Retirement · Investing · UK Personal Finance
9 minute read · Updated February 2026
Your 30s are a strange time for retirement planning. Old enough to know it matters, young enough that it still feels abstract, and busy enough with mortgages, childcare, and just getting on with life that it keeps getting pushed to later. I understand the instinct. But the maths is unforgiving on this one — the decisions you make in your 30s about pension contributions compound into genuinely large numbers by retirement, in a way that decisions in your 50s simply cannot replicate.
This is not a lecture about starting earlier. You are here now, in your 30s, and that is the right time. This is the practical framework for what to actually do. Not financial advice — the right numbers depend on your specific salary, employer, and goals — but the honest logic I find most persuasive.
Compound growth is the reason. Money invested in your 30s has 30-35 years to compound before a typical retirement age. Money invested in your 50s has 10-15 years. The difference is not linear — it is exponential.
A concrete example: £300 per month invested from age 30 at 7% annual growth produces approximately £490,000 by 65. The same £300 per month from age 40 produces around £230,000. The person starting at 30 contributes only £36,000 more over their lifetime, but ends up with £260,000 more. That gap is the decade of compounding between 30 and 40 — and it cannot be recovered later by contributing more, because later contributions simply have less time to grow.
This is not meant to make anyone who is already past 30 feel bad — it is to make clear why the decisions made now, in your 30s, carry disproportionate weight.
There is a lot of noise around retirement planning — different products, different platforms, different strategies. In my experience the things that actually determine outcomes in retirement are simpler than the industry makes them sound.
Contribution rate. The most important variable by a significant margin. Moving from 8% to 12% total contributions (yours plus employer) on a £40,000 salary adds roughly £170,000 to your pot by 65, assuming 7% growth. Moving from 12% to 15% adds another £110,000. These are not small differences — they are life-changing ones. And the net cost out of take-home pay is lower than the gross numbers suggest because of tax relief.
Employer match. If your employer matches contributions above the minimum and you are not claiming the full match, you are declining free money. On a £40,000 salary, an unclaimed 2% employer match is £800 per year — which compounds to approximately £80,000 over 30 years at 7%. Ask HR what your employer's match rate is and make sure you are contributing enough to claim all of it.
Starting now rather than waiting. Every year you delay costs more than you think. A one-year delay on starting a pension at 32 versus 33 — just one year — costs approximately £25,000-£30,000 in final pot value at 7% growth on a £300/month contribution. The cost of procrastination is disproportionately high in your 30s precisely because of the compounding horizon.
Given limited spare cash each month, the order I find most logical — not financial advice — is:
If your employer offers salary sacrifice for pension contributions, it is almost always worth using it. Your contribution comes from gross pay before tax and National Insurance are calculated — saving both income tax and employee NI at 8% on the contribution. On £200 per month in pension contributions, salary sacrifice saves you approximately £36 extra per month compared to a standard contribution, at no additional cost. Over 30 years that additional saving compounds significantly.
Ask HR whether salary sacrifice is available. If it is and you are not using it, switching is usually a simple form. See our full salary sacrifice guide for the exact numbers at different salary levels.
The commonly cited rule of thumb is half your age as a percentage of salary in total pension contributions. At 35, that is 17.5% total — yours and your employer's combined. Most people in their 30s are at 8-10% (the auto-enrolment minimum). That gap is significant and worth closing gradually — a 1% increase per year, or timed with each pay rise, gets you there without it ever feeling like a sacrifice.
For where your pot should be by your mid-30s, see our pension benchmarks at 30 and pension benchmarks at 40.
See how pension, ISA and LISA stack up over 25–30 years with your salary, employer match and monthly contributions.
Project my retirement savings →