You turned 50, checked your retirement accounts, and felt a pit in your stomach that no online calculator could fix. You are not alone, and you are absolutely not out of time, either.
Bill Yount, an emergency physician based in the United States, spent decades earning a high income while ignoring his finances. He had no budget, no idea of his net worth, and no retirement plan worth mentioning when he hit the half-century mark.
What happened over the next decade is the kind of financial turnaround most people assume is impossible after a certain age. Yount went from a negative net worth to full financial independence before the average American retirement age of 62.
His story, shared in a recent interview on Morningstar’s The Long View podcast, is not about luck or a massive inheritance arriving at the perfect time. It is about specific, repeatable steps you can still take in your 50s to reshape your retirement trajectory.
A high income did not protect Yount from financial chaos
Yount earned a physician’s salary for years, but lifestyle inflation consumed nearly every dollar he brought home each month. New cars, a large home, and regular family travel kept his spending locked in step with his earnings.
When he finally sat down and calculated his net worth at age 50, the number was negative. It’s not because he earned too little, but because he spent too much, saved nothing, and had zero visibility into where his household money was actually going each month.
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He was also dealing with a medical malpractice lawsuit, which added enormous emotional stress to an already grim financial picture. Career burnout and legal exposure converged just about the time he realized nobody was coming to rescue his retirement.
Yount described that moment as his wake-up call during the Morningstar interview with Christine Benz, the firm’s director of personal finance. He said retirement felt 10 to 15 years away, but he did not even understand basic financial concepts such as net worth.
How Yount reversed a negative net worth in roughly a decade
The first thing Yount did was create a budget, something he had never done, despite earning six figures for over two decades. He tracked every recurring expense, identified where money was leaking, and eliminated spending that was not essential to his family.
He downsized aggressively and pushed his savings rate higher
Yount and his wife downsized their home, sold possessions they no longer needed, and immediately redirected the freed-up cash into retirement accounts. He went from saving almost nothing to setting aside a significant share of his physician’s income for investments each year.
He also began maxing out his employer-sponsored retirement plan, using every available tax-advantaged account to which he had access. For workers 50 and older in 2026, the IRS allows up to $32,500 in 401(k) contributions, combining an $8,000 catch-up with the $24,500 base limit.
He discovered financial independence through the FIRE community
Yount stumbled upon the financial independence, retire early movement and began applying its core principles to his own household. He eventually co-founded the Catching Up to FI podcast with Jackie Cummings Koski to help others who started late.
The podcast has aired nearly 200 episodes and focuses on people who did not begin saving or investing until their 40s or later. Koski, a certified financial planner and author of “F.I.R.E. for Dummies,” reached financial independence and retired from corporate work at age 49.
The IRS gives late starters more room to catch up than most people realize
If you are 50 or older, the federal tax code offers provisions designed specifically to help you accelerate your retirement savings aggressively. These catch-up contributions can add tens of thousands of dollars to your retirement accounts each year when used consistently.
Key 2026 catch-up contribution limits you should know
- Workers aged 50 and older can contribute up to $32,500 to a 401(k) in 2026, combining the $24,500 base limit with an $8,000 catch-up, the IRS confirms.
- Workers aged 60 to 63 qualify for a “super catch-up” under SECURE 2.0, allowing up to $35,750 in total 401(k) contributions for the year.
- IRA contribution limits for 2026 rise to $7,500, with an additional $1,100 catch-up for savers 50 and older, for a total of $8,600.
- High earners who made more than $150,000 in FICA wages in 2025 must direct their catch-up contributions into a Roth 401(k) starting in 2026, per IRS final regulations.
Catch-up contributions give late starters a powerful way to fast-track retirement savings and close the gap quickly.
What those contribution limits look like over a full decade of saving
A 50-year-old who maxes out a 401(k) at $32,500 per year for 12 years, earning an average annual return of 6%, would accumulate roughly $580,000.
That projection does not include any employer matching contributions, which could add $50,000 to $150,000 more, depending on the plan’s formula.
Layering on a maxed-out IRA contribution of $8,600 per year could push the total past $700,000 over 12 years of disciplined saving and compounding. Combine that with Social Security benefits, a paid-off mortgage, and reduced living expenses, and retirement at 62 becomes a realistic target.
Where most late starters stumble before they even get started
The biggest obstacle for late starters is not the math or the market returns on their investment portfolios over time. It is the emotional weight of feeling too far behind to bother trying at all.
The shame of starting late keeps people frozen in place
Many Americans over 50 avoid looking at their retirement numbers because the gap between where they are and where they should be feels too large.
The median 401(k) balance for workers aged 45 to 54 was roughly $60,000, Vanguard’s How America Saves report shows, which falls far short of expert benchmarks.
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Only 35% of non-retirees believe their retirement savings plan is on track, the Federal Reserve has reported in its recent surveys. Nearly two out of three working Americans already sense they are falling behind, yet many still take no action to close the gap.
Lifestyle creep is the silent budget killer at every income level
Yount’s story proves that a high income alone does not guarantee financial security if spending rises to match every pay increase over time. You can earn $200,000 or $300,000 annually and still have nothing saved if you never build a gap between your income and your expenses.
Only 14% of retirement plan participants actually contribute the IRS annual maximum, despite having access to and the ability to do so, Vanguard data show. For workers earning between $75,000 and $100,000, that figure drops to just 2%.
Practical steps you can take this month if you are starting late
Yount’s playbook was not complicated, but it required consistency and a willingness to make uncomfortable financial changes immediately. Here is what you can do right now, regardless of whether your current net worth is positive or negative.
Build a real budget and track every dollar for 30 days
Track every dollar coming in and going out for at least 30 days before deciding where to cut your spending or increase contributions. You cannot close a gap you have not measured, and most people dramatically underestimate their monthly spending without a written plan.
Automate your savings and escalate the percentage every year
Set your 401(k) or 403(b) contribution to automatically increase by at least one percentage point each year going forward without fail. Two-thirds of auto-enrollment plans now include automatic annual deferral rate increases, Vanguard notes, which removes the friction entirely.
Downsize something meaningful in your household budget
Yount and his family sold their home and moved into a smaller, less expensive property to free up cash for investing immediately. You do not need to be that drastic, but selling a second car, refinancing high-interest debt, or cutting large subscriptions can shift your savings rate.
Choose a financial planner who will grow with you over decades
Yount specifically sought a fee-only fiduciary advisor in their 30s so the planner would have decades of runway to guide them through retirement. He also wanted someone focused on helping him spend responsibly, not just someone focused on accumulating assets without a drawdown strategy.
Prioritize your health alongside your money
Yount’s top piece of advice for late starters is to protect your physical health as aggressively as you protect your portfolio. Accumulating retirement savings means nothing if you do not have the health span to actually enjoy the freedom that financial independence provides.
Yount’s message to every late starter still sitting on the sideline
Yount started at 50 with a negative net worth and retired at the average American retirement age of 62 with his finances fully in order.
He reminds listeners that late starters have one advantage early retirees do not: decades of real-life experience and valuable memories.
More Personal Finance:
- Retirees following 4% rule are leaving thousands on the table
- Fidelity says a $500 policy could protect your entire net worth
- Fidelity’s 4 Roth strategies could save your family a fortune in taxes
The typical early-retirement story involves someone in their 20s who lived frugally, saved aggressively, and retired by 30 with roughly $1 million. Yount points out that late starters did not deprive themselves of life; they have travel memories, family experiences, and priceless relationships.
Starting late does not mean finishing behind if you are willing to commit to a plan, make real cuts, and let the math work for you. The IRS gives you the tools; your employer may match your contributions; and compounding still works, even with a 10- to 15-year runway ahead.
If Yount went from zero to financial independence as a physician who ignored money for most of his career, you can get closer than you think. The only move that guarantees failure is the one where you sit still and do nothing at all.
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