The average net worth at 25 in the UK is approximately £9,000-£15,000, though the median is lower at £5,000-£8,000.

Net Worth at 25 by Percentile

Percentile Net Worth What This Means
10th -£15,000 Student debt dominates
25th -£2,000 Breaking even
50th (median) £5,000 Typical 25-year-old
75th £18,000 Ahead of most peers
90th £35,000 Well-established
95th £60,000+ Exceptional start

Source: ONS Wealth and Assets Survey (extrapolated for 22-29 age group)

Typical Wealth Breakdown at 25

Asset Type Median Value
Savings accounts £2,500
ISAs £1,500
Pension (auto-enrolled) £3,000
Other investments £500
Physical assets (car etc) £3,000
Gross assets £10,500
Student loan -£40,000
Other debt -£2,000
Net worth (ex. student loan) £8,500

Note: Many calculations exclude student loans as they’re income-contingent and written off after 30-40 years.

How You Compare

Your Net Worth Position Assessment
Negative (debt) Below average Common — focus on debt reduction
£0-£5,000 25th-50th On track — start building
£5,000-£15,000 50th-70th Solid start
£15,000-£30,000 70th-85th Excellent progress
£30,000+ Top 15% Outstanding

Realistic Targets at 25

Target Type Amount Purpose
Emergency fund £6,000-£10,000 3-6 months expenses
Pension started £3,000+ Auto-enrolment minimum
House deposit savings Started Even £2,000 is progress
High-interest debt £0 Cleared (excluding student loan)

Building Net Worth in Your 20s

Priority order:

  1. Clear high-interest debt (credit cards, overdrafts)
  2. Emergency fund (3 months minimum)
  3. Pension contribution (at least employer match)
  4. Lifetime ISA (if planning to buy property)
  5. General investments (S&S ISA)

Monthly Savings Impact

Monthly Savings In 5 Years (to age 30)
£100 £6,300
£200 £12,600
£300 £18,900
£500 £31,500

Assumes 5% annual return

Why Student Loans Differ

Plan 2 (post-2012) student loans:

  • Only repay 9% of income over £27,295
  • Interest: RPI + up to 3%
  • Written off after 30 years
  • Doesn’t affect mortgage applications significantly

Most financial planners treat these as a “graduate tax” rather than true debt.

Common at 25

Don’t worry too much if:

  • You’re still renting
  • You have student loan debt
  • Your pension is small
  • You’re just starting to save

These are all normal at 25.

Sources

  • Office for National Statistics. “UK Statistical Data and Analysis.” ons.gov.uk
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Written by WealthVieu

WealthVieu researches and writes data-driven personal finance guides using primary sources including the IRS, Bureau of Labor Statistics, Federal Reserve, and Census Bureau.

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