It’s not uncommon to find friends and family chasing different dreams, living different lives when we hit our thirties. While some have long settled down with a partner and kids, others are busy working towards a solid career, or even studying or upgrading themselves.
As much as it’s important to live life at your own pace, when it comes to finance, time is of the essence – especially when we’re past the early stages of adulting. To check in with your financial milestones, here are five financial goals to achieve by age 35 that will put you on a path towards achieving stability.
One of the most important things you can do for your financial health is to become (and stay) debt free. This will ensure that you can fulfil your other financial goals without any further hindrance.
Maybe you’re servicing a student loan. Or maybe you have a pesky balance that you’ve been juggling between credit cards. Whatever your debts are, make a plan to pay them off by age 35 (or sooner, if possible).
Follow these steps to help you along:
- Total up your entire debt. When you know for sure how much debt you actually carry, you’ll be that much more motivated to do something about it.
- Work out how much you can pay off each month. To do so accurately, take your income, then deduct daily expenses and essentials. Then commit the remaining to paying off your debt. It may be worthwhile to temporarily pause your savings until you’re debt free.
- Construct a simple debt payment worksheet to help you keep track, especially if you owe balances between multiple credit cards. Also, consider consolidating your credit card debts into one using a Balance Transferr or Personal Loan (more on that below).
- Start paying down your debt. When you hit a milestone (such as 25% done, one credit card cleared, etc), remember to celebrate. Acknowledging your efforts will help you keep going.
- Keep going until you’re free of debt.
By the time you hit 35, you’ll probably be at a certain point in life where you have a concrete idea of what you want going forward.
You need to ensure that should something untoward happen to you, your loved ones or dependents can continue to maintain a similar standard of living. This is where insurance comes in.
But what kind of insurance, and how much? Simply put, there are two main areas to consider.
The first is healthcare and hospitalisation, which, as a Singaporean, you are already (at least partially) covered for. It is worth considering extending your cover and benefits with an Integrated Plan (IP). This gives you higher claims limits, higher-class hospital wards and alternative treatments.
The limits, however, still depends on the exact IP you choose, which comes in different premium tiers. Do note that you’ll need to pay the IP premiums in cash, while your basic MediShield still remains payable via your MediSave.
The second area to consider is life insurance, which you will use to cover the gap between your financial obligations and your current assets. Follow these steps:
- List out your financial obligations, and extrapolate into the future. For example, if your current household expenses (essentials only) with two young children is $4,000 per month, and you want to protect them for 20 years (until they reach adulthood), your family expenses would total $4,000 x 12 months x 20 years = $960,000. Next add any other obligations, such as debt, mortgages, car loans, etc.
- Then, calculate your current assets, including savings and valuable items.
- Find the difference between (1) and (2). That’s the gap you need to cover.
- Talk to a professional financial adviser to work out a comprehensive insurance portfolio to cover that gap.
An emergency fund is like an umbrella: ignored when you don’t need it, and suddenly very precious when you do. Hopefully, you are familiar with the idea of an emergency fund. Perhaps you may already be working on one yourself.
When you reach 35, it is a good idea to have a pool of money you can tap on during emergencies, and it should be big enough to cover 12 months of your expenses.
This will become an important support pillar in case you want to make a career change, suffer an upheaval due to uncontrollable events (like COVID-19, but hopefully never again), or if you decide to strike out on your own.
Before you panic, we’re talking about 12 months of expenses, which, when pared down to the essentials, should be markedly lower than your income. Still, it is a fairly large sum to achieve, so treat your emergency fund as an ongoing work-in-progress.
Here are the steps to follow when establishing an emergency fund.
- Calculate your barebones monthly expenses, which should comprise daily expenses and essential bills only. Cut everything else out.
- Decide how to fund your emergency fund. Maybe you can carve out a portion of your monthly budget. Or take up some extra work on the weekends.
- Aim to accumulate 12X of your barebones monthly expenses by your 35th birthday.
- Most importantly, get started!
Getting married and/or getting your own flat is among one of the biggest milestones in your life. It can also be quite costly, so it certainly pays to get ready for it.
This one is really quite simple. You’re aiming to have enough funds to pay for a wedding banquet and/or honeymoon which can easily cost tens of thousands.
Similarly, the downpayment of your own flat (to be paid in cash) can be anywhere from 5% to 20% of the transaction price, depending on your property type, mortgage scheme, and the balance in your CPF Ordinary Account.
Here’s how you can go about saving for a wedding or a flat:
- Decide on the type of wedding banquet you want to have, your honeymoon destination, and the dream home you want.
- Based on the above, work out a likely budget for the wedding or home down payment.
- Count how many months you have from now till you turn 35, and divide your budget up accordingly.
- And because you want this to be a non-negotiable goal, set up an automatic fund transfer to deduct this amount from your paycheck every month.
By the time you hit 35, you’re in the prime of your life. So it may be a little jarring to consider that retirement is only another 30 or so years away.
Because compounding interest needs time to work its magic, the sooner you begin investing for your retirement, the better off you’ll be.
Here’s how you can go about investing for your retirement:
- Work with a professional financial adviser to construct a personalised retirement portfolio. As a general rule, your portfolio should last till the end of your life. Hence, at 35, a 55 year plan will cover you till age 90.
- Your investment portfolio should consist of two phases: a growth phase, followed by a sustain phase. Your growth phase should last during your working years (so 30 years, at least), and should be tuned to grow and accumulate your wealth. When you retire at 65 (or whichever age), your portfolio should shift into a sustain phase, with the goal of keeping pace with inflation while maintaining stability and liquidity.
- As a general rule, aim to invest 20% of your monthly income each month to ensure sufficient retirement funds.
- Decide how you will handle dividends and bonuses, so you don’t get sidetracked when your investments start bearing fruit. When in doubt, re-invest.
Yes, this goal ignores your CPF Life annuity payouts and the potential monetisation from your property.
Our reasoning is this: by ensuring self sufficiency with a simple and disciplined investing schedule, you can stop worrying about whether your CPF Life payouts will be sufficient in your golden years. Instead, you’ll get to enjoy your property and CPF Life payouts as nice bonuses.
SingSaver is a personal finance comparison platform that allows users to easily compare credit cards, personal loans, and insurance for free while helping empower people to lead healthier financial lives through increased financial literacy.
Text: Alevin Chan/SingSaver