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Net Worth by Age: Benchmarks and How to Compare
Net WorthPersonal FinanceWealth BuildingFinancial Planning

Net Worth by Age: Benchmarks and How to Compare

NOVOX Team

Net Worth by Age: Benchmarks and How to Compare

Wondering whether you're "on track" financially is one of the most common — and most anxiety-inducing — questions in personal finance. The honest answer is: it depends. But benchmarks by age give you a useful starting point, as long as you know how to read them correctly.

This guide walks you through what the numbers actually say, how to calculate your own net worth, and — more importantly — what to do if you're behind.

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What Is Net Worth, Exactly?

Net worth is the simplest snapshot of your financial health:

Net Worth = Total Assets − Total Liabilities

Assets include everything you own that has value: savings accounts, investment portfolios, retirement accounts (401k, IRA), real estate equity, vehicles, and even crypto. Liabilities are everything you owe: mortgage balance, student loans, car loans, credit card debt, and any other outstanding obligations.

Example: If you have $120,000 in a 401(k), $15,000 in savings, and a car worth $10,000 — but you carry $35,000 in student loans and $8,000 in credit card debt — your net worth is:

> ($120,000 + $15,000 + $10,000) − ($35,000 + $8,000) = $102,000

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Why Age-Based Benchmarks Are Tricky

Before diving into numbers, a critical caveat: median and mean net worth figures tell very different stories.

Mean (average) net worth is heavily skewed by the ultra-wealthy. A room with 99 people worth $50,000 and one billionaire has a staggering "average" that means nothing for the other 99. Median net worth — the midpoint where half of people have more and half have less — is far more useful for comparison.

Income, geography, inheritance, education, and career path all create enormous variation. Use benchmarks as a rough compass, not a report card.

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Net Worth Benchmarks by Age Group

The figures below are illustrative ranges drawn from broad financial research and widely cited planning rules of thumb. They reflect median net worth for U.S. households in each age bracket.

Under 35

  • Median net worth: ~$13,000–$39,000
  • Many people in this group are still paying down student loans or building their first emergency fund. A positive net worth at all is a solid foundation.
  • Rule of thumb target: 1× your annual salary saved by age 30 (e.g., if you earn $55,000/year, aim for $55,000 in net assets).
  • Ages 35–44

  • Median net worth: ~$91,000–$135,000
  • This decade is often defined by competing priorities: mortgage, childcare, career growth. Home equity starts to play a bigger role.
  • Rule of thumb target: 2–3× your annual salary in net worth by age 40.
  • Ages 45–54

  • Median net worth: ~$168,000–$247,000
  • Peak earning years begin. Retirement accounts should be compounding meaningfully. Debt reduction accelerates.
  • Rule of thumb target: 4–6× your annual salary by age 50.
  • Ages 55–64

  • Median net worth: ~$213,000–$364,000
  • The final push before retirement. Social Security planning, catch-up contributions, and downsizing decisions become relevant.
  • Rule of thumb target: 7–10× your annual salary by age 60.
  • Ages 65+

  • Median net worth: ~$266,000–$409,000
  • Wealth often peaks here, then gradually declines as people draw down savings. Home equity frequently makes up the largest share.
  • Goal: Enough invested assets to sustain 25–30 years of withdrawals (the "4% rule" suggests a portfolio of 25× your annual spending needs).
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    The Factors That Move the Needle Most

    Benchmarks are descriptive, not prescriptive. Here are the levers that genuinely determine trajectory:

  • Savings rate, not income: A person earning $60,000 who saves 20% will outpace someone earning $120,000 who saves 5% within a decade.
  • Time in the market: Thanks to compounding, $5,000 invested at age 25 grows to roughly $70,000 by age 65 at a 7% average annual return — versus $19,000 if invested at age 45.
  • Debt management: High-interest debt (credit cards at 20%+) is the single fastest way to erode net worth. Eliminating it delivers a guaranteed "return" equal to the interest rate avoided.
  • Home equity vs. liquid assets: Many people near retirement have most of their net worth locked in a home. That matters for cash flow planning — a $400,000 house doesn't pay your grocery bill unless you tap it.
  • Asset diversification: Spreading across retirement accounts, taxable brokerage accounts, real estate, and other assets reduces concentration risk.
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    How to Actually Calculate and Track Your Net Worth

    Knowing the formula is one thing; keeping an accurate, up-to-date picture is another. Most people underestimate their liabilities or forget scattered accounts.

    A practical approach:

    1. List every asset — bank accounts, investment accounts, retirement accounts, property value estimates, vehicle value, and any other holdings.

    2. List every liability — mortgage balance, auto loans, student loans, personal loans, credit card balances.

    3. Subtract and record the date — net worth is a point-in-time figure. Track it monthly or quarterly to see trends.

    4. Update regularly — market movements, debt paydowns, and new contributions all shift the number.

    Apps like NOVOX connect your bank accounts, brokerage, real estate, crypto, and cash in a single dashboard, automatically calculating your net worth in real time. It also assigns a 0–100 financial health score so you can see not just what your number is, but how healthy your overall financial picture looks.

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    What If You're Behind the Benchmarks?

    First: benchmarks describe where people are, not where they need to be. Plenty of people retire comfortably below the median and plenty above it struggle. That said, if you want to close a gap, the most impactful moves are:

  • Increase your savings rate by even 1–2% — automate it so you never see the money.
  • Max out tax-advantaged accounts first — 401(k) up to the employer match, then a Roth IRA ($7,000 limit in 2024, $8,000 if you're 50+).
  • Attack high-interest debt aggressively — the debt avalanche method (highest interest rate first) minimizes total interest paid.
  • Revisit your asset allocation — if you're 35 and holding mostly cash, inflation is quietly eroding your purchasing power.
  • Build income — side income, career advancement, or skill development can accelerate everything else.
  • Progress compounds. A $10,000 improvement in net worth this year means a larger base earning returns next year.

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    FAQ

    How often should I check my net worth?

    Monthly is ideal for motivation and catching errors; quarterly is sufficient for most people. Avoid daily checks — short-term market swings create noise, not signal.

    Does my primary home count toward net worth?

    Yes — the equity in your home (market value minus remaining mortgage) counts as an asset. However, since you can't easily spend it without selling or borrowing against it, many planners track "liquid net worth" separately.

    What's a good net worth at 30?

    A common benchmark is having saved roughly 1× your annual gross salary. So if you earn $60,000, a net worth of ~$60,000 by 30 puts you on a solid trajectory — though starting from zero with no debt is also a perfectly respectable position.

    Should I include retirement accounts in my net worth?

    Absolutely. 401(k)s, IRAs, and pension values are real assets. Just remember they come with withdrawal rules and potential tax liabilities — a $200,000 traditional IRA isn't quite the same as $200,000 in a savings account after taxes.

    How do I track net worth across many accounts?

    Manually via a spreadsheet works, but it's easy to miss accounts or use outdated values. A consolidated tool like NOVOX pulls live balances from banks, brokerages, crypto wallets, and real estate estimates into one place, giving you a single, always-current number.

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    This article is for educational purposes only and does not constitute personalized financial advice. Consult a qualified financial professional for guidance specific to your situation.
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