Money & Budgeting

Money in Your 20s UK — Complete Financial Guide

Everything you need to know about money in your 20s UK. Building credit, saving habits, pension basics, investing for beginners, and avoiding common mistakes.

Your 20s are your financial foundation decade. The habits you build now — saving, investing, avoiding bad debt — will compound for decades. The money mistakes you make can also linger. Here’s everything you need to know about money in your 20s.

The Financial Journey of Your 20s

What Changes Through the Decade

Age Typical Situation Financial Focus
20-22 Student/first job Basic habits, avoid bad debt
22-25 Early career Build emergency fund, credit, pension
25-28 Career growth Save harder, start investing
28-29 Established House deposit? Serious wealth building

Key Milestones to Hit by 30

Milestone Target
Emergency fund 3-6 months expenses (£5,000-15,000)
Credit score “Good” or above (700+)
Pension pot 0.5-1x annual salary
Investments Started, any amount
High-interest debt None

Building Credit in Your 20s

Credit Score Importance

Your credit score affects:

  • Renting (landlord checks)
  • Phone contracts
  • Car insurance prices
  • Credit card limits
  • Future mortgage approval

How to Build Credit

Action Impact Effort
Register on electoral roll High 5 minutes
Get credit card High Application
Pay full balance monthly Critical Ongoing
Being on utility bills Medium If renting
Avoid multiple applications High Restraint
Keep old accounts open Medium Don’t close

Credit Card Strategy for 20-Somethings

Do Don’t
Use for regular spending Use for things you can’t afford
Pay full balance monthly Carry a balance (20-40% APR)
Set up Direct Debit Miss payments ever
Stay under 30% utilization Max out the card
Keep oldest card open Close accounts unnecessarily

Saving and Emergency Funds

The Emergency Fund Hierarchy

Priority Amount Purpose
Level 1 £1,000 Basic emergencies
Level 2 1 month expenses Job loss buffer
Level 3 3 months expenses Real security
Level 4 6 months expenses Full protection

In your 20s, getting to Level 2-3 is realistic and important.

How Much to Save

Income Suggested Savings Rate
Under £25,000 5-10% (or what you can)
£25,000-35,000 10-15%
£35,000-50,000 15-20%
Over £50,000 20%+

If living at home, aim for the higher end. If renting in London, lower end may be realistic.

Where to Keep Savings

Account Type Rate (2026) Best For
Easy-access savings 4-5% Emergency fund
Regular saver 5-7% Building savings habit
Cash ISA 4-5% Once over Personal Savings Allowance
Lifetime ISA Bonus + growth House deposit

Pension Basics for 20-Somethings

Why Pensions Matter Now

Every £100 saved at 22 could become £1,500+ at retirement (7% growth, 45 years).

Starting Age £100/month = At 67
22 £330,000
25 £280,000
28 £230,000
30 £200,000

Delaying costs you £100,000+ in retirement.

Auto-Enrolment Basics

Detail Current Rules
Minimum employee contribution 5%
Minimum employer contribution 3%
Total minimum 8%
Kicks in at £10,000 annual earnings

Never opt out — the employer contribution is free money.

Should You Contribute More?

Situation Recommendation
Can afford 1% extra easily Yes
Employer matches extra % Absolutely yes
Still have high-interest debt Clear debt first
No emergency fund Build emergency fund first

Investing in Your 20s

When to Start Investing

Prerequisite Status
Emergency fund (Level 1-2)
No high-interest debt
Workplace pension enrolled
Can commit 5+ years

If all four: you’re ready.

How to Start

Step Details
1 Open Stocks & Shares ISA (Vanguard, InvestEngine, Trading 212)
2 Choose global index fund
3 Set up £25-100/month Direct Debit
4 Leave it alone for decades

What to Expect

Reality Detail
Markets will drop Sometimes 20-40%+
You won’t time it perfectly Nobody does
Long-term trend is up Historically 7-10% annual
Compounding takes time Results accelerate in later decades

Salary and Career

Salary Expectations in Your 20s

Career Stage Typical Salary
Graduate entry £24,000-32,000
2-3 years experience £28,000-40,000
5 years experience £35,000-55,000
Top performers £50,000-80,000

Maximising Earnings

Strategy Typical Impact
Job switch every 2-3 years 15-30% increases
Internal promotion 5-15% increases
Skill development Career flexibility
Negotiate offers 5-15% above initial
Side income +£5,000-20,000/year

Your biggest wealth builder in your 20s is career progression.

Housing in Your 20s

Rent vs Buy

Rent If… Consider Buying If…
Career uncertain Stable job, plan to stay 5+ years
Want flexibility Have 10%+ deposit
Building deposit Can afford ownership costs
Exploring areas Found your area

Saving for a House Deposit

Monthly Saving Time to £25,000
£300 6.9 years
£400 5.2 years
£500 4.2 years
£750 2.8 years

Lifetime ISA for House Deposit

Feature Details
Maximum contribution £4,000/year
Government bonus 25% (£1,000/year)
Property price limit £450,000
Penalty for other use 25% (lose bonus + 6.25%)
Must be open 12 months Before buying

Start early — bonus adds up significantly.

Debt Management

Good Debt vs Bad Debt

Good (or Acceptable) Bad
Student loan Credit card balances
Eventually: mortgage Payday loans
Career development loan Overdraft (if used long-term)
Buy-now-pay-later addiction

Debt Priority Order

Debt APR Priority
Payday loans 1,000%+ Emergency
Credit cards 20-40% Immediate
Overdraft 35-40% High
Car finance (high) 10-20% Medium
Student loan ~8% Low (special rules)

Student Loan Reality

Fact Implication
Repay at 9% over £27,295 Low immediate impact
Written off after 40 years Many won’t fully repay
Doesn’t affect credit score Not like normal debt
~8% interest (2026) High but automatic

Usually not worth prioritising over other savings/investments.

Common 20s Money Mistakes

What to Avoid

Mistake Why It Hurts
No emergency fund One problem becomes a crisis
Credit card debt 20-40% interest compounds brutally
Skipping pension Missing decades of growth
Lifestyle creep Spending every pay rise
No budget Money disappears without a plan
Expensive car on finance Depreciating asset + monthly drain
Gambling House always wins
Trying to impress others Comparing to strangers’ debt

What Actually Matters

Do This Not This
Max pension match Opt out to have more cash
Build emergency fund “I’ll be fine”
Start investing early Wait until you “have enough”
Live below your means Match income with spending
Track spending Check balance and hope

20s Financial Checklist

By Age Action
20-21 Adult bank account, electoral roll
21-22 Credit card (use responsibly)
22-23 Stay auto-enrolled in pension
23-24 £1,000 emergency fund
24-25 3 months emergency fund
25-26 Start investing (ISA)
26-27 Consider LISA if buying property
27-28 Review pension contributions
28-29 Full financial plan for 30s

You Might Also Find Useful

Sources

  1. ONS — Earnings and employment
  2. MoneyHelper — Young people guides