Late-in-life parenthood exposes every weak spot in a budget. It also forces a choice: keep chasing the old lifestyle, or build a new plan that actually works. My take is simple and firm. Retirement comes first, on purpose, starting now; and the “old you” doesn’t get a vote.
A recent call with Amanda and her husband, both brand-new parents in their 40s, put this into focus. They carry no consumer debt, hold a fixed mortgage at a good rate, and keep $30,000 in cash. Yet they have no retirement savings. That’s common and fixable. The path is discipline over nostalgia, math over fear, and action over delay.
The Case for a New Financial Identity
The hardest part isn’t the numbers. It’s closing the door on the past. As John Delony put it to the couple:
“Put a period at the end of that old life… We’re going to live in this reality and we’re not going to sit down there thinking about, ‘oh, remember when.’”
That’s the turning point. The family that stops trying to “get back” what they had is the family that wins. Yes, it may feel like loss. But it’s only the loss of spending that never built wealth. Choose a new identity built on margin and intention.
Retirement First Isn’t Selfish. It’s Smart
Rachel Cruze ran the numbers with them using a simple retirement calculator. They currently save nothing. Saving changes the entire picture:
- $1,000 per month invested until age 67, assuming 10% annual growth: about $676,000.
- $2,000 per month on the same timeline: about $1.3 million.
Those figures aren’t promises; they’re direction. The point is clear. Time and consistent contributions make wealth-building possible, even for late starters. Rachel also reminded them of the order of operations: aim to invest 15% of household income for retirement. On $90,000, that’s roughly $1,125 a month. Add an employer match, and you gain free money and momentum.
Meanwhile, keep the mortgage. The couple owes about $130,000 at 3.85%, with $300,000 in equity. They asked about selling to fund retirement. Rachel’s answer was blunt:
“You’re just robbing Peter to pay Paul.”
Exactly. They’d trade a low-rate loan and stability for a short-term cash hit, and still face the cost of housing. Hold the asset. Pay it off on schedule or faster if the plan allows.
What To Do Next
Here’s the practical sequence I support, based on the advice given:
- Lock in a 3–6 month emergency fund (they’ve got $30,000, which is a good start).
- Invest 15% of gross income for retirement. Start now, and automate it.
- Use the workplace 401(k) up to the match, then fund Roth IRAs (including a spousal Roth for the stay-at-home parent), then go back to the 401(k).
- Meet with a vetted advisor to map the accounts and allocations.
- Keep the low-rate mortgage; avoid cash-out moves.
This plan trades instant comfort for long-term security. As John warned, the shift can feel rough:
“They’re going to feel broke… $2,000 a month that they used to just blow… is going to go into an account for future them.”
Good. Feeling the stretch means you’re finally building something real.
Counterarguments Fall Short
What about college savings? Important, but not before retirement. Kids can borrow for school. You can’t borrow for retirement. What about boosting lifestyle to “feel normal” again? That’s how people drift back into trouble. Normal is broke. Different is funded.
And if you think it’s too late, it isn’t. Rachel called out the power of growth over time: even with aggressive saving, contributions might total roughly $456,000 while growth could approach $900,000 in her example. Compounding does the heavy lifting once the habit is set.
My Bottom Line
Stop negotiating with your past. Build a new plan around a real percentage going to retirement, an advisor who will sit with your numbers, and a lifestyle that matches your season. Choose camping over costly trips, and choose margin over memory. Lastly, choose wealth over wishing.
Start this month. Set the percentage. Automate it. Then live proudly inside your new identity. The best time to start was years ago; the second-best is today. As Rachel said,
“The best time to start is now.”
Your future self, and your child, are counting on it.
Frequently Asked Questions
Q: Should we pause retirement to save for our child’s college?
No. Fund retirement first at 15% of income. Once that is automatic, add college savings. Parents need stability in old age more than kids need a debt-free degree.
Q: Is selling a low-rate house to invest a good move?
Usually not. You give up a fixed, affordable payment and pay transaction costs. Keep the home, invest consistently, and build equity while you save.
Q: How can a single income household hit 15%?
Automate contributions, grab the 401(k) match, use Roth IRAs, and trim lifestyle. A written budget and a clear target make the math work over time.
Q: What if we feel behind starting in our 40s?
Start anyway. Increase income where possible, cut extras, and invest every month. Compounding needs time and consistency more than perfection.






