B
Benson
— The Early Starter —
At age 25, Benson starts saving $5,000 a year. He does this for ten years — through age 34 — then never adds another dollar. He just lets it ride.
Twins. Same returns, same retirement age. One starts at 25 and saves for ten years. The other starts at 35 and saves for thirty. Three times the contributions. Same arithmetic. Different lives.
At age 25, Benson starts saving $5,000 a year. He does this for ten years — through age 34 — then never adds another dollar. He just lets it ride.
At age 35, Ada starts saving $5,000 a year. She does this for thirty years — every single year through age 64. She contributes three times as much as Benson.
| Investor | Contributed | Balance | Multiple |
|---|---|---|---|
| Benson | $0 | $0 | — |
| Ada | $0 | $0 | — |
Age 65 Same returns. Same retirement age. Three times the contributions for the latecomer. Yet the early starter walks away with more.
| Investor | Strategy | Total Contributed | Balance at 65 | Multiple |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Benson | Save $5K/yr ages 25–34, then never contribute again | — | — | — |
| Ada | Save $5K/yr ages 35–64, every single year | — | — | — |