Savings & Investing

How Much Savings Should I Have at 40 UK? — Benchmarks & Catch-Up Guide

Savings, pension, and net worth benchmarks for 40-year-olds in the UK. See how you compare, what you should aim for, and how to accelerate your wealth if you're behind.

Savings and investment information is for educational purposes only. The value of investments can go down as well as up. Cash savings up to £85,000 per person per institution are protected by the FSCS.

At 40, you’re typically at or near peak earnings, but also facing peak financial complexity — mortgages, children’s education costs, ageing parents, and retirement planning. Here’s where you should be.

Savings Benchmarks at 40 — Quick Summary

Benchmark Amount Notes
UK median (ages 35-44) £10,000-£15,000 Cash savings only
UK average (ages 35-44) £20,000-£35,000 Skewed by high earners
Expert recommendation 6-12 months expenses £15,000-£30,000+
“Excellent position” £50,000+ cash Top quintile
Pension target 3x annual salary Key retirement milestone

How 40-Year-Olds Actually Compare

Savings level Where you stand Approximate %
£0 Below average ~8%
£1-£10,000 Below median ~25%
£10,000-£20,000 Around median ~25%
£20,000-£40,000 Above average ~22%
£40,000+ Well ahead ~20%

The 40-Year-Old Financial Reality

At 40, your financial priorities typically include:

Priority Target Typical situation
Emergency fund 6-12 months expenses £15,000-£36,000
Pension pot 3x salary £120,000-£240,000 for avg earner
Mortgage Being paid down £100,000-£300,000 outstanding
Children’s costs University, activities £5,000-£15,000/year
Investments Growing steadily ISA with £20,000+
Protection Fully in place Life insurance, wills completed

Cash Savings Target by Salary at 40

Gross salary Monthly expenses (est.) 6-month fund 12-month fund
£40,000 £2,500 £15,000 £30,000
£50,000 £3,000 £18,000 £36,000
£60,000 £3,500 £21,000 £42,000
£75,000 £4,000 £24,000 £48,000
£100,000 £5,000 £30,000 £60,000

Why 12 months? At 40+, it takes longer to find equivalent employment if made redundant. Higher earners need larger buffers.

Pension at 40 — The 3x Salary Rule

Your salary 3x salary target Monthly to reach target from £100k (by 65, 5% growth)
£40,000 £120,000 ~£150/month additional
£50,000 £150,000 ~£400/month additional
£60,000 £180,000 ~£650/month additional
£75,000 £225,000 ~£1,000/month additional

Pension Reality at 40

Scenario Likely pension pot
Auto-enrolled since 22, 8% combined, avg £38k salary £50,000-£65,000
Contributed 12% since 25, avg £45k salary £100,000-£130,000
Started late (at 35), 12% on £45k £30,000-£40,000
Maximised contributions, high earner £200,000+

Most 40-year-olds are below the 3x target. But 25 years of contributions and growth remain.

Catch-Up Strategies at 40

Current position Strategy
Less than 1x salary in pension Aggressive catch-up: 20%+ contributions, salary sacrifice, use carry forward
1-2x salary Increase to 15-20% combined, review fees and fund choices
2-3x salary On reasonable track, maintain high contributions
3x+ salary Excellent position, consider tax-efficient investing beyond pension

Pension Carry Forward

You can use unused pension allowance from the previous 3 tax years. If you’ve been under-contributing, this could allow contributions of:

Tax Year Annual Allowance Potential carry forward
2023/24 £60,000 Unused amount
2024/25 £60,000 Unused amount
2025/26 £60,000 Unused amount
Total possible Up to £240,000 (Less what you used)

This is particularly powerful for higher earners with spare cash from bonuses, inheritance, or property downsizing.

Net Worth at 40 — Complete Picture

Component Typical range at 40
Cash savings £15,000-£50,000
Pension pot £60,000-£180,000
ISA investments £10,000-£60,000
Property equity £50,000-£200,000 (if owner)
Total assets £135,000-£490,000
Minus: Mortgage -£100,000 to -£350,000
Minus: Student loans -£10,000 to -£30,000
Minus: Other debt £0 to -£15,000
Typical net worth £100,000-£300,000

Wide variance explained: London property owners may have huge equity but equally huge mortgages. Long-term renters who invested well can have surprisingly high liquid net worth.

The Power of Contributions at 40

You still have 25+ years until traditional retirement. Monthly contributions now make a significant difference:

Extra monthly at 40 Worth at 55 (5% growth) Worth at 65 (5% growth)
+£200/month +£53,000 +£116,000
+£300/month +£79,000 +£173,000
+£500/month +£132,000 +£289,000
+£1,000/month +£265,000 +£578,000

Tax relief boost: If you’re a higher-rate taxpayer, pension contributions cost you only 60% of face value. £500 into your pension costs £300 via salary sacrifice.

Investment Allocation at 40

Asset % of portfolio Rationale
Global equities 60-70% Growth focus with 25+ year horizon
UK equities 10-15% Home market exposure
Bonds 15-25% Increasing stability
Property (REITs) 5-10% Diversification
Cash Emergency fund only Keep separate

At 40, you’re still young enough for equity-heavy holdings but old enough to start introducing stability.

Monthly Budget Framework at 40

Category Recommended % On £60k salary
Housing (mortgage/rent) 25-30% £1,000-£1,200
Pension 12-15%+ £600-£750
Other savings/investing 5-10% £250-£500
Living expenses 40-50% £1,600-£2,000
Discretionary 5-10% £200-£400

Financial Priorities at 40 (Rank Order)

  1. Pension contributions — Maximise tax relief, use salary sacrifice
  2. Emergency fund — 6-12 months, essential at this life stage
  3. Debt reduction — Pay down mortgage faster if affordable
  4. Children’s education — ISAs, JISAs, or regular savings
  5. ISA investing — Tax-free growth beyond pension
  6. Protection review — Ensure adequate life cover and income protection

Common Mistakes at 40

Mistake Impact Solution
Still at minimum pension contributions Facing inadequate retirement income Increase to 15-20%+ immediately
Lifestyle inflation eating all income No wealth building despite high earnings Save 50%+ of raises and bonuses
Over-prioritising children’s costs Sacrificing own retirement Balance — your retirement can’t be borrowed for
Ignoring protection Family vulnerability Review life insurance, write a will
All money in property Illiquid, concentrated risk Build liquid investments and pension
Cash savings earning nothing Inflation erosion Move long-term savings to investments

Comparison: Savings by Age

Metric At 30 At 35 At 40 At 50
Emergency fund 3-6 months 6 months 6-12 months 12 months
Pension 1x salary 2x salary 3x salary 6x salary
Cash savings median £6,000 £12,000 £15,000 £25,000
Net worth target £60,000 £120,000 £200,000 £400,000

40-Year-Old Financial Checklist

Task Target Done?
Emergency fund 6-12 months expenses
Pension balance known Logged into all providers
Pension contributions 15%+ combined
Old pensions consolidated One or two providers
State Pension forecast checked GOV.UK forecast
ISA maxed or regular contributions £20,000/year ideal
Life insurance adequate 10-15x salary, until mortgage cleared
Will written and up to date Include pension nomination
Power of attorney arranged For future incapacity
Children’s savings (if applicable) JISA or savings account

What Success Looks Like at 40

Status Cash savings Pension Net worth Assessment
Struggling < £10,000 < 1x salary < £75,000 Urgent action needed
Below average £10,000-£20,000 1-2x salary £75,000-£150,000 Increase pension immediately
Average £20,000-£35,000 2-3x salary £150,000-£250,000 On track, maintain effort
Good £35,000-£60,000 3x salary £250,000-£350,000 Solid position
Excellent £60,000+ 4x+ salary £350,000+ Ahead of schedule

Next Steps

  1. Run your numbers — Calculate exact net worth today
  2. Check State Pension — Get your forecast to see expected income
  3. Model retirement — Use a pension calculator to project outcomes
  4. Increase contributions — Every £100/month now adds ~£50,000+ at retirement
  5. Review protection — Life insurance, critical illness, income protection, will

At 40, you have both the earning power and time horizon to make dramatic improvements to your financial future. Actions taken now are worth significantly more than actions at 50.

Sources

  1. ONS — Wealth and Assets Survey
  2. Fidelity — Retirement Savings Guidelines