Savings by Age UK — How Much Should I Have Saved?

Is £30,000 Savings Good UK? — How You Compare by Age

Is £30,000 in savings good in the UK? See how it compares to the average by age group, whether it is enough for an emergency fund, and what to do with it.

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.

£30,000 in savings is above the UK median for most age groups under 55. Whether it is ‘good enough’ depends on your age, income, family situation, and whether you have other assets working for you.

How £30,000 Compares by Age

Age £30,000 is… UK median savings for age Verdict
Under 25 Outstanding £2,000–£5,000 Exceptional
25–34 Excellent £5,000–£10,000 Well above median
35–44 Good £10,000–£15,000 Well above median
45–54 Above median £15,000–£25,000 Above median
55–64 Around median £20,000–£35,000 Broadly average
65+ Below median £25,000–£50,000 Slightly below median

Does £30,000 Cover an Emergency Fund?

For most single people and couples, £30,000 comfortably covers 6–12 months of essential expenses — the upper end of the recommended emergency buffer.

Household monthly spend £30,000 covers Verdict
£1,500/month 20 months More than sufficient as emergency fund
£2,500/month 12 months Full upper emergency fund
£3,500/month 8.5 months Good emergency fund
£4,500/month 6.7 months Meets 6-month target
£6,000/month 5 months Adequate

What to Do with £30,000

Once your emergency fund is established, the question is where the surplus goes.

Scenario A: Emergency fund only, no other savings £30,000 meets the full emergency fund for most households. Next priority: pension and ISA.

Scenario B: Emergency fund secured, £30,000 is surplus

Option Expected return Risk Notes
Easy-access savings 4–5% (2026) None Safe but eroded by inflation long-term
Cash ISA 4–5% tax-free None Better than savings account for higher-rate taxpayers
Stocks & Shares ISA 6–9% long-term average Medium For money not needed for 5+ years
Pension lump sum 6–9% + 20–45% tax relief Medium Best return for retirement savings

The ISA Angle

£30,000 is below the annual ISA allowance of £20,000 — meaning you could shelter all of it in an ISA within two tax years. For higher-rate taxpayers, any savings interest on £30,000 above the Personal Savings Allowance (£500) is taxed at 40%, making an ISA wrapper important.

See best savings accounts UK for current top rates. For where to invest a lump sum, see our how to invest £20,000 guide.

Sources

  1. ONS — Wealth and Assets Survey
  2. PLSA — Retirement Living Standards