Making your first million. Many people should be  able to save $1 million for retirement if they start saving early  enough. A worker who saves $5,500 per year beginning at age 30, gets a  $1,500 401(k) match each year, and earns 7 percent annual returns will  have $1,014,640 by age 65. However, someone who waits until age 40 to  start saving will have to tuck away closer to $14,000 a year to reach $1  million by age 65, assuming the same 401(k) match and investment returns.
Those who do not get an employer 401(k) match or  don't consistently save in a 401(k) plan will need to save even more on  their own. "You may have to adjust for time frames when you were not  contributing to your 401(k), such as when you are saving for a house or  you change jobs," says Mark Fuller, president of Fuller Wealth  Management in Broomfield, Colo. "Life happens, and you have got to be  able to make some mid-course corrections along the way." Excessive fees  and investment costs, 401(k) waiting periods and vesting schedules,  and taking early 401(k) withdrawals or loans can also make it more  difficult to become a millionaire. "It sounds easy and it sounds good on  paper, but in actuality it is tough for people to do," says Doug  Kinsey, a certified financial planner  for Artifex Financial Group in Oakwood, Ohio. "People need to really  keep their transaction costs to a minimum. If you shave off a couple of  points a year in expenses, that goes a long way toward saving a million  for retirement."

 
 
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