When I tell people my net worth crossed six figures, they usually assume I had a tech salary or inherited money. Neither is true. For most of my twenties and early thirties, I earned between $45,000 and $65,000 a year. No trust fund, no stock options, no side business printing cash. Just a regular paycheck and a set of habits I built one at a time.
I am sharing the details because I got tired of wealth-building advice written by people who were already wealthy. The gap between “invest early and often” and actually doing it on a salary that barely covers rent is enormous. This is the bridge.
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ToggleWhere I Started — and It Was Not Pretty
At 24, I had $11,000 in student loans, a car payment of $280 a month, and about $800 in a savings account. My credit score was somewhere in the low 600s because I had missed a payment on a store credit card I had forgotten I opened in college. I was not broke in the dramatic sense — I had a job, I paid my bills, I ate — but I had zero financial momentum.
The turning point came when I read a single statistic: the median American household has less than $5,000 in savings outside of retirement accounts. I was average, and average was not going to cut it.
Step One: I Killed the Car Payment
The first thing I did was sell my financed car and buy a used Honda Civic for $6,500 in cash. I borrowed $3,000 from my brother to make up the difference after the sale and paid him back over six months. That freed up $280 a month, plus another $90 in reduced insurance premiums.
I drove that Civic for seven years. It was not glamorous, but $370 a month redirected into savings compounds into real money over time. In just the first three years, that single decision put an extra $13,320 into my accounts before any investment returns.
People underestimate how much car expenses drain wealth. Between payments, insurance, maintenance, and depreciation, the average American spends over $1,000 a month on their vehicle. Cutting that number in half is one of the fastest ways to accelerate savings.
Step Two: I Automated Everything
I am not disciplined. I know that about myself. If money sits in my checking account, I will spend it on dinner, gadgets, or some random thing I convince myself I need. So I took willpower out of the equation.
The day after every paycheck, automatic transfers moved money into three places: $400 to a high-yield savings account, $200 to a Roth IRA, and $150 to my student loan above the minimum payment. What was left in checking was my spending money, and I had to make it work.
The first few months were tight. I ate more meals at home, skipped happy hours, and said no to a few weekend trips. By month four, I had adjusted to the new normal and barely noticed. The accounts, meanwhile, were growing for the first time in my life.
Step Three: I Got Aggressive About the Debt
Student loans at five percent interest do not sound scary, but they were costing me $550 a year in interest alone. I wanted that money working for me, not against me. So I threw every extra dollar at the principal — tax refunds, birthday money, the occasional freelance check.
I paid off the full $11,000 in just under two years. The day I made the final payment, I redirected that entire monthly amount into investments. No lifestyle inflation, no “treating myself.” Just a clean transfer from one automatic payment to another.
This approach — sometimes called the debt avalanche method — saved me hundreds of dollars in interest compared to paying minimum payments. If you have multiple debts, focus on the one with the highest interest rate first while making minimums on the rest.
Step Four: I Invested Simply and Consistently
I did not try to pick stocks. I did not chase crypto. I did not attempt to time the market. I opened a brokerage account, set up automatic contributions, and bought broad-market index funds. Specifically, I split my money between a total U.S. stock market fund and a total international fund, roughly 80/20.
The beauty of index investing is that you do not need to be smart or lucky. You just need to be consistent. Over the past decade, the S&P 500 has averaged about 10% annual return, including dividends. Even in years when the market dropped, my automatic contributions kept buying shares at lower prices, which boosted my returns when the recovery came.
By age 32, my combined investment and retirement accounts had crossed $85,000. Not because of any one brilliant move, but because of eight years of steady, boring contributions.
Step Five: I Found Ways to Earn More Without Burning Out
Cutting expenses has a floor — you can only reduce so much before life becomes miserable. Earning more has no ceiling. So I started looking for ways to add income without taking a second full-time job.
I picked up freelance projects in my field — nothing fancy, just work I could do in the evenings and on weekends. That added $800 to $1,500 a month in good months. Every dollar of freelance income went straight to investments. I also negotiated two raises at my day job over three years, totaling about $8,000 in annual salary increases.
The combination of higher income and maintained spending was powerful. My savings rate jumped from about 15 percent to nearly 30 percent, and the math started compounding noticeably.
If side income interests you, the key is to choose something that builds on the skills you already have rather than starting from scratch. There are legitimate ways to earn from home that do not require a massive upfront investment.
Step Six: I Protected What I Built
Once I had real money saved, I realized I needed to protect it. I bought term life insurance — cheap at my age — and made sure I had adequate health coverage. I also built my emergency fund to eight months of expenses, which gave me the confidence to stay invested during market downturns rather than panic-sell.
I also started paying attention to taxes. Contributing to a Roth IRA meant my withdrawals in retirement would be tax-free. Using my 401(k) at work reduced my taxable income today. And I made sure to harvest tax losses in my brokerage account when opportunities came up. None of this was complicated, but together these moves saved me thousands over the years.
The Saver’s Credit from the IRS was another tool I used in my lower-earning years — it gave me a direct tax credit just for contributing to retirement accounts.
The Numbers Today
At 35, my net worth sits just above $140,000. That includes roughly $95,000 in investment and retirement accounts, $25,000 in savings and emergency funds, and about $20,000 in home equity from a small condo I bought two years ago with a modest down payment.
I still earn a middle-class salary. I still drive a used car. I still cook most of my meals. But I also travel twice a year, enjoy good coffee every morning, and never worry about covering an unexpected expense.
The point is not that I am special. The point is that building wealth on an ordinary income is possible if you make it automatic, stay patient, and resist the urge to keep up with people who earn twice what you do. Start where you are, use what you have, and give yourself permission to build slowly. The math will take care of the rest.
Image Credit: Pexels
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For a fun comparison, see the net worth of the richest presidents in US history.







