At 45, you are typically at or approaching peak earnings — and also at peak financial complexity. Mortgage payments, children’s education, and retirement planning are competing for the same income. Here is where you should be, and what to do if you are not.
Savings Benchmarks at 45 — Quick Summary
| Benchmark | Amount | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| UK median (ages 45–54) | £15,000–£25,000 | Cash savings only |
| UK average (ages 45–54) | £30,000–£50,000 | Skewed by high earners |
| Expert recommendation | 6–12 months expenses | £18,000–£36,000+ |
| “Excellent position” | £60,000+ cash | Top quintile for age |
| Pension target | 4x annual salary | Key retirement milestone |
How 45-Year-Olds Actually Compare
| Savings level | Where you stand | Approximate % of age group |
|---|---|---|
| £0–£5,000 | Below average | ~28% |
| £5,000–£15,000 | Around median | ~25% |
| £15,000–£30,000 | Above median | ~22% |
| £30,000–£75,000 | Well above average | ~15% |
| £75,000+ | Top quintile | ~10% |
The 45-Year-Old Financial Reality
At 45, your key financial priorities and targets look like this:
| Priority | Target | Typical situation |
|---|---|---|
| Emergency fund | 6–12 months expenses | £18,000–£36,000 |
| Pension pot | 4x annual salary | £140,000–£240,000 for average earner |
| Mortgage | Roughly 10–15 years remaining | £100,000–£250,000 outstanding |
| Children’s costs | Secondary school/university approaching | £5,000–£15,000/year |
| ISA savings | Growing | Aim for £50,000–£100,000 by this age |
What 4x Salary in Your Pension Means
The 4x salary pension benchmark is based on targeting a retirement income of around half your current salary at age 67, assuming the State Pension (£11,502/year in 2026/27) covers roughly a third.
Example: Sarah, 45, earns £48,000
- Pension target: £192,000 (4x salary)
- She currently has £110,000 in her pension
- Gap: £82,000
- At 8% annual growth, an additional £450/month closes the gap by age 67
Higher-rate taxpayers closing pension gaps get 40% tax relief — a £1 pension contribution costs only 60p net.
Catch-Up Strategies at 45
1. Maximise salary sacrifice — contributions from gross salary save NI (2%) on top of income tax relief. On £48,000, salary sacrificing an additional £500/month saves roughly £3,600/year in tax and NI versus paying in from take-home pay.
2. Use carry forward — you can carry forward unused pension annual allowance from the previous three tax years. If you made no contributions in a lean year, that allowance is available now.
3. Review ISA allocation — at 45, cash ISAs should be complemented by Stocks & Shares ISAs for the portion you will not need for 10+ years. The annual allowance is £20,000.
4. Overpay the mortgage if the rate is above 4–5% — fixed mortgage rates above 4% represent a guaranteed return. Overpaying £300/month on a £200,000 balance at 4.5% can save £20,000+ in interest and shave years off the term.
Emergency Fund: The 45-Year-Old’s Safety Net
An emergency fund at 45 needs to cover:
- Standard 6–12 months’ expenses
- Higher potential for income disruption (redundancy at this age takes longer to recover from than at 30)
- Children’s unexpected costs
On a household spend of £3,000/month, the target is £18,000–£36,000 in accessible savings (easy-access savings account or cash ISA, not tied up in investments).
What to Do if You Are Behind at 45
You have approximately 22 years to State Pension Age. This is still enough time to make substantial progress:
- Increasing pension contributions by £500/month now → approximately £210,000 additional by age 67 (at 7% growth)
- Maximising the ISA allowance for 10 years → £200,000 gross contributions alone, plus growth
The worst option is to wait. Each year of inaction at 45 is worth more than a year at 55 due to compounding.
For a full breakdown of pension targets by age, see how much pension should I have?. For your net worth at this age specifically, see average net worth at 45 UK. To compare with the previous milestone, see how much savings at 40.