and wealth building strategies for your mid-thirties.

At 35, you’re often at a financial crossroads: career advancing, possibly managing family costs, potentially carrying a mortgage, and facing increasing pressure to prepare for the future. This guide covers everything you need to know about money at 35 in the UK.

Where You Should Be Financially at 35

Key Benchmarks

Category Target Notes
Pension savings 2x annual salary £80,000 if earning £40,000
Emergency fund 6 months expenses £15,000-25,000 typically
Net worth 2x annual salary Including property equity
High-interest debt £0 Mortgage only
Life insurance In place If mortgage/dependents

Reality check: These targets assume steady career progression and consistent saving. Many 35-year-olds are behind due to:

  • Career changes or gaps
  • Expensive housing markets
  • Childcare costs
  • Starting careers later (postgrad, career switch)

The focus should be on trajectory — where are you heading, not just where you are.

Average Salary at 35 in the UK

Income Benchmarks

Percentile Annual Salary
Bottom 25% Under £28,000
Median (50%) £36,000-40,000
Top 25% Over £52,000
Top 10% Over £65,000
Top 5% Over £85,000

Salary by Sector at 35

Sector Typical Range Senior/Management
Tech/Software £55,000-90,000 £100,000+
Finance/Banking £55,000-120,000 £150,000+
Law (8-10+ PQE) £80,000-150,000 Partner track
Medicine (Consultant) £85,000-110,000 Plus private work
Engineering (Senior) £50,000-70,000 £80,000+
NHS (Band 7-8) £45,000-60,000 Management roles
Teaching (Senior) £42,000-55,000 Head of department
Marketing (Manager) £45,000-65,000 Director level
Public Sector (G6-7) £50,000-70,000 Senior policy

Peak earnings ahead: For most careers, 35-50 is the highest earning period. Focus on maximising this window.

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

Key Financial Priorities at 35

1. Pension — The Critical Decade

Between 35 and 45, pension contributions have maximum impact:

Monthly Contribution Age 35-65 (7% growth)
£400 ~£460,000
£600 ~£690,000
£800 ~£920,000
£1,000 ~£1,150,000

Pension reality check at 35:

Current Pension Pot Status Action
Under £30,000 Behind Significantly increase contributions
£30,000-60,000 Catching up Maintain or increase
£60,000-100,000 On track Continue current trajectory
Over £100,000 Ahead Well positioned

Maximum contribution benefit: Higher earners can contribute up to £60,000/year or 100% of earnings (whichever is lower) and receive up to 45% tax relief.

See our pension tax relief guide.

2. Family Financial Planning

If you have or are planning children:

Childcare Costs

Childcare Type Monthly Cost Annual Cost
Full-time nursery £1,200-2,000 £14,400-24,000
Childminder £800-1,200 £9,600-14,400
After-school club £200-400 £2,400-4,800

Help available:

  • 30 free hours (3-4 year olds, working parents)
  • Tax-Free Childcare — save up to £2,000/year per child
  • Employer childcare vouchers (if still enrolled)

Family Budget Adjustments

Family Stage Income Impact When It Eases
Baby (0-2) High childcare costs Free hours from 3
Toddler (3-4) 30 free hours help School starts
School age (5-11) Lower costs, after-school only Secondary
Secondary (11-18) Minimal childcare Independence

University costs: Start thinking about this now. See our Junior ISA guide.

3. Mortgage Optimisation

If you own property, your mortgage is likely your largest monthly cost:

Key Questions at 35

Question Action
When does your fix end? Set reminder 3 months before
Are you overpaying? Even small amounts reduce total interest
Could you remortgage cheaper? Check every 2-3 years
Is your term appropriate? Could you extend/shorten?

Overpaying vs Investing

Factor Favour Overpaying Favour Investing
Mortgage rate High (5%+) Low (under 4%)
Risk tolerance Low Higher
Tax status Basic rate Higher/additional rate
Liquidity needs Stable income Uncertain

General rule: Higher earners often benefit more from pension contributions (tax relief) than mortgage overpayments.

See our mortgage overpayment calculator.

4. Career Maximisation

Your mid-thirties are prime earning years:

Career Action Potential Impact
Negotiate salary 5-15% increase
Move companies 10-20% increase typical
Get promoted 10-30% increase
Add qualifications Opens senior roles
Build network Future opportunities

Don’t neglect: Your earning power is your biggest asset. A £10,000 salary increase, invested over 30 years at 7%, equals ~£1,000,000 more wealth.

Sample Budgets at 35

Single Person on £45,000 (Take-home ~£2,900)

Category Amount % of Net
Mortgage/Rent £1,000-1,400 34-48%
Bills & utilities £180-250 6-9%
Council Tax £150-200 5-7%
Groceries £280-350 10-12%
Transport £150-250 5-9%
Phone & subscriptions £60-100 2-3%
Social/lifestyle £200-300 7-10%
Pension (additional) £200-300 7-10%
Savings/Investing £200-400 7-14%

Family on £70,000 Combined (Take-home ~£4,450)

Category Amount % of Net
Mortgage £1,300-1,800 29-40%
Bills & utilities £250-350 6-8%
Council Tax £180-250 4-6%
Groceries £450-600 10-13%
Childcare £500-1,500 11-34%
Transport (2 cars) £400-600 9-13%
Phones & subscriptions £100-150 2-3%
Children’s activities £100-200 2-4%
Pension (additional) £200-400 4-9%
Savings £100-300 2-7%

Note: Childcare is the biggest variable. Costs drop significantly once free hours kick in and again when children start school.

See our budget planner guide.

Building Wealth at 35

Net Worth Calculation

Track your overall financial position:

Assets Value
Property value £X
Pension(s) £X
ISA/Investments £X
Cash savings £X
Total Assets £X
Liabilities Value
Mortgage £X
Other debt £X
Total Liabilities £X

Net Worth = Assets - Liabilities

Net Worth Targets by Age

Age Target (Multiple of Salary)
30 1x
35 2x
40 3x
45 4x
50 5x

Example (earning £50,000):

  • Target net worth at 35: £100,000
  • Target net worth at 40: £150,000

Investment Strategy at 35

Still time for growth-focused allocation:

Risk Level Allocation
Aggressive 90-100% global equities
Moderate 75-85% equities, 15-25% bonds
Conservative 60% equities, 40% bonds

At 35, most advisors suggest: 80-90% in equities for long-term growth, unless you have specific near-term goals.

See our how to start investing guide.

Protection and Estate Planning

Insurance Priorities at 35

Insurance Priority Typical Cost
Life insurance Essential if dependents/mortgage £15-40/month
Income protection Essential for earners 2-4% of covered income
Critical illness Important £30-70/month
Private health Optional/nice to have £40-100/month

Life insurance tip: Get level term insurance to cover your mortgage, plus decreasing term to cover remaining years of child dependency.

Will and Estate Planning

At 35 with assets, you need:

Document Purpose
Will Direct where assets go
Pension nomination Ensure pension goes where intended
Power of Attorney Who makes decisions if incapacitated
Life insurance in trust Avoid inheritance tax, faster payout

Cost: Simple will £150-300 online, or £500-1,000 with solicitor.

Common Situations at 35

If You Haven’t Bought Property Yet

You’re not alone — average first-time buyer age is now 34.

Option Considerations
Continue saving LISA still available until 50
Buy smaller/further out Compromise on location
Shared ownership Part buy, part rent
Keep investing Property isn’t the only wealth builder

25-30 year mortgages still available at 35 with most lenders.

If You’re Divorced/Separated

Financial Impact Action Needed
Pension sharing Review pension rights from divorce
Property split May need to restart saving
Single household costs Budget adjustment needed
Maintenance Factor in if paying/receiving

Key: Don’t neglect your pension in the settlement — it’s often the largest marital asset.

If You’re Behind on Savings

Current Position Catch-Up Strategy
Little pension Increase to 15-20% if possible
No emergency fund Build £1,000 then grow
No investments Start ISA alongside pension
Significant debt Aggressive payoff plan

Focus on highest-impact actions: Pension contributions (tax relief) and debt elimination typically have the biggest effect.

Mistakes to Avoid at 35

1. Lifestyle Creep

As salary increases, ensure savings increase proportionally:

Pay Rise Lifestyle Savings
£5,000 increase 50% (£2,500) 50% (£2,500)

2. Neglecting Your Career

Issue Impact
Staying in same role too long Salary stagnation
Not upskilling Career ceiling
Missing promotions Long-term earnings loss

At 35: You likely have 30 years of earning left. Investing in your career pays dividends.

3. Underinsuring

Risk Without Protection
Death Family loses home, income
Illness/disability Career ends, no income
Critical conditions Cannot work, expenses rise

Life insurance is cheap — don’t leave family vulnerable.

4. Ignoring Pension Fees

Fee Level Impact Over 30 Years
0.25% ~£50,000 pot lost to fees
0.75% ~£140,000 pot lost to fees
1.50% ~£250,000 pot lost to fees

Low-cost index trackers in your pension can save tens of thousands.

Your Financial Checklist at 35

Essential Now

  • Pension contributions at 12-15% or more
  • 6-month emergency fund
  • Life insurance if mortgage/dependents
  • Will written and current
  • All old pensions consolidated
  • Budget tracked and optimised

By 40

  • Pension pot of 3x annual salary
  • Net worth of 3x annual salary
  • Mortgage under control (not overextended)
  • Income protection insurance
  • Clear retirement number calculated

Longer Term

  • Career path to peak earnings
  • Children’s education funded/planned
  • Estate planning complete
  • Second property/investment portfolio growing
  • Early retirement options evaluated

Where You Should Be by 40

Following good financial practices from 35-40:

Category Target by 40
Pension pot 3x annual salary
Net worth 3x annual salary
Emergency fund 6-12 months
Career Peak or near-peak earnings
Debt Mortgage only, being reduced
Protection Full suite in place

Summary

At 35, you’re in the critical wealth-building decade. The decisions you make between 35 and 45 about pension contributions, career progression, and spending discipline will largely determine your financial security at 60.

Key priorities:

  1. Maximise pension contributions — tax relief is generous, compound growth is powerful
  2. Protect your family — life insurance and income protection
  3. Invest in your career — your earning power is your biggest asset
  4. Control lifestyle creep — save proportionally as income rises

The single most impactful thing at 35: Review your pension contributions and consider significantly increasing them during these peak earning years.

For more guidance:

Sources

  1. ONS — Annual Survey of Hours and Earnings
  2. UK Finance — First-time buyer statistics
  3. MoneyHelper — Pension guidance