Calculate Your Savings Rate
How is the Savings Rate Calculated?
Understanding your personal savings rate is one of the most important metrics for achieving financial health. Unlike looking at your bank balance alone, your savings rate tells you exactly how much of your hard-earned money you are keeping for your future versus how much you are consuming today.
The calculation is a straightforward comparison between your disposable income (net income) and the amount you save (or your income minus your expenses).
The Savings Rate Formula
To calculate your savings rate manually, you use the following formula:
Alternatively, if you already know exactly how much you transferred to savings/investments:
A Practical Example
Let's break down the math with a realistic scenario used in the calculator above:
- Net Income: $5,000 (Your take-home pay after taxes)
- Total Expenses: $4,000 (Rent, utilities, food, entertainment)
First, we determine the savings amount:
$5,000 (Income) – $4,000 (Expenses) = $1,000 Saved
Next, we divide the savings by the total income:
$1,000 / $5,000 = 0.20
Finally, multiply by 100 to get the percentage:
0.20 × 100 = 20% Savings Rate
Why Does This Metric Matter?
Your savings rate is the primary driver of how quickly you can achieve financial independence. The higher your savings rate, the fewer years you need to work. For example:
- At a 10% savings rate, you are working 9 years to save 1 year of living expenses.
- At a 50% savings rate, you are working 1 year to save 1 year of living expenses.
What is a Good Savings Rate?
While this varies by income level and cost of living, the popular 50/30/20 rule suggests allocating 50% to needs, 30% to wants, and saving at least 20% of your income. Financial Independence, Retire Early (FIRE) proponents often aim for rates of 50% or higher.