The One Money Move Young People Should Make Right Now

2026 update — IRA contribution limits just increased. Here’s why that matters for you.

If you’re in your 20s or 30s and you’re not yet contributing to a Roth IRA, this post is for you. Not your parents. Not your future self. You, right now.

Starting in 2026, the IRA contribution limit has been raised from $7,000 to $7,500 per year due to inflation and rising cost of living. It’s a small change on paper, but it’s a signal worth paying attention to: the government is acknowledging that the cost of building a future is going up. The question is whether you’re keeping pace.

What Is a Roth IRA, and Why Does It Matter?

A Roth IRA (Individual Retirement Account) is one of the most powerful wealth-building tools available to everyday people — and it’s specifically designed to reward those who start early. Here’s what makes it special:

You contribute money that’s already been taxed (after-tax dollars), and from that point on, your money grows completely tax-free. When you withdraw it in retirement, you pay zero taxes on the gains. Zero. That’s the deal. In a world where the government takes a cut of almost everything, the Roth IRA is one of the few places your money can quietly compound without interruption.

There’s also flexibility that traditional retirement accounts don’t offer. You can withdraw your contributions (not earnings) at any time without penalty, which makes it less intimidating for younger investors who worry about locking money away forever.

$3M

Projected value by age 65, starting at 25 with $0 invested

$300K

Total principal you’d contribute over 40 years

$625

Per month to fully max out your contribution

10%

Historical average annual return of the S&P 500

Let that sink in. If you begin maxing out your Roth IRA at age 25 (starting from nothing) with a historically reasonable 10% annual return, you’d be sitting on roughly $3,000,000 by the time you’re 65. And you’d have only personally contributed about $300,000 of that. The other $2.7 million? That’s compound interest doing the work you’re not doing.

The Argument Against (And Why It Doesn’t Hold)

Common Objection

“What am I going to do with $3 million when I’m old? I’d rather enjoy my money now while I’m young and actually have the energy to have fun.”

It’s a fair point. Life is meant to be lived, not postponed. And yes — a lot can happen between now and 65. The world changes, priorities shift, and none of us knows exactly what tomorrow looks like.

But here’s the question I’d ask in return: What if you do reach 65? Because statistically, most of us will. And the people who arrive there without financial cushioning don’t stop needing money — they just lose their options.

The Counter-Argument

Enjoying your youth and building long-term wealth are not mutually exclusive. $625/month is the max — but even $100, $200, or $300 a month builds something real. You don’t have to choose between a life now and a life later.

I refuse to still be working at 65. I want to spend that time relaxing, chasing hobbies, and being present with the people I love.

That vision of genuine freedom in your later years doesn’t happen by accident. It’s built quietly, in the background, by decisions made decades earlier. Retiring comfortably isn’t a luxury reserved for the wealthy; it’s available to anyone willing to start small and stay consistent.

The Resolution: Start Where You Are

Bottom Line

To fully max out the 2026 limit, you’d set aside $625 a month — roughly what many people spend on eating out, subscriptions, and impulse purchases without blinking. But if that feels out of reach right now, that’s okay. Some is genuinely better than nothing. Open the account. Contribute what you can. Increase it as your income grows. Let time handle the rest.

Your future self will be relaxed, financially free, and watching grandkids grow up without the stress of money. You will be grateful you made this choice in 2026.

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