Most of us who know a tiny bit about saving for retirement know the value of starting early and if you don’t know about that old adage, here it is: “Start early.” But how early?
When you get that first job is a great time to start contributing to your RRSP: you don’t usually have a lot of bills, debt or other financial obligations.
Plus, you want to start building the right habits early. Your finances don’t need a “gap year” where they go exploring the world. Sure, you want that financial freedom in your 20's and nobody is suggesting an ascetic youth, but be sure to balance it with some good saving habits.
By far the biggest benefit to starting early is the power of compounding interest over time. If you saved just $50 a week over the course of 45 years, with a 5% interest rate, you'd end up with over $435,000 saved up. The compound interest over those 45 years has nearly quadrupled the amount you've put in, and that's with a mere 5%.
You can't go back in the past and start saving back when you were 20, but you can start today and that's a lot better than starting 5 years from now, or ten years from now, or twenty years from now.
The secret is to save early and save often.
Related reading: The Complete Guide to Your TFSA