Been seeing a lot of conversations lately about what your net worth should actually look like when you hit your 30s. Honestly, it's one of those questions that doesn't have a one-size-fits-all answer, but there are some solid frameworks worth considering.



First, let's get clear on what net worth even means. It's basically everything you own minus everything you owe. Simple math, but it actually tells you way more about your financial health than just looking at your income. You could be earning six figures and still be broke if you're drowning in debt.

So what should my net worth be at 30? According to the Federal Reserve's latest consumer finance survey from 2023, families under 35 saw their median net worth hit around $39,000, with an average of $183,500. That's a pretty wide range, which tells you something important — your situation depends heavily on your specific circumstances.

One financial advisor I came across suggests that your real goal in your 30s should actually be hitting zero net worth. Sounds backwards, right? But the logic is solid — getting to zero means you've paid off all your debts. For most people, that's the actual foundation of financial stability. No fancy tricks, just disciplined debt payoff.

Other experts frame it differently. Some suggest aiming for a net worth between $25,000 and $100,000 by your 30s. The math behind it: if you hit $100,000 and don't save another dollar, that could potentially grow to about $1 million by retirement at 65 if properly invested. If you're saving $500 monthly, targeting around $25,000 is more realistic.

Then there are the benchmarks people use. The 2x income rule suggests your net worth should be roughly double your annual salary. Make $60k? Aim for $120k in net worth. There's also the 30x monthly expenses approach — if you spend $3,000 monthly, you'd want $90,000+ in net worth. And some look at debt-to-net-worth ratios, suggesting consumer debt shouldn't exceed 25% of your total net worth.

What I find most interesting is how achievable this actually is if you're consistent. One example that stuck with me: saving just $5 on weekdays (20 days a month) at 4% annual interest, compounded daily, gets you roughly $16,000 over 10 years. Not flashy, but real. Or max out a Roth IRA at $6,500 yearly with a modest 7% return — by 30 you'd have around $132,000 in retirement accounts alone.

The takeaway? Your net worth at 30 doesn't need to be perfect. Whether you're at zero, $25k, or $100k, what matters is understanding where you stand and having a plan to move forward. Family situation, career trajectory, regional costs — all that matters. But the framework is there if you want to track your progress.
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